Composition / ingredients
Step-by-step cooking
Step 1:
Defrost layers of puff pastry and roll out with a rolling pin to a thickness of about three millimeters. Cut each layer into six identical squares. In total, I made twelve small puffs out of half a kilo of dough.
Step 2:
On each workpiece with a small sharp knife on one side, make three or four through parallel incisions, as in the photo.
Step 3:
And put a teaspoon of jam on the second half of the blanks. I love cherry, so I chose it. But, of course, jam can be absolutely anything: apple, strawberry, and apricot, for example.
Step 4:
The edges of each blank (inside, on the side where the jam is located) are slightly moistened with ordinary water. Water will play the role of a kind of "glue" for a stronger connection of the edges in the future. Roll the puffs in half on the work surface.
Step 5:
Using a fork, press down the edges of the puff on three sides. You need to work with the flat side of the teeth, pressing the edges of the puff quite hard against each other. But be careful not to push both layers through. Otherwise, puffs with a cute fringe will turn out.
Step 6:
Mix the yolk with milk.
Step 7:
Use a cooking brush to lubricate the puffs with egg mixture. Preheat the oven to a temperature of two hundred degrees. While the oven is heating up, the puffs will have time to disperse. Bake the puffs for half an hour until golden brown.
A little advice on defrosting puff pastry. I always do this: I take a package of dough out of the freezer compartment and leave it at room temperature for fifteen minutes.
After this time, it is necessary to open the package and separate the already slightly thawed layers from each other. That is, they should finally defrost separately, on different surfaces. It seems that this is a trifle, but if it is not observed, the dough layers will stick together, and working with them will no longer be as comfortable as it would be with smooth layers.
I always seal the edges of puff pastry pastries using the method described here. And so far, he has never let me down. And in the case of pastries with unstable fillings (for example, with jam) this is especially true.
If I'm not lying, the preparation of these puffs took me, at most, ten minutes of active time. And the pleasure of eating them turned out to be just an incredible amount.
Have a nice tea party!
Calorie content of the products possible in the composition of the dish
- Whole cow's milk - 68 kcal/100g
- Milk 3.5% fat content - 64 kcal/100g
- Milk 3.2% fat content - 60 kcal/100g
- Milk 1.5% fat content - 47 kcal/100g
- Concentrated milk 7.5% fat content - 140 kcal/100g
- Milk 2.5% fat content - 54 kcal/100g
- Puff pastry - 400 kcal/100g
- Puff pastry, unleavened - 337 kcal/100g
- Apricot jam - 242 kcal/100g
- Jam - 250 kcal/100g
- Water - 0 kcal/100g
- Egg yolks - 352 kcal/100g