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Copyright, 2015
February 28, 2014
Rob
Pâte à choux
23

Recipe: Paris-Brest with mousseline cream

It was 1910 when pastry chef Louis Durand created upon request one of the most famous French desserts of all time, the Paris-Brest.

Recipe---Paris-Brest---01

The request came from the organizer of a popular “Paris-Brest-Paris” bicycle race (which still exists today but is only open to amateurs) who wanted a dessert to be served at the arrival.

Recipe---Paris-Brest---07

The Paris-Brest is traditionally made of a ring of choux pastry filled with a praliné mousseline cream and its shape resembles that of a bicycle wheel.

Recipe---Paris-Brest---04

I absolutely love the looks of this dessert, which is perfect and stunning in its simplicity.

The recipe calls for praliné, a paste made by mixing caramelized hazelnuts and almonds: it can be bought in professional shops or also home made (120g of hazelnuts and almonds for 80g of sugar).

A tip for the recipe: for the mousseline cream it is very important that the butter be at the same temperature of the pastry cream (i.e. not too hot, not too cold) otherwise it will either melt or solidify and form lumps.

This is definitely one of my favourite desserts! It’s a shame that in other countries it’s not as popular as in France!

 

Paris-Brest with praliné mousseline cream

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Paris-Brest with praliné mousseline cream
From book On baking

Ingredients

Choux pastry

70gMilk
70gWater
1 pinchSalt
60gUnsalted butter
90gBread flour
~150gEggs (~3 eggs)

Pastry cream

250gMilk
1/2Vanilla bean
40gGranulated sugar
3Egg yolks
18gCornstarch
90gUnsalted butter (cold)

Praliné mousseline cream

60gPraliné paste
90gUnsalted butter (diced - room temperature)

Decoration

Powdered sugar (as needed)
Sliced almonds (as needed)

Directions

Choux pastry

1
Bring the milk, water, salt and butter to a boil in a saucepan. Make the sure the butter is fully melted before reaching the boiling point.
2
Remove from the heat and immediately add all the flour.
3
Stir with a spatula or wooden spoon then put the pan back on the heat and continue beating the dough
4
Keep drying the dough up on the heat only for a few minutes until it comes away from the sides of the pan and leaves a thin film on the bottom of the saucepan
5
Transfer the dough to a clean bowl and let it cool down for a few minutes
6
Add an egg and stir until it is completely absorbed in the dough
7
Add all the other eggs one at a time. Slightly beat the last egg before adding it then pour it slowly little by little on the batter, checking frequently if it has reached the right consistency.
When the batter is shiny but firm (i.e. not runny), it is ready to be used with a piping bag.
8
Draw two 18cm circles on parchment paper
9
Flip the parchment paper sheet (so that the ink is not in contact with the choux pastry). Using a pastry bag fitted with a large star (or plain) tip, pipe a first ring following the circle you've drawn
10
Pipe a second inner ring. Make sure the joint is in a different place from the outer circle.
11
Finally, pipe a third ring on top of the other two. Once again, make sure the joint is far from that of the bottom rings.
12
On the other side of the pan, pipe another ring of choux pastry
13
Brush the rings lightly with egg wash
14
Sprinkle the bigger ring with sliced almonds
15
Bake at 170° for about 45-50 minutes or until the choux pastry rings are golden brown and well dried.

Pastry cream

16
In the meantime, heat the milk with half of the sugar and the vanilla bean in a saucepan
17
In a bowl, whisk together the egg yolks, sugar and corn starch
18
When the milk is boiling, pour it in three times over the egg mixture through a strainer and mix every time to prevent the yolks from curdling
19
Put back the liquid mixture into the saucepan and cook on medium heat whisking continuously
20
Allow the pastry cream to boil for 2 minutes then remove from the heat, add the cold, diced butter and whisk again until it is fully incorporated
21
Pour the cream in a large container, cover with plastic wrap and store in the fridge

Praliné mousseline cream

22
When the cream is at around 25°C, whip it at medium speed in the bowl of a mixer with the praliné paste
23
Incorporated the soft, diced butter little by little and keep on whipping for around 5 minutes until the cream is soft and airy

Assembling the Paris-Brest

24
When the choux pastry ring has cooled down, slice the bigger ring of choux pastry in half horizontally with a serrated knife (the tip of the knife should be at all times in the ring hole; do not try to slice the ring like a cake)
25
Place the smaller ring inside the bottom half of the bigger ring
26
Pipe the mousseline cream on the bottom half of the baked ring in a connecting chain of rosettes (converging towards the inner hole) using a medium star tip and pastry bag
27
If you feel your Paris-Brest is not tall enough, you can add another yummy layer of cream on top of the previous one
28
Replace the top half
29
Dust with powdered sugar

Note

  • Tip: try adding some chunks of caramelized hazelnuts into the cream after piping!
  • If the cream is too soft to be piped you can refrigerate it for a few minutes, but be careful, because its big quantity of butter will make it solid quickly and impossible to pipe.
  • Of course the cream can be stored up to 3 days into the fridge, but if you want to pipe it, you will have to whip it again to incorporate air and make it lighter.

