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Paul Hollywood's Pies and Puds is a British cookery television series that was first broadcast on BBC One in November 2013. Each episode shows Paul Hollywood cooking three recipes. [1] In addition to that, he goes around the United Kingdom looking for traditional local recipes and the stories behind them. [1]
The oldest known documented recipe for puff pastry in France was included in a charter by Robert, bishop of Amiens in 1311. [5] The first recipe to explicitly use the technique of tourage (the action of encasing solid butter within dough layers, keeping the fat intact and separate, by folding several times) was published in 1651 by François ...
From key lime or cherry pie in the summer, pumpkin and apple pie in the fall, or a cozy chicken pot pie in the depths of winter, there’s a pie for every season. bhofack2/ iStock The Basics of Pie
A pithivier (English: / p ɪ t ɪ ˈ v j eɪ /; [1] French: pithiviers, IPA: ⓘ) is a round, enclosed pie usually made by baking two disks of puff pastry, with a filling stuffed in between. [2] It has the appearance of a hump and is traditionally decorated with spiral lines drawn from the top outwards with the point of a knife, and scalloping ...
Medieval recipes generally included a shortcrust and puff pastry case filled with a mixture of cream, milk, or broth, with eggs, sweeteners such as sugar or honey, and sometimes spices. Recipes existed as early as the fourteenth century that would still be recognisable as custard tarts today. [5]
A Dutch sausage roll (saucijzenbroodje) showing the puff pastry surrounding the roll of minced meat inside. The basic composition of a sausage roll is sheets of puff pastry formed into tubes around sausage meat and glazed with egg or milk before being baked. [2] They can be served either hot or cold.
It is a beef filet enveloped together with duxelles in puff pastry, baked, and served with a truffle or Madeira sauce. The author, who mastered her cooking skills both in Paris and Vienna at the end of the 19th century, claimed that she had received this recipe from the cook of the imperial court in Vienna.
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]