Showing posts with label Eton Mess. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eton Mess. Show all posts

Friday, April 5, 2013

E = Eton Mess and Eclairs

e
A friend mentioned on Facebook that she was making dinner and etonmesssaid the dessert was Eton Mess. I had vaguely heard of this before but didn’t remember what it was. Basically it is fresh strawberries, crumbled meringues and whipped cream in a dish which, basically, looks a bit of a mess. It was invented at Eton College which is one of the best know public schools in Britain (public schools are actually private schools and parents are charged school fees) at which no fewer than 18 British Prime Ministers have been educated. The school was founded in 1440 by Henry VI. Not sure why I, born and bred in the UK, have to learn about Eton Mess from a friend in South Africa. Here is a recipe and article about it from The Joy of Baking. I love meringues and cream (especially English cream) so it wouldn’t take much for me to love this.

Matt loves éclairs. Many years ago, before I knew him, he used to buy a couple of boxes of éclairs to take home, by the time he got home, there was only one box left.


Eclairs
Homemade éclairs are a labour of love, but the reward will be a decadent mouthful of crisp pastry oozing creamy vanilla custardEclairs
Ingredients
  • 140g plain flour
  • pinch of sugar
  • 125ml milk
  • 100g butter
  • 4 eggs
FOR THE CUSTARD FILLING
  • 300ml milk
  • 50g caster sugar
  • 2 egg yolks
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 4 tsp each plain flour and corn flour (corn starch)
  • 300ml double cream (or the heaviest cream you can buy)
  1. Start by making the custard filling. Heat the milk until almost boiling in a saucepan. Meanwhile, mix together the sugar, egg yolks and vanilla in a bowl, then stir in the flours, a couple of tsp at a time, to a smooth paste. Gradually whisk in the hot milk, pour everything back into the saucepan and cook over a high heat, stirring constantly, for about 5 mins until thick - it will go alarmingly lumpy but don't worry, just keep stirring it vigorously with a wooden spoon until smooth. Lay a sheet of cling film directly on the custard surface, then cool and chill until you're ready to fill the buns.
  2. To make the choux buns, heat oven to 220C/200C fan/gas 7. Sift the flour with the sugar and a pinch of salt into a small bowl. Put the milk and butter into a medium saucepan with 125ml water and gently heat so the butter melts but the liquid doesn't bubble. Once the butter has completely melted, increase the heat until the liquid comes to a fast rolling boil. Immediately turn off the heat, tip in the sifted flour and beat vigorously with a wooden spoon until you a have a smooth dough that comes away from the sides of the pan (see picture 1). Spread over a large dinner plate to cool to hand temperature.
  3. Once the dough mix has cooled, scrape it back into your pan. Using your wooden spoon, beat in each egg, one by one, until you have a smooth, shiny mixture.
  4. Cut 2 large sheets of baking parchment. On each one draw 2 sets of 'track' lines with a 10cm gap - these will be your guidelines so your éclairs will all be roughly the same size (see picture 2). Use the paper to line 2 large baking sheets - penside down. Spoon your choux mixture into a piping bag with a 1cm wide nozzle, or into a disposable piping bag with a similar-size hole snipped off for piping. Pipe 2 rows of well-spaced, squashed 'S' shapes on each sheet between the guidelines (see picture 3). Bake, one tray at a time, on a highish shelf for 25 mins, reducing temperature to 200C/180C fan/ gas 6 as soon as they go in the oven.
  5. After 25 mins, poke a hole in the end of each bun, or using a small serrated knife, split down the middle and return to the oven, upside-down, to dry out for 5 mins until crisp and golden. Set aside to cool.
  6. While the buns are cooling, finish your filling. Whisk the cream until thick, then use your electric whisk to beat the cooled, set custard until just smooth again. Fold in the cream. Spoon your filling into a piping bag - use a small nozzle if you're filling the buns through the holes you've pierced, or a large nozzle if you've split the buns in half. Carefully pipe the custard into each cooled bun - they should feel heavy once full. Arrange the buns on a wire rack and spread each with a little of your chosen icing (see below). If you can't decide, it's really easy to split your batch of choux buns, halve icing quantities, and make a selection to keep everyone happy.
Have a great day
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