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AlmondsBicycleChoux pastryÉclair pasteEgg yolksFamousFrenchHazelnutsMousseline creamOn bakingParis-BrestPâte à chouxPopularPralinéTraditional
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23 Comments General

23 Comments

  • Christ
    April 22, 2014 1:18 am

    Made this today – my first Paris-Brest – and it was perfect. Thank you!

    Reply
  • Rob
    April 23, 2014 5:26 pm

    Great! I’m glad to hear that 🙂

    Reply
  • Helen
    July 17, 2014 10:11 am

    Looks amazing! Do you think it’ll last well overnight or over 2 days? I’m hoping to make it ahead of time 🙂

    Reply
    • Rob
      July 17, 2014 10:25 am

      Thank you Helen! For sure it will last overnight. I usually keep desserts 2-3 days maximum at home, especially those with pastry cream. Of course, the fresher the cake, the better it’ll taste.

      If you start eating it after 2 days, then you will have to finish it really quickly (which might not be a problem at all for some!). 🙂

      Reply
      • Helen
        July 18, 2014 2:16 pm

        Wonderful! Should I fill it then refrigerate it or leave the shell uncut in a container?

        Reply
        • Rob
          July 18, 2014 9:15 pm

          If you want store the “unassembled” cake, you can keep the shell uncut in an air-tight container at room temperature (or also freeze it) and the cream in the fridge. Nevertheless, before piping the cream you will have to whip it again (I tried it once and the result didn’t really satisfy me, though: I think the mousseline cream is much better when it’s fresh-made).

          Otherwise, you can just fill the cake and refrigerate it, I would go for this option (or a mix of the two: prepare the shell in advance, then make the cream as late as you can).

          Reply
  • Tom
    August 8, 2014 5:26 pm

    Hi!
    Nice recipe! Made the shell and it came out awesome.
    I baked it with a mold around it.

    When whipping the cream and butter, do you use the whisk attachment?

    Reply
    • Rob
      August 8, 2014 5:53 pm

      Hi Tom, thank you! I think you can use both (whip or paddle) but I prefer the whip attachment because I think it allows incorporating air more easily (of course the butter must not be rock hard!) 🙂

      Reply
      • Tom
        August 8, 2014 7:39 pm

        Hi Rob, thank for the quick reply!
        One more thing, you only cool the pastry cream to 25 degrees? not for a few hours like normally?

        Reply
        • Rob
          August 9, 2014 3:43 am

          In general I don’t think there is any need to cool the pastry cream for hours: you just have to cool it down quickly to prevent the proliferation of bacteria (which is highest between 20-65°C more or less).
          For the mousseline cream I let the pastry cream cool down to around 25°C because if it is colder, the softened butter will solidify and form small lumps, and if it is warmer, the butter will melt… and that’s not what we need! 😛

          Reply
          • Tom
            August 9, 2014 12:31 pm

            Alright, cool!
            I’ll try it out today :))
            Thanks a lot!

  • Cecilia
    October 6, 2016 3:34 am

    Hi Rob,
    How long can I keep It out of the fridge?
    We are driving away for two hours.

    Reply
    • Rob
      October 6, 2016 9:53 am

      Hi Cecilia, depends on the temperature in your car 🙂 I think that two hours is really the maximum it can stay out of the fridge without deteriorating that much. If you don’t want to run risks, you can freeze it for 30-60 minutes before leaving (I usually do that).

      Reply
  • Janice
    May 8, 2018 6:34 am

    Hi, a late comment as this post is pretty old, but I just made miniature versions of this recipe and they are delicious. Thanks for the photos and instructions, super helpful!

    Reply
    • Rob
      May 27, 2018 10:58 pm

      Glad to read that, Janice! Thank you!

      Reply
  • Wendy
    June 3, 2018 10:35 am

    Hi, the recipe sounds awesome! How many does it serve? I want to give it a try.

    Reply
    • Rob
      June 3, 2018 5:48 pm

      Hi Wendy! Depends on how hungry people are 🙂 In general, a cake like this should be fine for 8 people.

      Reply
  • Yasmina
    January 23, 2020 12:30 am

    Hello What flavor of spices do you advice me to add in the dogh making to make it more special ?

    Reply
  • Yasmina
    January 23, 2020 12:32 am

    Hey rob
    What kinda spice flavor do u advice me to add to the dough that goes along with the cream to make it speacial

    Reply
    • Rob
      January 23, 2020 10:21 pm

      Hi, Yasmina, do you mean in the choux pastry? I’ve checked in my recipe books and I’ve only found minimal variations in the recipe of the choux pastry, like a pinch of ground pepper, or adding sesame or poppy seeds on top… perhaps some cinnamon or anise would be good too, depending on the filling 🙂

      Reply

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WELCOME

Hi, my name is Rob, I work in IT but I love baking and I also got a pastry diploma. I created this blog to keep track of my journey from complete beginner to world pastry champion (I'm not there yet).

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