Tuesday, September 17, 2013

TWD Espresso Profiteroles


The first time I made profiteroles was several years ago for Paul's birthday dinner.  I used a David Lebovitz recipe and made cinnamon ice cream, hot fudge sauce, and candied almonds ahead of time.  On the day of the party all I had to do was make the puffs (is profiterole the name of the puff or the name of the dessert as a whole?).  I must have made them three times before they turned out.  The first time I didn't cook enough of the liquid out before adding the eggs.  The second time I was impatient and used eggs straight from the refrigerator.  I'm reasonably sure I cried.  Paul kept trying to console me and telling me he was sure the runny blobs I was trying to spoon on my baking sheet would taste fine, but I knew they were wrong.  The third time I waited until the eggs were at room temperature and cooked more of the liquid out before adding them.  They still didn't look like much on the baking sheet and I stood anxiously watching them while they baked in the oven, but miraculously they rose into lovely golden puffs.  Our friends loved the dessert, which made me particularly happy because I had broken my usual rule and made profiteroles for friends who are actually French.

After my first profiterole experience I had high hopes for this recipe.  I love the cinnamon and chocolate combination (if you ever have extra time, money, and calories on your hands go make this) and am a sucker for anything with coffee (unfortunately decaf these days).  Unfortunately, these were kind of disappointing.  The chocolate sauce and ice cream were okay, but I liked David Lebovitz's recipes better for both of them.  The puffs were good, but neither Paul nor I could taste the coffee at all, and I brewed an extremely strong pot of coffee.  I'm going to try a plain puff tonight--I think the chocolate sauce might have over-powered the coffee flavor--but I don't think the brewed coffee and beans added much other than a pretty look.  Oh well.  These weren't bad, but from now on I'm sticking to David's recipe.

5 comments:

  1. I liked these. I thought the coffee flavor did come through. They're not on my "top ten" list, but they're good.

    You are brave for making a French dessert for French people. You are mean for linking to the chocolate babka from Smitten KItchen. Now I have another recipe for my "need to make, but it's so fattening" list.

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  2. my attempt at the espresso ones failed so I tried the recipe with a plain profiterole instead. I don't think the ground beans added much flavour to it as well...

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  3. Yeah, these worked out for me, but it probably wasn't my favorite attempt either. I loved that you made them for French friends.

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  4. It's hard to go past David Lebovitz's recipes sometimes, isn't it? Your profiteroles look great. I ended up trying different flavours as I am trying to not have coffee at the moment.

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  5. The coffee dough did not work for me. And they did not have a very strong coffee flavor at all. I ended up making a plain batch that turned out much better and I did make David's cinnamon recipe - love his book.

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