Chocolate Eclairs
From BBC Food
Raymond Blanc's recipe for chocolate
éclairs is full of tips and
advice, including how to freeze.
Equipment and preparation: You will need a large piping bag fitted with
a 1.5cm/½in fluted nozzle and a 0.5cm/¼in nozzle.
Ingredients
For the choux pastry
4 tbsp water
4 tbsp whole milk
50g/2oz unsalted butter, at
room temperature
1 tsp caster sugar
pinch sea salt
100g/4oz plain flour
4 medium free-range eggs,
beaten
For the filling
20g/¾oz unsweetened
chocolate, 100% cocoa solids
450g/1lb pastry cream
(crème patissière), at room temperature (see Top recipe
tip below)
1 tbsp strong cocoa powder,
sifted
For the glaze
200g/7oz white fondant icing
1 tbsp cocoa powder
1-2 tsp water
Method
Preheat the oven to 170C/325F/Gas 3.
For the choux pastry, place the water, milk, butter, sugar and salt in
a medium saucepan over a high heat and bring the mixture to a boil.
Remove the pan from the heat and, using a wooden spoon, quickly beat in
the flour until the mixture is completely smooth.
Turn the heat down to medium, return the pan to the hob and cook for
about one minute, beating all the time, or until the mixture comes away
from the edge of the pan.
Remove the pan from the heat and gradually beat in the eggs until you
have a smooth, dropping consistency. (You are looking for the mixture
to just drop from the spoon, not run off it; you may not need all of
the egg to reach this stage. )
Transfer the paste to a large piping bag fitted with a 1.5cm/½in
fluted nozzle and let the mixture to cool for about five minutes in the
bag to stiffen slightly before you begin the piping.
Line a large baking tray with greaseproof paper and pipe on 12
éclairs, each about 15cm/6in long. Alternatively, for a more
professional and uniform finish, pipe four rows of pastry, each about
36cm/14in long, onto a non-stick tray and freeze. Cut the frozen strips
into three and either defrost and cook as below, or bake from frozen
and add five minutes to the cooking time.
Bake the éclairs in the preheated oven for 30-35 minutes or
until golden-brown, then transfer to a rack and leave to cool.
For the filling, melt the chocolate in a bowl over a pan of simmering
water. Do not let the bottom of the bowl touch the water or the
chocolate will burn.
Pour the melted chocolate into the pastry cream, mix in the cocoa
powder and whisk together to a smooth consistency. You could chill the
mixture at this point for 30 minutes, then whisk again before you fill
the éclairs, to give a creamier mouth-feel to the filling.
When you are ready to fill the éclairs, transfer the filling to
a piping bag fitted with a 0.5cm/¼in nozzle. Pierce the
underside of each éclair four times with the tip of the nozzle,
gently squirting a little of the filling into the éclair as you
do so.
For the glaze, gently warm the fondant in a small pan over a low heat
until it reaches body temperature.
Stir in the cocoa powder and enough of the water to make a smooth
paste, then transfer to a piping bag fitted with a 1.5cm/½in
nozzle.
Pipe the glaze onto the top of each éclair, removing any excess
with the back of your finger, then place in the fridge for the glaze to
set before serving.
Top recipe tip
The éclair cases can be baked in advance and frozen. Defrost for
one hour then fill them with the pastry cream. Alternatively, you could
freeze the éclairs uncooked and cook them straight from the
freezer when required, in which case add five minutes to the cooking
time. The pasty cream (or crème patissière) can be made
up to three days in advance and stored in the fridge. Alternatively
flavour the pastry cream with coffee or vanilla extract instead of
chocolate and do not add the cocoa powder to the glaze.
Required techniques
By Raymond Blanc
From Raymond Blanc's Kitchen Secrets
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