Done with exploring local infusions into Tiong Bahru Bakery goodies, Celebrity Chef Gontran Cherrier works his pastry magic to create and introduce eight well-loved French classics he grew up on – all of which employ traditional French baking techniques.
Puff Pastries: Vanilla Mille FeuilleWe love this!
Known for its multiple layers, this crispy, flaky pastry comes layered typically with two types of dough: water and butter. The Vanilla Mille Feuille ($8), also known as ‘thousand leaves’ due to its numerous layers, comprises contrasting layers of vanilla pastry cream and crispy puff pastry squares.
The challenge: Eating the mille feuille without making a big mess.
Possible solutions: Have it layer by layer or flip it on one side and cut into smaller bite-size pieces.
Sugar Doughs (Pate Sucree): Mixed Berries Tart and Chocolate Slipper Tart
Pâte sucrée is a French term for the sweet short crust pastry used to make a tart base, with the addition of egg and cream to give a biscuit-like crust that is sturdy enough to cradle fillings.
Shaped as a slipper deemed to be the “Singaporean footwear” by Gontran Cherrier, the Chocolate Slipper Tart ($7.50) reveals a rich chocolate ganache layer after biting through the light chocolate shell.
Choux Pastries: Paris-Brest, Chocolate Éclair and Lemon Meringue Eclair
Fluffy and light, choux pastries are made from just four ingredients: egg, flour, water and butter. And the key to a choux pastry’s soft airy middle and crisp outer shell is its high moisture content.
Oblong-shaped choux pastries, éclairs, are available in two flavours here: Chocolate ($6.50) and Lemon Meringue ($7). The former is piped with dark chocolate cream, finished with a glossy chocolate glaçage, while the latter oozes of a tart lemon cream to balance a torched Italian meringue.
Other dessert offerings include the Opera Cake ($8.50) and Tropical Cheese Cake ($8). Available at all Tiong Bahru Bakery outlets.
See Also:
Restaurants in the Tiong Bahru areaFrench cuisine you have to tryWritten by Peh Yi Wen
Yi Wen likens the gourmet world to a theme park that never closes – full of adventure with endless rides to discover. When not writing, she dabbles in calligraphy and gawks at lego displays.