Questions tagged [pastry]

Pastry dough is made of fat, flour and a thin liquid. It is typically light and flaky with a tender inside.

Pastry dough is made of fat (usually butter), flour, and a thin liquid (usually water), worked together with specific techniques, and shaped into a specific final form. Pastry dough is typically light and flaky with a tender inside.

In place of butter, any fat, such as shortening or lard, may be used. A flavor-enhancing liquid, such as brandy, may be used in place of plain water.

Pastry includes croissants, some pie crusts, danishes, tarts, baklava, pâte à choux, as well as things made with phyllo dough or puff pastry.

Baked goods made from poured batter or constructed via the creaming method (beating sugar into fat creates air bubbles) are not pastry. This includes cake, cookies/UK biscuits, standard doughnuts, waffles, meringues, graham cracker pie crusts and quick-bread style muffins. Please use the and (if applicable) tags for these instead.

Dough made with yeast or little fat is not pastry; this includes bread and rolls. Use the and tag instead.

While a pastry chef is a chef who specializes in desserts, and a pastry shop (pâtisserie) would serve all kinds of sweets, these terms are used in a very broad sense and should not be taken into account when deciding what "pastry" is. For example, a pastry cook may also prepare cakes, but cakes are not literally pastries and do not belong in this tag.

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Butter Alternatives for Baking Pastry

I'm dairy intolerant but I really love to bake. I've found success by substituting butter with either lard or coconut oil. The other night, I made a short pastry dough that called for 13 tablespoons of butter to 1.5 cups of flour and instead of…
coloratura
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Temperature controlled work surface?

I made croissants yesterday, but couldn't be bothered to keep returning the pastry to the fridge in order to keep it cool, so the butter became too soft. While the end result was still pretty amazing, I couldn't include enough butter to get the…
Popup
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Giant meringue French pastry - what are these called?

A few months ago we were visiting Paris, and in Montmartre, there were several pastry shoppes with large meringues. And by large, I mean the size of someone's head, or an American football. They were usually swirled with a pastel food coloring to…
Matthew
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What is the name of this Italian pastry?

Italian pastry made at Christmas. Ingredients: Eggs Flour Whiskey Sugar Vanilla Shortening Then deep fried, and covered with powdered sugar are called "CRUSTELLIS" OR "CRUSTOLI". Instead of powdered sugar they were also given a honey bath. What…
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Why was my Danish pastry dough so wet?

I followed this recipe for a quick "Danish" dough, at http://www.ezrapoundcake.com/archives/11051; scroll down to food processor dough. The ingredients were: 1/4 CUP WARM WATER 1/2 CUP MILK, AT ROOM TEMPERATURE 1 LARGE EGG, AT ROOM TEMPERATURE 2…
Roy
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Can I bake a quiche with a flaky crust?

I want to bake a chard quiche. Normally, I would use short pastry for the crust, but I want to practice my flaky pastry skills. Still, I plan to bake it in the normal quiche form. It is white glazed ceramic, slow to heat up, slow to release heat,…
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Only recipe I can find for Anacini says "as much as plain flour as the mixture will need"

http://tuscanity.com/?p=96 What does that mean - they say "until the mixture becomes an easy workable smooth dough" - but how do you know if you haven't added enough or added too much? Do you have a better recipe?
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How do I make the filling in pain aux raisins / danish pastry

I'm making pain aux raisin, but would like some help making the jelly like filling that goes in between. The recipe here describes the filling as frangipane, yet when I make it, it is not as jelly like as I would like, and ends up being quite…
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Does "pastry" mean something different in cooking than in baking?

I was watching Iron Chef: Quest for an Iron Legend today. In the third episode, the theme of the competition was pastry, and the key ingredient they had to use was milk. This site's pastry tag says that "pastry dough is made of fat, flour and a thin…
T Hummus
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What is the proper way to make a fruit purée?

When making a fruit purée, specifically raspberry, to be used as a filling or a layer for cakes or chocolates, what is the proper way to do this? Should the berries be cooked? Should the cooking occur before or after straining the seeds? Should a…
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How do I best cut florentines from a finished (baked) baking tray?

I have baked a tray of florentine pastry, and I have spread chocolate on it (dark and milk). It's about 35 x 35 cm. Now I'd like to make cookies out of it. I know recipes say to cut the pastry when it's still warm, but it was just far too thin and…
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Why not use cornstarch instead of flour for pastries?

If when baking cakes, and especially pastries, you want less gluten formation, why not use something that has even less gluten than cake flour? What would happen if I tried to make a cake or pastry with cornstarch instead of flour?
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Why are my croissants heavy?

I have been experimenting with croissants and found that, delicious as they are, they are dense, not light and fluffy. The layers are very close together, not open with vast pockets of air. I have tried cranking up the oven to 550 when I initially…
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can I make tarte tatin without an oven?

This is killing me! Buying an oven and getting it installed isn't really an option at this time. What I'm thinking is cooking the apples in the caramel on the stovetop for longer, making a smaller version, in a mini cast iron pan. Cover the top and…
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What is the difference between using hot water and cold water when making regular pastry?

What difference in texture and taste does using hot water make to pastry? How would this compare with a standard recipe (flour, butter, salt, egg, a little cold water)?
Greybeard
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