Site icon Downton Abbey Cooks | Gilded Age Cooks

Decadent Chocolate Éclairs

two chocolate eclairs on white background

The decadent éclair has to be one of the greatest gifts the French have provided to satisfy our sweet tooth.  So well loved it was served as dessert in 1st Class on Titanic.


Print

Decadent Chocolate Éclairs

The decadent éclair has to be one of the greatest gifts the French have provided to satisfy our sweet tooth.  So well loved it was served as dessert in 1st Class on Titanic. 
Course Afternoon Tea
Cuisine Edwardian, French, Titanic, Victorian
Prep Time 40 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
Total Time 50 minutes
Servings 12 éclairs

Ingredients

choux pastry

  • 2.5 oz white flour sifted
  • 2 oz unsalted butter diced, plus extra for greasing
  • 2 large eggs beaten
  • 1 pinch salt

Filling

  • 7 oz whipping cream
  • 5 tsp icing sugar sifted
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract

Icing

  • 3.5 oz milk chocolate, quality chopped

Instructions

Preheat

  • Preheat the oven to 200C/400F/Gas 6. Generously grease a baking tray with butter.

choux pastry

  • Sift the flour onto a sheet of greaseproof paper.
  • Put 4 oz water into a medium-sized pan with the salt and butter and heat gently until the butter has completely melted – don’t let the water boil and begin to evaporate. Quickly bring the mixture to the boil and tip in all the flour in one go. Remove the pan from the heat and beat furiously with a wooden spoon – don’t worry, the mixture will look messy at first but will soon come together to make a smooth heavy dough.
  • Put the pan back on a low heat and beat the dough for about a minute to slightly cook the dough – it should come away from the sides of the pan to make a smooth, glossy ball. Tip the dough into a large mixing bowl and leave to cool until tepid.
  • Beat the eggs in a bowl until combined, then gradually beat them into the dough with an electric whisk or mixer, or a wooden spoon, beating well after each addition. (You may not need all the egg.) The dough should be very shiny and paste-like, and fall from a spoon when lightly shaken.
  • Spoon the pastry into a piping bag fitted with a ½ in plain nozzle and pipe 12 x 4 inch lengths onto the greased baking tray.
  • Sprinkle the tray, not the pastry, with a few drops of water, and bake in the oven for 15 minutes. Then, without opening the door, reduce the oven temperature to 170C/325F/Gas 3 and bake for 10 minutes, or until golden-brown and crisp.
  • Remove the tray from the oven and carefully make a small hole in the side of each éclair to allow steam to escape. Return to the oven and bake for a further five minutes, or until the pastry is completely crisp. Remove from the oven and transfer to a wire rack to cool.

Filling

  • For the filling, whip the cream with the sugar and vanilla extract in a bowl until just stiff.
  • Once the éclairs have cooled, cut down the length of one side of each éclair and pipe in the whipped cream.

Icing

  • Melt the chocolate over a double boiler or a bowl suspended over a pan of simmering water (do not allow the bottom of the bowl to touch the water) and allow it to cool slightly. Dip the tops of the éclairs in the chocolate and let the chocolate set before serving.
Exit mobile version