3.02.2010

Pineapple Tarts - Something Asian...finally



Call me the failed planner, I won't hold it against you. I had created a wonderful menu of sweet and savory (unbelievable, I know) goodies to give out as gifts to friends and family to celebrate Chinese New Year. They key words here are: "had" (it was planned, never materialized) and "menu" (having a menu does not necessarily equate the actual coming together of ingredients, because that would take...well...time). Let me whip out my virtual legal-pad on my phone and enlighten you all - I had: Pineapple Tarts, Savory Sesame Crisps, Matcha Macarons with Red Bean Paste filling, Orange Zest Fortune Cookies.
So the little voice in my head, which by the way talks like one of the curiously famous starlettes on The Hills kept saying, "Chinese New Year holiday lasts, like, totally long, its like, 10 days or whatever, and like, when I did the Christmas box it was so much work, it was a complete and utter travesty for my skin - to quote Cher from clueless". But in my defense, I DID end up making the Pineapple Tarts as well as the Matcha Macarons.
There are actually quite a lot of bloggers out there that make CNY-themed pastries to celebrate the season - the most popular recipe being Pineapple Tarts. These aren't the traditional Taiwanese type that we remember hauling back to the mid-west during our college years (not applicable to those that are in NYC or California). These are a Malay/Singaporean version that uses various spices (cloves, star of anise, cinnamon) in the pineapple jam, and a crumbly pastry that doesn't usually end up completely encasing the jam.
My recipe is a combination of what I learned from the wonderful Angie at Sea Salt with Food as well as Billy Law at A Table for Two. I absolutely loved the idea of shaping the tarts into mini pineapples with cloves on top. I must admit, for being such a crafty little lady, the spikes on the "pineapples" were quite difficult to maneuver with my clumsy kitchen scissors. Check out the other blogs, they did a great job of showing how to make them. I just took photos of the final product - are you beginning to question my baking-credibility?

Pineapple Jam
3 baby pineapples or 2 cans shredded pineapples
200 grams granulated sugar
1 clove
1 cinnamon stick
1 star anise
150 grams liquid glucose. this is so low fat you have no IDEA
2 tbsp all purpose flour

  1. Finely shred the pineapple till fine. This took me ages...my dad managed to take our dog out for a walk and when he came home, I was still on pineapple two. What can I say, perfectionista I am.
  2. Strain the pineapple till dry. Now that I think of it, I should have kept it for juice or something. So, do that - live and learn right? Save your pineapple juice, the lessons of life.
  3. Simmer the pineapple in a pan till the rest of the juice dries up.
  4. Add sugar and spices. Is that part of a country song perhaps?
  5. Keep stirring. Focus on those arm muscles. We'll all be body builders soon.
  6. When the mixture starts getting dry, add liquid glucose
  7. Stirrr till the jam is thick and sticky icky icky - and sort of dry
  8. Add the flour.
  9. Continue to stir until the jam is almost completely dry - it should take around 10 minutes.
  10. Let the jam cool off a bit and then shape into small ovals, around the shape of the first joint of your thumb. Is that even usable as a measuring device?
Pastry
180C
350 grams all purpose flour
50 grams corn flour (okay, I used corn starch, am I completely wrong? maybe. but they turned out all KINDS of fabulous)
250 grams unsalted butter at room temperature
50 grams icing sugar
2 egg yolks
1/2 tsp vanilla essence
1/4 tsp salt
1 egg yolk for glazing
  1. Sift together all purpose flour, corn flour and salt
  2. Cream together the butter and the icing sugar with a mixer until it gets light.
  3. Beat in egg yolks one at a time.
  4. Add in the vanilla extract.
  5. Fold in the dry ingredients. Mix everything together until it forms a dough. It should still be light and crumbly though.
  6. Scoop out around a tablespoonful of dough, roll it into an oval, use your thumb to create a little well that big enough to fit the ball of pineapple jam.
  7. Place the ball of jam into the well and wrap the surrounding dough around the visible part of the jam to cover it completely.
  8. When you finish doing this with all of your dough and jam, you're actually ready to slip them in the oven already. BUT if you want to make them look like pineapples, click on the links above - you basically cut "v" shapes with a pair of scissors across the length of the dough and stick a clove on one of the ends!
  9. When you're done decorating...or whatever, brush the rolls with the beaten egg yolk.
  10. Bake for around 20 minutes or until they come out golden brown.

3.01.2010

Puff Piece: Cream Puffs




Shall I re-introduce myself perhaps? Unfortunately, I have yet to proclaim "I have a reader comment that isn't from a family member/friend!!" like the wonderful Julie - so I'll go straight into it.

