Five European pastries you should give a try

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Can’t resist sweets? Then you’re in  for a treat. Because Europe boasts   a huge variety of specialty pastries. Today,  we’re serving you five irresistible  creations you won’t want to pass up on. We’re starting out with Portugal’s sweetest  piece of cultural heritage: Pastéis de Belém. The pastry shop of the same name in  Lisbon has been baking the little   tarts since 1837. Pastry chef Miguel  Clarinha knows the secret recipe. The pastry shop now makes about 20,000  of the flaky delicacies a day. The cream   filling needs to be poured quickly into the  pastry. Then the pastéis are off to the oven   for 20 minutes. Traditionally while they’re  still warm: cinnamon and powdered sugar are added. The recipe was originally created in the  nearby Hieronymus monastery – now a UNESCO World Cultural Heritage site. Today, what was once a treat made  by monks is now perhaps Portugal’s   most famous pastry – and has become  popular even outside the country. Next, our journey takes us to East Germany:  Here, one typical specialty is created in   front of an open flame: Baumkuchen  – a very specific kind of spit cake. The little town of Salzwedel is considered its  home. The Erste Salzwedeler Baumkuchenfabrik   still prepares it, following the  traditional recipe from 200 years ago. The dough is made from butter and egg  yolk. The egg whites are separated. Here,   they go through some one thousand eggs a day. Wheat flour and a secret spice mix are added. And at the end, beaten egg whites and sugar. Then the dough is poured onto a  rotating wooden spit in layers   and baked in front of an open flame. As soon as the Baumkuchen has cooled down, the finishing touch is a chocolate or sugar glaze. Fun fact: Baumkucken – or tree cake – owes its name to its visible layers, which look like the rings of a tree. Now we’re off to the city of Lille, in northern  France. Meringue, chocolate, and a lot of cream:   That’s what goes into a merveilleux –  which translates to wonderful. The cake   is traditionally prepared with butter cream.  But its reinterpretation by French pastry chef   Frédérique Vaucamp is especially popular. First, egg whites and sugar are whipped into meringue. That’s baked in the oven for about an hour at 100 degrees Celsius. In the meantime,  the cream is beaten until it thickens and mixed with cocoa.  The baked meringue is coated with the cream and  covered with another dollop of meringue. It all   gets topped off with an outer cream coat and  then is rolled in bits of chocolate or nuts.  Whether the classic version with dark chocolate  or garnished with a cherry, pistachios, or nuts:   there’s a merveilleux for anyone’s taste. Next stop: Spain. They’re best enjoyed  dunked in liquid hot chocolate: churros, the champions of Spanish street foods. Lines regularly form in front of the  churrerías, like this one in Madrid. Churros are made of just three  ingredients: wheat flour, salt,   and hot water. But they’re hard work to make: The finished dough is pressed into a mold and  then fried in hot oil – making the churros   nice and crunchy. That’s how countless  churro wheels are created here every day. Cut up into smaller pieces, they’re  usually served with thick, dark,   hot chocolate, and they’re a  real hit at any time of the day. It’s important to note: You eat churros warm – and   casually with your fingers. That  way, they taste extra authentic. Now we’re reaching the end of the journey –  and we’re having a cream tea in Britain. The British specialty includes clotted cream, strawberry jam and a freshly baked scone. The ingredients for scones is very basic. Flour and salt into the bowl with baking powder. Together with cold butter, it  all turns into a crumbly dough.  Add the sugar. Give that a  mix. A squeeze of lemon juice,   and then you would add one teaspoon of vanilla  extract. And then you start to add your milk.  It’s important for the  dough not to turn to liquid.  A little mold is used to portion  the individual scones before they   go into the oven for 10 minutes. They’re traditionally served with   thick clotted cream and jam. What you put  on a scone first is a subject of debate. Cream first, definitely. I put the jam first. Cream first and then the jam. What do you think? And what sweet  specialty is your home country famous for?
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Channel: DW Food
Views: 200,633
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: pasteis, pasteis de nata, pasteis de nata recipe, pasteis de belem, pasteis de belem recipe, belem, portugal, lisbon, pastel de nata, baumkuchen, baumkuchen recipe, baumkuchen pronunciation, baumkuchen making, baumkuchen germany, germany, german cakes, merveilleux recipe, merveilleux pastry, merveilleux cake, france, french pastry, churros recipe, churros receta, churros madrid, churros chocolate, scones recipe, scones and clotted cream, england, spain, dw, dw food, deutsche welle
Id: LUHVnkOfX8I
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 7min 15sec (435 seconds)
Published: Sat Mar 30 2024
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