Puits_d'amour

<i>Puits d'amour</i>

Puits d'amour

French pastry filled with cream or jelly


The Puits d'amour (pronounced [pɥi damuʁ]) is a French pastry with a hollow center. The center is usually stuffed with redcurrant jelly or raspberry jam; a later variation replaced the jam with vanilla pastry cream. The surface of the cake is sprinkled with confectioners' sugar or covered with caramel.[1]

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Etymology

Puits d'amour is a French expression carrying erotic connotations; it literally translates to 'well of love'.[2]

History

The first mention of the recipe appeared in Vincent De La Chapelle's 1735 recipe book Le cuisinier moderne (the modern cook). La Chapelle presented two recipes for a gâteau de puits d’amour (puits d'amour cake) consisting of a large puff pastry vol-au-vent topped with a pastry handle and stuffed with redcurrant jelly, the ensemble was meant to resemble the bucket of a well. The other recipe is for the petits puits d’amour (small puits d'amour), a bouchée sized variant of the cake.

In the eighteenth century, the puits d'amour caused scandal because of its name and presentation which alludes to the female genitalia; nevertheless it was very successful in the court of Louis XV's intimate dinners.[1][2]

Nicolas Stohrer, one of the exiled Polish king Stanislas pâtissiers preferred to stuff the dessert with vanilla pastry cream and glazed the top with a thick layer of caramel, removing the scandalous connotation of the red fruits jam filling.[1][2]

Preparation

A puits d'amour is made up of layers of staggered rings of puff pastry placed on top of a pastry circle. An egg yolk can be used to help the dough rings to stick together. The finished pastry "wells" are baked until puffed and golden-brown and set to cool. They are then sprinkled with powdered sugar, raspberry jam or redcurrant jelly which is carefully spooned in the hollow center.

In a later variation, the top is glazed with caramel icing and pastry cream is used as filling.[3][4]

See also


References

  1. "HISTORIQUE DU PUITS D'AMOUR". Les spécialités (in French). Stohrer. Retrieved April 1, 2013.
  2. "Il était une fois..." (in French). puitsdamour-biarritz.com. Archived from the original on April 11, 2013. Retrieved April 2, 2013.
  3. "Puits d'Amour". cooking.com. Retrieved April 2, 2013.
  4. "Puits d'amour à la confiture". Recettes. cuisine.larousse.fr. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved April 3, 2013.

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