Category Archives: Summer Desserts

Profiteroles aux Deux Chocolats – Profiteroles with White and Dark Chocolate Sauces

Profiteroles at Cafe du Soleil - Photo by Philippe Touitou

Profiteroles are one of the most popular desserts at Cafe du Soleil, especially during the hot summer months. They have the elements of any great ice cream dish – ice cream, whipped cream and chocolate sauce. The French add a nice crisp “pate a choux” (which literally translates to “cabbage pastry” , based on the shape of the cooked product). It’s an easy dough to make at home once you get the hang of it. There really are few pitfalls so please try it with confidence. Even though the recipe may look complicated – it’s not. At Cafe du Soleil we serve them with two sauces – white and dark chocolate, but you can just as easily serve it with one.

After seeing the beautiful photo above done by Philippe Touitou I dare you not to try this recipe!!

Profiteroles aux Deux Chocolats

Serves 6 – Pastry recipe makes about 12 large “Choux Puffs” so you will have an extra 6 for another round of profiteroles, or fill with whipped cream and dust with powdered sugar for cream puffs! They freeze well but you should “recrisp” them in oven after defrosting.

Pastry:

1/2 cup water

2 ozs butter, unsalted

pinch salt

1/2 cup (about 2 1/2 ozs) all purpose flour

2 large eggs

Profiteroles:

6 large scoops of your favorite vanilla ice cream

2 cups whipped cream

strawberries, powdered sugar, and mint for garnish

Chocolate Sauces:

Dark:

4 ounces semisweet or bittersweet chocolate,  finely chopped (better quality chocolate = better sauce)

1/2 cup heavy cream

1/4 cup light corn syrup

White:

4 ounces white chocolate

1/2 cup heavy cream

Method:

Choux pastry:

Preheat the oven to 450°F.

Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. Set up a heavy-duty mixer with the paddle attachment.

Combine the water, butter, sugar, and salt in a medium saucepan and bring to a simmer over medium-high heat. Reduce the heat to medium, add the flour all at once, and stir rapidly with a stiff heatproof spatula or wooden spoon until the dough pulls away from the sides of the pan and the bottom of the pan is clean, with no dough sticking to it.

Enough moisture must evaporate from the dough to allow it to absorb more fat when the eggs are added. Continue to stir for about 2-3 minutes, adjusting the heat as necessary to prevent the dough from coloring. A thin coating will form on the bottom and sides of the pan. When enough moisture has evaporated, steam will rise from the dough and there will be the nutty aroma of cooked flour.

Transfer the dough to the mixer bowl and mix for a minute to release some of the heat from the dough. With the mixer on medium speed, add the eggs, one at a time, beating until each egg is completely incorporated before adding the next one; scrape down the sides of the bowl as necessary.

Place the dough in a pastry bag fitted with a 1/2-inch plain tip. Pipe 12 disks about 2 1/2 inches across and about 1/2 inch thick on the baking sheet, leaving about 1 inch between them, as they will expand when baked. You may need an additional baking sheet in order not to crowd them too much.

Bake the puffs for 10 minutes, turn the sheet around, turn the oven down to 350°F, and bake 15 minutes more. Remove one puff and break it open: It should be hollow inside and not gooey or eggy; if it is still moist, return it to the oven and check in 5 minutes. Cool the puffs completely on the baking sheet. Store in an airtight container until serving time.

Chocolate Sauces:

Technique is the same for both sauces (minus the corn syrup in the white chocolate sauce) -

Place the chocolate in a metal bowl.

Combine the cream and corn syrup in a small  saucepan and bring to a simmer. Pour the liquid over the chocolate and allow it to sit for 3 to 4 minutes, or until the chocolate has melted. Whisk to combine. Allow the sauce to cool slightly, then pour into a bowl or other container.

To serve:
Preheat the oven to 300°F.

Warm the chocolate sauces in a double boiler or a microwave. Split each profiterole in half,  and warm on a baking sheet in the oven until crisp.

Place bottom half of each puff on serving plate. Place a large scoop of ice cream in the bottom half of each profiterole and top with the lid. Spoon the sauces over and decorate each plate with a generous amount of whipped cream, a few strawberries, powdered sugar, and mint.

Now tell me what could be bad about that?!!!

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Filed under Baked Goods, Dessert, Doughs, French Regional Specialties, Pastry Basics, Sauces, Summer Desserts

Mixed Berry Gratin with Champagne Sabayon

 

 

 

This is one of my favorite desserts at Cafe du Soleil – it’s so light that it makes the perfect ending to a big meal. This same sabayon technique can be used for savory dishes. You would just make the Champagne sabayon described below, omitting the sugar in both the sabayon and in the whipped cream. And I usually add a little finely chopped shallots in with the yolks and Champagne. Spread over steamed asparagus (or lump crabmeat and asparagus), sprinkled with a little grated Parmesan cheese and browned under the broiler, it makes a very professional looking (and great tasting) appetizer.

