This is the perfect destination where you can discover an array of exquisite recipes for macarons and an assortment of other delectable desserts that Mauderne loves to showcase in its delightful baking classes and bespoke dessert orders.
Choux Pastry Recipe by Mauderne
If you’d like to make them at home, book your space to our exclusive choux pastry classes in Central London.
In this recipe, discover how to make chou pastry from scratch at home without any specific kitchen appliances
After trying out different recipes with and without milk, I am sharing with you my go to recipe step by step to make chou pastry. You can use it for eclairs, choux, st honore, paris brest, profiteroles, gougeres
For 16 eclairs or 20 choux or 12 paris-brest
Ingredients
100g of water
100g whole milk
1.5g salt
12g sugar
88g butter
114g flour
200g eggs
Steps
In a saucepan, heat the milk with the water, salt and sugar as well as the butter previously cut into cubes. Off the heat, add the sifted flour all at once then mix vigorously with a wooden spoon to avoid lumps and have a homogeneous preparation.
Return the pan to low heat and let the dough dry out, stirring constantly. After a while it will come off the sides of the pan, then put it in a bowl to stop the cooking.
Then add the eggs one by one, stirring well between each addition to obtain a smooth batter. Make a furrow with the spatula if it closes slowly it's good if not add a little egg to loosen it. Put in a piping bag and pipe on a baking sheet previously buttered chou shapes or éclairs.
Bake at 190° for 30 min
Tips
Bit the batter before adding the eggs in step 3 to remove some of the steam
Glaze with melted butter the top of the eclair before putting in the oven
Basics to know how to make Pate A Choux by Massy
Follow this recipe to make a soft and perfect choux pastry at home
For approximately 12 eclairs or 30 choux pastry
Ingredients
Sweet choux pastry:
250g g butter
375g eggs
235 g flour
250g water
35g milk
1 pinch of salt
Steps
In a saucepan, mix the water butter and salt. Cook over low heat until boiling, stirring with a wooden spoon until the butter melts completely. Remove the pan from the heat and add the flour all at once. Mix vigorously to prevent lumps from forming.
Once the dough comes off the walls and forms a ball, put the pan back on very low heat to dry out the dough for 2 minutes while stirring. Still off the heat, add the milk an egg and mix to blend well. Repeat the process with each egg, adding them one by one.
Work the dough until it is smooth and forms a ribbon around the spoon.
Tips
Preparation time: 15 minutes
Cooking time: 20-25 minutes
Oven temperature: 190°C
This dough can be used for choux, eclairs, chouquettes, profiteroles and religieuses
Come to Mauderne's baking classes to learn the tips and secrets about how to make choux pastry and eclairs at home
Where To Go For The Best Choux Pastry In Paris And In London
If you didn’t know yet where to eat the best eclairs in the world now you have to address to pin on your to do list in London and Paris. And if you’d like to make them at home, book your space to our exclusive choux pastry classes in Central London.
Eclair de Genie in Paris
The French have a deep and long-running love affair with their éclairs, and no wonder. It's a classic French treat adored by Parisians since the 19th century, it's iced and stuffed with cream, and it's delicious. But in a fast-paced culinary world replete with "sexier," globally influenced sweets—think pastel-colored macaroons, trendy cronuts, fruity brûlées—the éclair seems almost antiquated, dull, and heavy. How can this traditional (and frankly, unattractive) French dessert keep up with the 21st century?
If you’re planning a Eurostar trip to Paris, then enter Christophe Adam, pastry chef and owner of L’Éclair de Génie in Paris's Marais district. Adam has transformed and modernized the classic French éclair into a dessert that is fresh and appealing. He dresses his éclairs in stunning rainbow colors, finishes them off with edible powdered silver, and throws into the mix fun flavors like yuzu, salted caramel, orange pistachio, and even caramel popcorn. Basically, he's made the old éclair cool again.
Adam has also somehow managed to make his toughest critics—Parisians themselves —fall in love with these reinventions.** **The shop's long lines of locals are evidence of this (so if you want to get your hands on those mouthwatering éclairs, you'd better come early). We highly recommend the Praliné noisette (hazelnut and praline), and the Choco Coco (crispy milk chocolate, with a coconut cream filling). They will change the way you see éclairs—and desserts in general. (14 Rue Pavée; +33 1 42 77 85 11, www.leclairdegenie.com__)
Read more at https://www.cntraveler.com/stories/2013-10-15/photos-l-eclair-de-genie-bakery-paris-france
It’s time for these dated pastries to step aside and for you to meet their sophisticated French cousin the éclair. Forget the dry, uninspiring and somewhat tasteless offering you’re use to seeing on the shelves of the local supermarket and say hello to Maitre Choux‘s mouth-watering éclairs – pastry perfection.
Maître Choux is the brainchild of Jeremie Vaislic and three Michelin star-experienced pastry chef Joakim Prat, who came to London from Barcelona’s Can Fabes to take on the role of Joël Robuchon’s Head Pastry Chef at L’Atelier, before moving on to Mayfair’s The Greenhouse.
Choux pastry, a staple of every patisserie in France, it is a very malleable yet simple bakery base. In the hands of Joakim, it is transformed into something quite extraordinary.
“Traditionally, éclairs are made using chocolate and coffee flavours,” says Prat. “We add a large range of flavours to a basic pastry product. We try to play with it by adding colour, texture and flavour. From a very simple base you can get a complex product.”
Opening their first store in South Kensington in 2015, Maître Choux has since expanded with the launch of a second bakery on Soho’s Dean Street. We suggest you take a visit if you want all the charm of a French bakery with a contemporary twist.
Read more at https://www.marieclaire.co.uk/life/food-drink/the-best-pastries-in-london-maitre-choux-582388#l54eSLXkqEC1UYLk.99
Learn How To Make Basic Choux Pastry
Follow this recipe to make a soft and perfect choux pastry at home
For approximately 12 eclairs or 30 choux pastry
Ingredients
Sweet choux pastry:
100 g butter
4 eggs
150 g flour
25 g caster sugar
14 water cl
12 milk cl
1 pinch of salt
Salted choux pastry:
80 g of butter
4 eggs
65 g of flour
20 water cl
1 pinch of salt
Steps
In a saucepan, mix the water (and milk for the sweet version), butter and powdered sugar and/or salt. Cook over low heat until boiling, stirring with a wooden spoon until the butter melts completely. Remove the pan from the heat and add the flour all at once. Mix vigorously to prevent lumps from forming.
Once the dough comes off the walls and forms a ball, put the pan back on very low heat to dry out the dough for 2 minutes while stirring. Still off the heat, add an egg and mix to blend well. Repeat the process with each egg, adding them one by one.
Work the dough until it is smooth and forms a ribbon around the spoon.
Tips
Preparation time: 15 minutes
Cooking time: 35 minutes
This dough can be used for choux, eclairs, chouquettes, gougeres, profiteroles and religieuses
Come to Mauderne's baking classes to learn the tips and secrets about how to make choux pastry and eclairs at home