My
first attempt at proper patisserie wasn’t as scary as I had imagined. It was a technical and methodical process
which was surprisingly quite calming – I caught myself humming once or twice. It was actually quite a pleasant overall
experience. Especially as they turned out
pretty good.
I
first saw these moulds in my local TK Maxx store. I love prowling around this store for unique
and sometimes the most irreverent baking equipment. You don’t realise you need a lime squeezer,
egg slicer, egg white separator, avocado holder and an elongated fish slice until
you see one. Surprisingly I use all
these fairly regularly now that I have them, especially the lovely long fish
slice.
These
moulds caught my eye because I had been wanting to try something more on the
patisserie side rather than cake for a while now and I know that whipped cream
or crème Chantilly (the traditional filling for cream horns) is a favourite
with my folks. I always have puff pastry
in the freezer so thought it couldn’t be that hard.
And
it wasn’t. It was a bit fiddly getting
the strips of pastry onto the moulds but once you get the hang of it things go
pretty smoothly. I didn’t use egg wash,
just some water to make them adhere once on the moulds. Once the strips are on they are wetted with
some water on a pastry brush then sprinkled with granulated sugar (I used
Demerara too).
These
look like a forest of golden fir trees.
I
stood them up in the oven which might not have been such a good idea as the
weight of the pastry made it sink as they baked and puffed up.
I later looked online at tutorials (I know I
should have done this before making them) and they had the moulds lying down
when placed in the oven.
You’d
think I would have learned my lesson and do this the second time I tried these,
but I just wanted the puff to be even all over and not flat on the side which would
be lying down, so I didn’t. I thought I
would just make the pastry strips stick better by pressing down on them more
firmly. Unfortunately this didn’t work
and yet again there were some moulds on which the pastry sank down.
The
next time I’m keeping these on their sides in the oven.
After
these cooled I spooned in a little raspberry jam then piped in some crème
Chantilly – which was so much fun. Again
I have to mention that making these is a very enjoyable process. Eating them
even more so.
I
think the combination of raspberry and crème Chantilly is an excellent one with
the puff pastry but next time I want to try these lined with some melted chocolate
or ganache and with chocolate flavoured whipped cream. Hmmm.
Cream
Horns with Crème Chantilly
(makes
about 10)
·
500g puff pastry
·
Granulated or Demerara sugar for
sprinkling
·
600ml double cream
·
1 vanilla pod, scraped and seeded
·
4 tbsp icing sugar (or more/less to
taste)
·
Raspberry jam (about half a jar)
Prepare
about 10 cream horn moulds by rubbing them with a little butter.
Roll
out the puff pastry into a rectangle about – you will be cutting one inch
strips from this so try to judge it by this.
Slice
the rectangle lengthways into roughly one inch strips. Take the mould and wrap the strip around it
making sure the strip is overlapping itself as you go down the mould.
Once
all the strips have been used, wet the pastry on the moulds with water on a
pastry brush. Then, holding it over a
large plate or tray (to catch the sugar), drizzle the sugar over the pastry so
that it is evenly coated.
Place
on a baking tray and bake at 200 C for about 30-35 minutes. Once out of the oven, allow to cool on the
tray.
To
de-mould these, squeeze the mould slightly so that the pastry case pops away
from it. The moulds for cream horns
should have this flexibility inbuilt to allow this.
Drizzle
in some seedless raspberry jam with a teaspoon, or in a piping bag fitted with a narrow
nozzle. Try to spread the jam all over
the inside and not too thickly – there shouldn't be so much that it drizzles out.
Whip
the cream with the vanilla pod a little.
Add in the icing sugar and whip until medium-stiff peaks – make sure not
to over whip and turn the cream into butter (I find that once you’ve got to the
stage where the cream is starting to peak, stop using an electric whisk and do
it gently by hand so that you have more control and don’t over-whisk).
Scoop
the cream into a large piping bag fitted with a medium star nozzle (not really
necessary if you don’t have one) and pipe into the pastry cases.
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