3000 readers a day
Mangiamaccheroni FXcuisine.com  

Pistachier at Lenôtre (page 2 of 2)

 Home >> Recipes
Keywords ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦
Feedback13 comments - leave yours!
ZOOMLarger imagesPrint
Print
A pistachio-flavored little cake served with coffee in French gastronomic restaurants. If you get the pistachio paste, you can make it too.
Page1  2  

Beat the egg whites into a foam and delicately fold in. Mix gently.

Fill a pastry bag with the mix.

Fill a star-shaped rubber cake pan with the mix, each no more than 3/4 full. If you don't have pastry bags - I don't - then try filling the pan with a spoon and God helps you.

Garnish each cake with a pistachio.

Bake at 160°C for 15 minutes. Lenôtre recommends turning the tray around at midtime to ensure the heat is bestowed evenly on the cakes.

Turn out the pistachiers and let them cool, upside down until you serve. They are best served warm.


151345 views


Did you like this article? Leave me a comment or see my most popular articles.

Related Articles

A Pastry Class at the Paris Lenôtre school ***
Lenôtre offers high-end non-professional pastry classes in Paris. Are they worth the time and money? Who attends? What do you actually learn? Read my account of a Brioche and Kugelhopf class at Lenôtre's school on the Champs-Elysées.


Making Your Own Meringues ** Popular
Meringue is the most obvious pastry to bake when you have too many egg whites, and yet many home chefs are frightened to try homemade meringues. See how easy they are if you go by the book.


Tuiles à l'orange Lenotre Baking Class **
Back at the Lenôtre pastry school in Paris to make tuiles à l'orange - a smart tile-shaped flat cookie served with tea in gastronomic restaurants.


  Most Popular ¦ Most Recent ¦ By Subject ¦ Last Comments

Copyright FXcuisine 2024 - all rights reserved.
If you do this recipe at home please let me know how it worked for you by submitting a comment or send me a picture if you can. Thanks!



13 Comments

  • #1
  • Comment by Patrick Smith
Pistachier recipe.I am wondering if one of these star shaped cakes is sufficient for a dessert serving? What is the dimension of the "star." I live in the US and have found some rubber pnas by wilton that have 6 stars per pan. Where did you find the pictured ones with 12?many thanks for your time and attention.Patrick
  • #2
  • Answered by fx
These pans belong to the Lenôtre school of pastry but they can be bought in many professional pastry chef stores such as Mora in Paris (mora.fr). I do not know the volume of the stars but you can always fill the pan twice if you make too much dough. Good luck!
  • #3
  • Comment by Devouassoux
In this recipe you don't indicate when the "beurre noisette" should be add. Nevertheless , thank you very much for having given this delicious recipe .
  • #4
  • Answered by fx
Chantal, you can add the butter to the well-mixed dried ingredients right before folding in the beaten whites. Good luck!
  • #5
  • Comment by bakeress
I love your site! Do you have any idea where I could find the star-shaped rubber cake mold in Paris? I'm dying to get my hands on some -they look so fun!
  • #6
  • Answered by fx
Bakeress, my favorite choice to get these molds is Mora at Rue Montmartre. Or Kappashi Dori in Tokyo, or the Internet!
  • #7
  • Comment by Mary Sanavia
For filling the molds easily with the batter,you can use a plastic bag (like ziploc) with one corner snipped off. (Don't use it if it's for a thick batter,like choux dough.)
  • #8
  • Answered by fx
Mary Sanavia, thanks for this great tip, these plastic freezer bags make great pastry bags for sure!
  • #9
  • Comment by lara
the pistachio cakes sounds interesting. is there any chance of getting the pistachio paste reipe? i live in fiji and we def do not have the paste here.

thanks
  • #10
  • Answered by fx
Lara, of course I have a whole article about homemade pistacchio paste - it's here: http://fxcuisine.com/default.asp?Display=85
  • #11
  • Comment by audrey
They look absolutely lovely.  Must try them.  I am trying to get some pistachio paste, I believe you can get it here in the UK, but if not will try and make some.

  • FX's answer→ Audrey you can look my other article about making your own Pistachio paste.

  • #13
  • Comment by Joanna
Dear FX:
I like very much your website, stories and especially the recipes! I would love to try to make these tea cakes this weekend, but I have a small favor to ask you: Could you please be kind enough to review the instructions for the recipe? you mention "sugar" and "Baking Powder" in the ingredients but they are not used. Did you mean to add the baking powder with the flour, and the sugar to the egg whites after whipping them to medium soft peaks? (this is my guess..). Also, this "sugar", is it regular white granulated sugar?

Sincerely,
Joanna

 Tell me what you think!

Write a comment below to let me know what you think about my article or ask any question you may have.

 (required)

 E-Mail (required, will not be displayed)

 (optional)



Please follow me on Instagram for lots of new content every week!
Francois

Subscribe and you'll never miss an article:
or RSS.







Sponsored links: DHTML Menu By Milonic JavaScript