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Custard Pastries - {Pasteis De Nata}

You will need a thermometer to accurately gauge the custard. These are best eaten warm the same day they're made.

Courses: Dessert

Recipe Ingredients

  Pastry
2 cups 125g / 4.4ozAll-purpose flour - minus 2 tbspns flour
1/4 teaspoon 1.3mlSea salt
3/4 cup 177mlAter - plus
2 tablespoons 30mlAter
2   Unsalted butter - cold, worked
  Until it is soft and spreadable
  Custard and Assembly
3 tablespoons 45mlAll-purpose flour
1 1/4 cups 296mlMilk - divided
1 1/3 cups 263g / 9.3ozSugar
1   Cinnamon stick
2/3 cup 157mlWater
1/2 teaspoon 2.5mlVanilla
6   Egg yolks - whisked
  Powdered sugar - as needed
  Cinnamon - as needed

Recipe Instructions

Pastry: In a stand mixer fitted with a dough hook, mix the flour, salt and water until a soft, pillowy dough forms that cleans the side of the bowl, about 30 seconds.

Generously flour a large wooden board and pat the dough into a 6-inch square using a pastry scraper as a guide. Flour the dough, cover with plastic wrap and let it rest for 15 minutes.

Roll the dough into an 18-inch square. As you work, use the scraper to lift the dough to make sure the underside isn't sticking.

Brush excess flour off the top, trim any uneven edges, and using a small offset spatula, dot and then spread the left two-thirds of the dough with a little less than one-third of the butter to within 1 inch of the edge.

Neatly fold over the unbuttered right third of the dough (using the pastry scraper to loosen it if it sticks), brush off any excess flour, then fold over the left third. Starting from the top, pat down the packet with your hand to release air bubbles, then pinch the edges closed. Brush off any excess flour.

Turn the dough packet 90 degrees to the left so the fold is facing you. Lift the packet and flour the work surface. Roll out to an 18-inch square, then dot and spread evenly with one-third of the butter, and fold the dough as in steps 4 and 5.

For the last rolling, turn the packet 90 degrees to the left and roll out the dough to an 18-by-21-inch rectangle, with the shorter side facing you. Spread the remaining butter over the entire surface.

Using the spatula as an aid, lift the edge closest to you and roll the dough away from you into a tight log, brushing the excess flour from the underside as you go. Trim the ends and cut the log in half. Wrap each piece in plastic wrap and chill for 2 hours or preferably overnight.

Custard And Assembly: In a medium bowl, whisk the flour and one-fourth cup of the milk until smooth. Set aside.

Bring the sugar, cinnamon and water to a boil in a small saucepan and cook until an instant-read thermometer registers 220 degrees. Do not stir.

Meanwhile, in another small saucepan, scald the remaining 1 cup milk. Whisk the hot milk into the flour mixture.

Pour the sugar syrup in a thin stream into the hot milk and flour mixture, whisking briskly. Add the vanilla and stir for a minute until very warm but not hot. Whisk in the yolks, strain the mixture into a bowl, cover with plastic wrap and set side. (Makes two-thirds cup custard)

Heat the oven to 550 degrees. Remove a pastry log from the refrigerator and roll it out on a lightly floured surface until it's about an inch in diameter and 16 inches long. Cut it into scant three-fourths-inch pieces. Place a piece cut-side down in each well of a nonstick 24-cup mini-muffin pan (2- by 5/8-inch size). Allow the dough pieces to soften several minutes until pliable.

Have a small cup of water nearby. Dip your thumbs into the water, then straight down into the middle of the dough spiral. Flatten it against the bottom of the cup to a thickness of about one-eighth inch, then smooth the dough up the sides and create a raised lip about one-eighth inch above the pan. The pastry sides should be thinner than the bottom.

Fill each cup three-fourths full with the slightly warm custard. Bake until the edges of the dough are frilled and brown, about 8 to 9 minutes.

Remove from the oven and allow the pasteis to cool a few minutes in the pan, then transfer to a rack and cool until just warm. Sprinkle generously with powdered sugar, then cinnamon and serve. Repeat with the remaining pastry and custard. If you prefer, the components can be refrigerated up to three days. The pastry can be frozen up to three months.

This recipe yields about 40 pastries.

Each pastry: 103 calories; 1 gram protein; 12 grams carbohydrates; 0 fiber; 6 grams fat; 3 grams saturated fat; 45 mg. cholesterol; 20 mg. sodium.

Source:
The Los Angeles Times, 09-08-2004

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