Choux au craquelin may sound fancy, but
they're just fancy cream puffs. The craquelin, a simple cookie-like dough made
of sugar, butter, flour, and a pinch of salt, is rolled out, sliced, and
perched on top of piped choux before being baked together to create pastry
puffs with a crackly look, crunchy feel, and a buttery, sweet bite.
What to Grab
4 ounces (1/2 cup) light brown
sugar
4 ounces (1 stick) unsalted
butter, cut into 1/2-inch cubes, and softened to about 68°F
4 ounces (about 1 scant cup)
all-purpose flour, sifted
1/8 teaspoon kosher salt; for
table salt, use half as much by volume
One recipe Choux Pastry (made
with water), transferred to a pastry bag fitted with a 1/2-inch plain round tip
One recipe vanilla, chocolate,
or lemon pastry cream, or one recipe crème légère, transferred to a pastry bag
fitted with a 1/4-inch plain round tip
To Make the Craquelin Top by
Hand: Mash together brown sugar and butter in a medium bowl with a flexible
spatula, then stir until smooth and fluffy, around 3 minutes. Mix in the flour
and salt until no dry flour remains and a damp, crumbly meal forms, about 2
minutes. Alternatively, to make the Craquelin top in a stand mixer, follow
these steps: In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment,
beat the brown sugar and butter on medium speed for 2 minutes, or until smooth
and fluffy.
Using a lightweight spatula,
scrape down the bowl and beater. Add flour and salt, then beat on medium-low
speed for 2 minutes, or until no dry flour remains and a damp, crumbly meal
forms. Bring the dough together with your hands to form a disc (it will be a
bit sticky but do not add extra flour). Set a sheet of parchment paper on a
work surface and place the dough on top. Shape the dough into a 6-by-8-inch
flat rectangle.
Place a second sheet of
parchment paper on top. Roll out the dough with a rolling pin into a
1/8-inch-thick rough rectangle (it should be around 12-by-14 inches in size);
reposition all sheets of parchment paper if required to avoid creasing.
Transfer the dough, along with the parchment paper, to a rimmed baking sheet
and freeze for 5 minutes, or until it is cold (or refrigerate until cold, about
15 minutes). Line a second baking sheet of parchment paper in the meantime.
Take off the top sheet of
parchment leaf. Stamp 18 bits of craquelin with a 2-inch circular cutter.
Working easily, place the craquelin rounds in a single layer on the prepared
baking sheet and return to the freezer; you will need to slip an offset spatula
under the cut-outs to remove them from the parchment paper. Scraps of craquelin
dough can be re-rolled, chilled, and cut into fresh rounds if needed (see Make
Ahead section for more on holding extra, uncooked rounds).
Preheat oven to 375°F (191°C),
with one rack in the upper-middle position and the other in the lower-middle
position. Preheat the oven to 350°F. Line two baking sheets with parchment
paper. Under each corner of the parchment leaf, pipe a small amount of choux
paste (the dough acts as a glue and keeps the paper in place as you pipe).
Apply steady downward pressure
to the packed pastry bag when holding it at a 90° angle, and pipe a 2-inch-wide
choux (see note). To end piping, release the pressure and swirl the pastry tip
free. Continue piping choux about 3 inches apart until you have a limit of 9
choux. Rep for the second tray. Top each choux with a craquelin cut-out, make
sure it's parallel to the baking sheet's floor, then gently press down to
ensure it adheres to the highest point of the piped choux. Bake all trays for
30 minutes, flipping racks and turning trays front to back after 20 minutes, or
until choux au craquelin are puffed, deeply golden brown, and feel hollow when
removed.
Filling for Sandwich-Style Choux
au Craquelin: Switch off the cooker. Enable the trays to sit in the oven for 30
minutes with the oven door partially open. Remove from oven and set aside for
15 minutes to cool fully. Slice each puff in half with a serrated knife to make
a top and bottom "bun." Fill a pastry bag fitted with a 3/4-inch star
tip with your preferred filling (see notes section below for filling
instructions). Start piping with steady pressure to generously fill the bottom
half of each choux, one at a time. Top each choux with the top half of a choux.
Repeat before all of the choux au craquelin have been completed. Serve right
away.
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