Photo by Steve Shanahan |
First published Canberra Times 4 June 2014.
Despite their size, these little pastries are surrounded by much tradition, myth and misconception. This mystery not only relates to their provenance but the mistaken believe that these are difficult to make and great patisserie skills are needed to produce a perfect pastry confection. Seriously, if you can cook pancakes, you can cook Caneles.
As far as their provenance goes, holding Google up as your
reference source, they hail from somewhere in France, particularly around the
Bordeaux region. Although, this
information is highly dependent on which page of research you stumble upon. However,
if you are wandering around the Bordeaux area of France, you cannot miss the plentiful
supply of these cakes sold everywhere.
The other controversy surrounding the Canele, is which
cooking receptacle provides the best result. Canele traditionalists, and there
is such a group, claim the little French
copper moulds produce perfection, and I would agree with this. If you are going
to go to the trouble of sourcing and using the copper Canele moulds, then you
would probably go to the extent of coating each mould with organic edible
beeswax prior to baking. I agree this sounds a bit extreme, but it is fully traditional
and gives the Canele its crispy exterior.
However, the much more economically priced silicone moulds
still produce an excellent Canele with the mandatory crispy exterior and molten
interior without the need to use beeswax or copper. The Canele moulds are
easily purchased on Ebay or Amazon for well under fifteen aussie dollars. The
result is a little more rustic, but not discernibly different.
If you plug “Canele” into Google, you will see there is a significant
amount of discourse about the difficulties of making these pastries and they
are the subject of numerous blogs that wax lyrical about methods and
equipment. I have made these gorgeous
little cakes a number of times and haven’t experienced any failures using the
silicone moulds and the following recipe.
Caneles are delicious warm or cold and keep for a few days
in an airtight container in the fridge. They are usually quickly eaten, but if
you have any left, they can be warmed for ten seconds in the microwave oven to
freshen up.
They can be eaten warm or cool, and keep for a few days in
an airtight container in the fridge. My favourite is warm, where the outside is
crispy and the inside is soft and a little molten.
This mixture produces about 20 Caneles and the mixture
should be left at least 24 hours in the fridge before baking. If baking for kids, leave out the rum in the
recipe below.
2 cups whole milk
30g unsalted butter
1 tsp vanilla paste
100g plain flour, sifted
1 tsp sea salt
180g sugar
3 eggs
80 ml good quality rum
Combine the milk, butter and vanilla in a medium saucepan,
and bring to a simmer. In the meantime, combine the sifted flour, salt and
sugar in a mixing bowl. Break the eggs
into a small bowl and beat gently without incorporating any air. When the milk
mixture stars to simmer, remove from the heat and set it aside.
Pour the eggs all at once into the flour, then immediately
after, also pour the milk mixture into the flour, stirring until well combined with a wooden spoon or spatula. Do not whisk
as you do not want to incorporate air. Add the rum and stir. Let the mixture cool
to room temperature, then cover and refrigerate for at least twenty-four hours
or up to three days. The longer this mixture is left the better the flavour.
When ready to bake, preheat the oven to a very hot 250C.
Lightly grease the canele moulds with
melted butter. Remove the batter from the fridge and stir to incorporate the
liquids that may have separated. Do not whisk.
If using a silicon mould, place the mould onto an oven tray
for ease of handling. Fill each mould almost to the top with the batter and put
into the oven to bake for twenty minutes. After twenty minutes, reduce the
temperature to 200C and place a piece of silicon baking paper on top of the
Caneles to stop them from burning. Bake
for a further twenty minutes. The tops of the Caneles should be a dark golden
colour.
Remove from the oven and leave for about fifteen minutes
before unmoulding the Caneles onto a cooling rack. They should drop out easily
from their moulds and as they cool further, and will collapse only very
slightly.
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