Tuesdays with Dorie: Baking with Julia - 66th installment. The recipe is Sunny-Side Up Apricot Pastries.
I enjoyed this puff pastry adventure. The pastry itself was fairly easy - few ingredients, and since it's cool right now, I didn't struggle with the butter or rolling. You make a simple dough, as the recipe says, like Play Doh, in the food processor. You pound out the cold butter into a one inch thick slab.
I got the "European-style" butter, hoping that it would make the pastry extra yummy, although it came in 8 ounce slabs, so I had two chunks instead of one. You roll out the (play) doh/dough, put the butter on the center, and then fold the dough around the butter like an envelope.
At this point you start the serious rolling and folding. I did not watch the video from the episode, so was just following the written instructions. My rolling surface (a silicon sheet) has inch markings, so I was able to tell when I had rolled it out to the correct length (24 inches!). You roll to 24 inches long, and then fold in three layers, like a letter. You do the roll/fold cycle once or twice, and then chill. You repeat these steps until it has been rolled and folded a total of six times.
Here's the dough when it had been through all the rolling and folding, with a million (OK, not a million) tiny layers of butter and dough rolled together.
At this point the dough is ready to roll and cut. I cut out the circles using a bowl as a guide. I bet a really sharp cutter works well for this, as it would cut through the layers cleanly - I think my tracing around the bowl with a knife made the edge a little squished.
There were no apricots to be had in my store, so I used local prune plums instead. You poach the fruit and make a vanilla cream - mine was a little bit "tough", as I think I should have cooked it more gently, but it tasted good anyway.
Here are the pastries before baking:
The pastries were delicious! I would defintely prepare this again. And I put the remaining puff pastry in the freezer for the next installment of puff pastry, later this month (to be continued... :-)
Nice! Your pastry is so beautifully golden brown - looks wonderful.
ReplyDeleteI hope you have some beautiful plans for that leftover puff pastry (other than just the pizzettes) - homemade puff pastry should be celebrated!
ReplyDeleteLooks great!
very nice--the plums were great, I bet. seems like a lot of us thought the cream was tough. maybe so it could stand up to the baking?
ReplyDelete