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  2. 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 ...

  3. Tips for Working with and Storing Puff Pastry - AOL

    www.aol.com/tips-working-storing-puff-pastry...

    This lemony tart is loaded with fontina cheese and fresh asparagus. ... serve these oven-fresh pastries with a scoop of creamy vanilla ice cream. Cherry pie filling can be substituted for the ...

  4. Daisy (perfume) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daisy_(perfume)

    Daisy has branched off many collections including Eau So Fresh, Eau So Intense, Eau So Sweet, Daisy Dream, Daisy Dream Daze, Daisy Dream Twinkle, Daisy Love, Daisy Love Skies, Daisy Love Daze, Daisy Sunshine, Daisy Hot Pink, and Daisy Spring. For the first three years of the product, Russian model Irina Kulikova was the face of the ...

  5. Profiterole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Profiterole

    The pastry cook's art of choux pastry began to develop around the 17th century. [14] The patissier Jean Avice [ 16 ] developed the pastry further in the middle of the 18th century and created choux buns, with the dough becoming known as 'pâte à choux', since only choux buns were made from it.

  6. List of Chinese bakery products - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Chinese_bakery...

    Cream horn – Long tapered cone of puff pastry, filled with whipped cream, and sometimes fruit or jam; Eclair – Very similar to the French original; Egg tart – Delicate pastry tart with a lightly sweet golden egg custard filling; [2] probably influenced by the Portuguese tart pastels de nata; Napoleon – Layers of puff pastry and creamy ...

  7. Choux pastry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Choux_pastry

    The full term is commonly said to be a corruption of French pâte à chaud (lit. ' hot pastry/dough ').The term "choux" has two meanings in the early literature. One is a kind of cheese puff, first documented in the 13th century; the other corresponds to the modern choux pastry and is documented in English, German, and French cookbooks in the 16th century.

  8. List of choux pastry dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_choux_pastry_dishes

    An oblong pastry filled with a cream and topped with icing. Gougère: Savory France A baked savory pastry made of choux dough mixed with cheese. Karpatka: Sweet Poland: A cake made of one sheet of short pastry on the bottom and one sheet of choux pastry on the top (or two sheets of choux pastry), filled with custard or buttercream. Usually ...

  9. Viennoiserie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viennoiserie

    Viennoiseries (French: [vjɛnwazʁi]; English: "things in the style of Vienna") are French baked goods made from a yeast-leavened dough in a manner similar to bread, or from puff pastry, but with added ingredients (particularly eggs, butter, milk, cream and sugar), which give them a richer, sweeter character that approaches that of pastry. [1]