Chocolate Eclairs
These long, puffy buns are stuffed with cream and
topped with rich chocolate icing. The buns are made with choux pastry, which is made by bringing butter and water to the boil, tipping in the flour and then beating in the eggs.
Ingredients
For the pastry:
75g/2oz butter, diced
200ml/7fl oz water
salt
100g/4oz strong plain flour
3 eggs, beaten
For the cream:
250ml/9fl oz double or whipping cream
For the chocolate icing
100g/4oz caster sugar
100ml/3oz water
50g/2oz dark chocolate
25g/1oz unsalted butter
Method
1. Heat the oven to 200C/400F/Gas 6. Place the butter, water and a pinch of salt in a medium saucepan over a low heat. Stir occasionally with a wooden spoon as the butter melts.
2. Meanwhile, sift the flour into a small bowl.
3. When the butter has melted, turn up the heat and bring the mixture to the boil. Switch off the heat and quickly tip the flour into the saucepan. Immediately beat the flour into the liquid with the wooden spoon to mix all the ingredients together. Stop beating when the mixture swells into a smooth dough that comes away from the sides of the saucepan. This should take only take 2-3 minutes. then pur the mixture back on the heat for 30 seconds. (no more than 40 secsonds)
4. Let the mixture cool for 3-4 minutes. Pour in a little of the beaten egg into the flour mixture and beat it in well. Keep adding and beating in the egg, a little at a time, until the dough looks thick, smooth and shiny and still holds its shape well. Don't put too much egg in at the same time as less than 3 eggs may be needed if the mixture has gone shiney before adding 3. The check that the dough has been mixed properly, when you pick up the dough it should drop but shouldn't be runny.
5. Spoon the mixture into a freezer bag (you'll need to scrape it out of the pan with a plastic spatula). Fold down the top of the bag to squeeze the dough to the bottom. Snip off one of the bottom corners of the bag to give you a hole about 1cm long.
6. Line two flat baking sheets with baking parchment. Squeeze the mixture into chipolata-sized sausage shapes on to the parchment, allowing about 4cm between each one (they will at least double in size in the oven). You should be able to make about 12.
7. Wearing oven gloves, place the baking sheets in the oven and bake for about 30 minutes. Take the clairs out when they are puffed up, golden brown all over, and feel hard when you poke one with a knife.
8. Immediately take each clair off the baking sheet (they will be very hot, so wear oven gloves) and, with the point of a knife, gently slit the side to let out the steam. (Otherwise, the steam sits trapped in the clair and turns back to water, leaving you with a soggy bun.) Leave them to cool and dry out on a wire rack.
9. Whip the cream in a small bowl until it is just thick enough to hold its shape. Place it in the fridge while you make the chocolate icing.
10. For the icing, place the sugar and water in a small saucepan over a low heat. Heat gently, stirring all the time with a wooden spoon to dissolve the sugar. Bring to the boil and boil fast for three minutes. Switch off the hob and wait for a few minutes for the syrup to cool down (you can speed this up by dipping the base of the pan in a bowl of cold water if you like). Meanwhile, break up the chocolate and cut the butter into chunks.
11. When the syrup is very warm, rather than very hot, add the chocolate and butter. Stir until both have melted and blended to a smooth, glossy sauce. Leave to cool, stirring occasionally. When the sauce starts to thicken, it's ready to ice your clairs.
12. When the buns are cool, use a teaspoon to fill the inside of each clair with whipped cream (you may need to enlarge the slit you made before). Then take a different teaspoon and smear the chocolate icing generously over each clair. Leave the clairs on the wire rack until the icing has set. In the unlikely event that you're not going to eat them straight away, you can put them in the fridge for a few hours.
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