 

 

 

Mixed Berry Gratin with Champagne Sabayon            Yield: 4 servings

 

Ingredients:

Ratio                 Weight               Volume          Ingredient

1 part                4 ozs                     (4)             Egg Yolks, XL

1 part                4 ozs                 (1/2 cup)      Champagne,       

1 Tbsp/yolk       4 Tbsp              (1/4 cup)       Sugar, Granulated

 

Add-Ins:          1 cup                 Whipped Cream (lightly sweetened)

                         2 cups               Mixed Fresh Berries

                                                   Fresh mint for garnish

 

Method:

 

1)       Fill a medium saucepan half full with water and bring to a simmer.

2)       Combine yolks, Champagne, and sugar in a medium stainless steel or heat resistant glass bowl. Whisk together for a few minutes until well blended.

3)       Place mixing bowl over simmering water (it should not touch the water) and whisk for about 10 – 15 minutes until the mixture about triples in volume. Don’t let the mixture get too hot or it will scramble the eggs (in other words if you see steam rising from the surface it’s getting too hot). The finished texture should be like lightly whipped cream.

4)       The sabayon can be served warm at this point, or chilled.

5)    When cold, fold in whipped cream and set aside. This can be made well in advance if you like and kept cold until ready to use.

6)    While the sabayon is chilling, clean berries and arrange           decoratively on four plates.

7)       When ready to serve, place plates in a 350F oven to warm for about 2 minutes. Remove from oven and spoon sabayon mixture evenly over the berries. Place plates under the broiler until sabayon is lightly browned, or use a blowtorch to brown them as you would for a Crème Brulee. Garnish with fresh mint sprigs.

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Filed under Dessert, French Regional Specialties, Pastry Basics, Ratio Recipes, Summer Desserts

Warm Blueberry Pie with Almond Crumb Topping

I was walking by the market the other day and saw blueberries at 2 half pints for $5.00 and I thought of this great pie recipe I usually make in the summer during blueberry season. So I thought it would be great to bring a little summer into January and share this recipe with you. 

This pie is really the best of both worlds – it’s a blueberry crisp or crumble in a pie shell. It’s quick, easy, and delicious!! I wouldn’t substitute frozen blueberries in this recipe because the texture will be completely different. The beauty of this pie is that the blueberries don’t become that teeth and denture-staining mush that is usually served as Blueberry Pie. You could just as easily omit the pastry and bake it in a baking dish as a crisp. And you could substitute other berries or fruit, or use a different crisp or a crumble topping if you have one that you prefer.

 

 

 

For the pastry shell you can use a slightly sweetened shell if you want but I don’t think it’s necessary. Just add about 2 Tbsp. sugar per pie shell. You can reduce the liquid in the pie shell also to have a more tender crust since the filling of this pie isnt very loose. Use about 2 ozs. liquid (based on 10 ozs. flour) instead of 3ozs. - so that would be 1 egg, or 1 oz. egg + 1 oz. water (remember our hydration formula – this would be a 20% hydration dough).

You could also increase the fat if you want a richer dough. Remember what I said about fat ratios – you can go as high as you dare up to 100 % of the flour weight (and probably higher – but I’ve never tried that). In Pro lingo we also say that this would be a ”shorter” dough, as in shortbread. Fat shortens the strands of gluten that make a tougher, more durable crust, so the more fat you have the more tender the crust. But please remember this is food and your body needs to be nourished, not sent into shock trying to digest all that fat!

Warm Blueberry Pie with Almond Crumb Topping: 

 

1 9” Pastry Shell from my recent blog on unsweetened pie dough

 

Filling:

¼ cup AP Flour

2 Tbsp. Cornstarch

2 Tbsp. Brown Sugar

2 Tbsp. Granulated Sugar

pinch Ground Cinnamon

pinch Ground Nutmeg

1 pint Fresh Blueberries

Juice of 1/2 Lemon

 

Topping:

2 Tbsp. AP Flour

2 Tbsp. Brown Sugar

1 Tbsp Granulated Sugar

pinch Ground Nutmeg

1 oz. Butter, unsalted, softened

2 Tbsp. Rolled Oats

¼ cup Almonds, sliced, blanched  

 

Method:

 

Oven at 350F.

 

1. Pre-bake pastry shell as follows: Prick bottom of shell with a fork all over, Cover with foil, or baking parchment, add pie weights (or any dried beans), and bake for about 20 minutes, then carefully remove foil and weights and bake an additional 5 – 10 minutes until lightly browned. Set aside to cool slightly.

 

2. While the pie shell is baking, make the filling as follows: In a small bowl combine dry ingredients. Add the blueberries and the lemon juice and toss gently. Set aside.

 

3. For the topping: Combine all ingredients and set aside.

 

4. To assemble and bake: Pour the blueberry filling into the baked pie shell, sprinkle loosely with the topping. Bake for 25-35 minutes until the topping has attained a nice color. Serve while still warm, accompanied by ice cream or whipped cream.

 

 

 

 

I hope you enjoy the pie – Please comment or send questions and/or suggestions…

   

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Filed under Baked Goods, Dessert, Summer Desserts