enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Custard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Custard

    Custard is a variety of culinary preparations based on sweetened milk, cheese, or cream cooked with egg or egg yolk to thicken it, and sometimes also flour, corn starch, or gelatin. Depending on the recipe, custard may vary in consistency from a thin pouring sauce (crème anglaise) to the thick pastry cream (crème pâtissière) used to fill ...

  3. These 13 Most Popular French Pastries Will Make Your ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/13-most-popular-french-pastries...

    Profiterole. Some French pastries also start with pâte à choux, or choux paste, a hot dough made by cooking water, butter, flour, and eggs together in a saucepan; when it bakes, it puffs up and ...

  4. Custard cream - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Custard_cream

    A custard cream is a type of sandwich biscuit popular in the British Isles, and parts of the Commonwealth, filled with a creamy, custard-flavoured centre. Traditionally, the filling was buttercream (which is still used in most homemade recipes) but nowadays cheaper fats have replaced butter in mass-produced biscuits.

  5. List of pastries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_pastries

    Made from butter, milk, flour, sugar, eggs and sometimes honey, [68] recipes call for pan frying (traditionally in lard), re-frying and then baking, or baking straight away. [69] [70] Nunt: Jewish: A pastry originating from Jewish cuisine and vaguely resembles nougat.

  6. List of spreads - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_spreads

    Citadel spread – paste made of peanut butter, oil, sugar, and milk powder; Clotted cream [8] ... Peanut butter; Obatzda – a Bavarian cheese spread, ...

  7. Mille-feuille - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mille-feuille

    According to the Oxford Companion to Sugar and Sweets, mille-feuille recipes from 17th century French and 18th century English cookbooks are a precursor to layer cakes.. The earliest mention of the name mille-feuille itself appears in 1733 in an English-language cookbook written by French chef Vincent La Chapelle. [4]

  8. Éclair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Éclair

    Once cool, the pastry is filled with custard (crème pâtissière), whipped cream or chiboust cream, then iced with fondant icing. [3] Other fillings include pistachio- and rum-flavoured custard, fruit-flavoured fillings, or chestnut purée. The icing is sometimes caramel, in which case the dessert may be called a bâton de Jacob [4] (lit.

  9. Chiboust cream - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chiboust_cream

    Crème chiboust is a crème pâtissière (pastry cream) lightened with meringue, though whipped cream is sometimes substituted for the meringue. It is the filling for the gâteau St-Honoré, supposedly created and developed in 1847 by the pastry chef M. Chiboust of the pastry shop that was located on the Paris street Rue Saint-Honoré. [1]