Cronuts (a combination of a croissant and a
doughnut) are all the rage in bakeries across the country, but I’ve come up
with a fun alternative that you can make at home. I call it a chouxnut – a
combination of a doughnut and a choux bun – easy to make and deliciously
decadent, the perfect gift that'll make anyone's day.
Chouxnuts
Ingredients:
Makes 10
120g butter
1 cup/ 250ml water
140g Sasko cake flour
4 large eggs (at room temperature)
Cream
filling:
500ml cream
3 Tbsp smooth peanut butter OR 3 Tbsp
Chocolate spread OR 3 Tbsp chocolate hazelnut spread
Chocolate
icing:
80g dark chocolate (chopped)
60ml milk
½ cup icing sugar
Method:
Preheat oven to 200*C and grease and line 2
baking trays.
Sift the flour.
Put the water and butter into a saucepan on
medium heat and once the butter has melted and the water is just boiling, add
the flour in one shot and stir vigorously with a wooden spoon for about 2-3
minutes until the pastry comes away from the sides and forms a ball.
Remove from the heat and allow to cool for about
5 minutes. (The choux needs to be cool enough to touch with your naked hand.)
Add the eggs, one at a time, beating with
the spoon/electric beaters until completely incorporated - this requires quite
a lot of arm strength if using a spoon.
The choux should now be sticky and rich but
should still be able to hold its shape.
Using a piping bag and large nozzle, create
10 equally sized circles of choux on the baking trays, with at least 4cm
between each of them, as they will double in size.
Bake in the oven for 20-25 minutes until
golden brown and crisp. (Timing will depend on the size.)
When you take them out of the oven, remove
from the baking paper and prick each of the chouxnuts with a skewer/knife to
release any excess steam and allow to cool on a wire cooling wrack.
Once the chouxnuts have cooled completely:
Whip the cream until stiff peaks form then
add the flavouring of your choice (peanut butter/chocolate spread/chocolate hazelnut
spread) and fold through until incorporated.
Make two holes, opposite one another, on
the underside of each chouxnut.
Spoon the cream into a large piping bag and
pipe enough cream into each hole to fill the chouxnuts.
For the icing: heat the milk in a bowl in
the microwave then add the chopped chocolate and stir until the chocolate has
melted (if it doesn’t melt completely at first, pop it back into the microwave
on lowest heat for 10-15 seconds, stir and repeat as necessary until it has
melted completely).
Add the sifted icing sugar and whisk until
you have a smooth chocolate icing.
Dip the top half of each of the chouxnuts
into the chocolate icing, as you would with a doughnut, and allow to dry
completely on the wire wracks before serving.
Tip
1: It is important to use the correct size egg –
this recipe calls for 4 large eggs
but if you only have extra large
eggs you will need to use 3 ½ eggs.
Tip
2: If your choux buns are browning too quickly at
15 minutes turn the oven temperature down to 180*C for the remaining cooking
time – oven temperatures differ and often the temperature displayed is a little
higher or lower than the actual temperature.
Tip
3: Make sure to peal your chouxnuts off the baking
paper immediately after bringing them out of the oven as they can stick to the
paper if you leave them on – if this happens, put them back in the oven for a
minute or two and they should come off easily.
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