Pastry
Pastry
Pastry
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article is about the food. For the distributed hash table system,
see Pastry (DHT).
Pastries
Palmier pastries
Place of origin
Worldwide
Main ingredients
Often flour, sugar, milk, butter, lard or shorte
ning, baking powder, eggs
Media: Pastries
The French word pâtisserie is also used in English (with or without the accent)
for the same foods. Originally, the French word pastisserie referred to
anything, such as a meat pie, made in dough (paste, later pâte) and not
typically a luxurious or sweet product.[3] This meaning still persisted in the
nineteenth century, though by then the term more often referred to the sweet
and often ornate confections implied today.
Pastry can also refer to the pastry dough,[4] from which such baked products
are made. Pastry dough is rolled out thinly and used as a base for baked
products.
Types[edit]
Main article: List of pastries
Shortcrust pastry
Shortcrust pastry is the simplest and most common pastry. It is
made with flour, fat, butter, salt, and water to bind the dough.
[5] pâte brisée is the French version of classic pie or tart
Choux pastry
Choux pastry is a very light pastry that is often filled
with cream. Unlike other types of pastry, choux is in fact closer
to a dough before being cooked which gives it the ability to be
piped into various shapes such as the éclair and profiterole.
Its name originates from the French choux, meaning cabbage,
owing to its rough cabbage-like shape after cooking.[11]
Choux begins as a mixture of milk or water and butter which are
heated together until the butter melts, to which flour is added to
form a dough. Eggs are then beaten into the dough to further
enrich it. This high percentage of water causes the pastry to
expand into a light, hollow pastry. Initially, the water in the
dough turns to steam in the oven and causes the pastry to rise;
then the starch in the flour gelatinizes, thereby solidifying the
pastry.[12] Once the choux dough has expanded, it is taken out of
the oven; a hole is made in it to let the steam out. The pastry is
then placed back in the oven to dry out and become crisp. The
pastry is filled with various flavors of cream and is often topped
with chocolate. Choux pastries can also be filled with
ingredients such as cheese, tuna, or chicken to be used as
appetizers.
Phyllo (Filo)
Phyllo is a paper-thin pastry dough that is used in many layers.
The phyllo is generally wrapped around a filling and brushed with
butter before baking. These pastries are very delicate and flaky.
[13]
Definitions[edit]
Croissants
Chemistry[edit]
Different kinds of pastry doughs are made by utilizing the natural
characteristics of wheat flour and certain fats. When wheat flour is mixed with
water and kneaded into plain dough, it develops strands of gluten, which are
what make bread tough and elastic. In a typical pastry, however, this
toughness is unwanted, so fat or oil is added to slow down the development of
gluten. Pastry flour can also be used, since it typically has a lower level of
protein than all-purpose or bread flours.[18]
Lard or suet work well because they have a coarse, crystalline structure that
is very effective. Using unclarified butter does not work well because of its
water content; clarified butter, or ghee, which is virtually water-free, is better,
but shortcrust pastry using only butter may develop an inferior texture. If the
fat is melted with hot water or if liquid oil is used, the thin oily layer between
the grains offers less of an obstacle to gluten formation and the resulting
pastry is tougher.[19]
History[edit]
A typical Mediterranean baklava, a phyllo dough pastry sweetened with nuts and honey
Russian pirozhki
It was not until about the mid-16th century that actual pastry recipes began
appearing.[19][21] These recipes were adopted and adapted over time in various
European countries, resulting in the myriad pastry traditions known to the
region, from Portuguese "pastéis de nata" in the west to Russian "pirozhki" in
the east. The use of chocolate in pastry-making in the west, so commonplace
today, arose only after Spanish and Portuguese traders brought chocolate to
Europe from the New World starting in the 16th century. Many culinary
historians consider French pastry chef Antonin Carême (1784–1833) to have
been the first great master of pastry making in modern times.
Pastry chefs[edit]
See also: List of pastry chefs
Gallery[edit]
A Linzer torte
A petit four
Liège-style waffles
Argentine sweet pionono
Strudel, a phyllo pastry
See also[edit]
Food portal
Bakery
Cake shop
Danish pastry
Doughnut
Hot water crust pastry
Hübner Haus
Jesuite
Konditorei
Kuo Yuan Ye Museum of Cake and Pastry
List of baked goods
List of desserts
List of food preparation utensils
List of pastries
Mold (cooking implement)
Pan dulce (sweet bread)
Pastry brush
Pastry fork
Pie crust
References[edit]
1. ^ Bo Friberg (March 2002). Professional Pastry Chef. John Wiley and Sons. ISBN 0-471-21825-1.
2. ^ L. Patrick Coyle (1982). The World Encyclopedia of Food. Facts on File Inc. ISBN 0-87196-417-1.
3. ^ Jim Chevallier, A History of the Food of Paris: From Roast Mammoth to Steak Frites, 2018, ISBN 1442272821, p. 73, 102
4. ^ "Definition of 'pastry'". Oxford English Dictionary. Archived from the original on 23 August 2016. Retrieved 7 January 2015.
8. ^ "Tarts". The Art and Soul of Baking. Andrews McMeel Publishing. 21 October 2008. p. 207. ISBN 978-0-7407-7334-1. Retrieved 29
October 2013.
9. ^ Peter Barham (2001). "Short crust variations". The Science of Cooking. Springer. p. 183. ISBN 978-3-540-67466-5. Retrieved 29
October 2013.
18. ^ Inc., King Arthur Flour Company. "Professional Baker's Reference: A Guide to the Numbers | King Arthur Flour". King Arthur Flour. Archived
from the original on 2017-10-24. Retrieved 2018-01-03. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
19. ^ Jump up to: Jaine, Tom, and Soun Vannithone. The Oxford Companion to Food. New York: Oxford UP, 1999
a b
External links[edit]
"Pastry" – Encyclopædia Britannica
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