Jess bought me a beautiful cookbook for Christmas - Baking At Home with The Culinary Institute of America and flipping through it, I just completely consumed! Kinda like the Brioches grew legs and walked into my kitchen, took off their little top hats...let the buttery steam out...mmm..
There aren't as many photos as I wish there were, but it's really elegantly done. Tons of tips and techniques as well! I'm considering one day applying to the wonderful school...would the accept a vegetarian? I think they have a pastries and baking program (yes, I've already looking into it. I'm searching for sponsors...anyone? really) which probably wouldn't involve too much non-vegetarian things. So anyway, I decided to try out the Cream Puffs! As usual, I also did some research off other blogs and I found someone that tried to replicate the Beard Papa Chocolate-topped cream puffs, and omigosh - its so simple!!! I'm tempted to not share this...but alas, I'm a giving person. Ha!
SO, Pāte á Choux and Pastry Cream from the CIA cookbook, Chocolate topping from the uber cute Wendy at mybutteryfingers. There are quite a few components to this, at least for me - but I'll do it step by step here...

Pāte á Choux - you can actually make these ahead of time if you're living in a pretty dry area. The idea here is to get some volume in the center of the puff (err...hence the name) so the CIA recommends starting at a high temperature (to get the rise) and then lowering the temperature to dry the puffs out. Look at all these things I'm learning already! They better accept me when I apply. Here's what you need

1 c. whole or low-fat milk. come on - whole!!!
8 tbsp (1 stick) unsalted butter, diced
2 tbsp granulated sugar
1/2 tsp salt
1 c. bread flour, sifted
3 large eggs
1 large egg white

Preheat to 190C/375F, baking sheet lined with parchment or Silpat ♡ Also, you'll need a pastry bag with a round tip - or, like the macarons, just cut a corner off of a zip lock bag.

  1. Combine the milk, butter, sugar and salt into a saucepan over high heat and bring to a boil.
  2. Reduce the heat to medium and add the sifted flour all at once
  3. Stir well
  4. Gross right?
  5. Cook the grossness while stirring constantly with a wooden spoon. Before you know it, the grossness will pull away from the sides of the pan, takes around 5 minutes.
  6. Transfer to your standing mixer (paddle attachment) and beat on medium speed until it's cooled to body temperature.
  7. Add the eggs one at a time, beating well and scraping down the bowl with a rubber spatula after each egg.
  8. Beat in the egg white. It should be the consistency of cake-batter right now...if I did it correctly!
  9. Transfer the dough into a pastry bag.
  10. Pipe the dough into golf-ball sized balls onto the baking sheet.
  11. If you want, see below on how to Beard-Papa-ize these guys. If you want these puffs beard free, keep going...
  12. Brush the unbaked puffs lightly with egg wash (1 large egg whisked with 2 tbsp cold milk).
  13. Bake until the pastries are puffy and lightly browned (around 20 minutes)
  14. Lower the oven temperature to 162C/325F until they're a rich golden brown (another 20-25 minutes). SO MUCH WAITING.
  15. Remove from the oven and puncture a small hole in the side of each of the puffs. I learned this from another blog...you need a little hole on the side of the puff to help the steam release from the center. It's a big no-no to have moist-centered puffs, and that happens when the steam is trapped.
Chocolate Topping

40g cake flour
10g cocoa powder
50g unsalted butter
50g granulated sugar

  1. Cream together the butter and sugar. I know...we're always creaming.
  2. Fold in the flour and cocoa powder.
  3. Put the dough on a piece of plastic wrap and press together to form a log - kind of like the icebox cookies that we made before...
  4. Chill the logs for at least 30 minutes or until the dough is stiff.
  5. Slice into around 20 portions, or however many puffs you are planning on baking.
  6. Place one chocolate slice on each of the (unbaked) puffs.


Pastry Cream - an OH MAN is this good. If you have any left over, you will most likely feel the urge to use it to dip, spread, baste, marinate....yes - that good. I made this more than a month ago and I can still smell the creamy vanilla.

1/4c. cornstarch
3/4c. sugar (divided use)
2c. while milk (divided use)
4 large egg yolks, lightly beaten (use the egg-whites for you macarons, dolls! PS. I made some Matcha and Red Bean Paste macarons yesterday)
1 pinch salt
2 tsp vanilla extract
2 tbsp unsalted butter

  1. Combine the cornstarch with 1/4 cup sugar in a mixing bowl, then stir in 1/2 cup of the milk.
  2. Blend the yolks into the cornstarch mixture.
  3. Stir with a wooden spoon until completely smooth
  4. Prepare an ice bath (dishes that are rich in eggs need ice bathes because it helps speed the cooling process to prevent scrambled eggs from happening). Use a large bowl, but make sure it can fit the mixing bowl your mixture is in. Add ice and then enough cold water to come halfway up the side of the mixing bowl that you'll want to cool down.
  5. Combine the remaining 1 1/2 cups milk with the remaining 1/2 cup sugar and the salt in a saucepan over medium heat and bring to a boil.
  6. Temper the egg mixture by gradually adding about one third of the hot milk mixture, whisking constantly.
  7. Add the remaining milk mixture into the eggs.
  8. Return the mixture to the saucepan (is this confusing? time to get organized!!!)
  9. Continue cooking over medium heat while stirring vigorously with a whisk until it comes to a boil and the whisk leaves a trail in the pastry cream (5-7 minutes).
  10. When you get to that point, remove from the heat and stir in the vanilla extract and the butter
  11. Transfer to the ice bath
  12. Stir occasionally until the cream is cool
  13. Spoon into a piping bag and fill the puffs!!

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