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-   -   Favorite French Dessert? (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/favorite-french-dessert-586570/)

PalQ Jan 30th, 2006 10:07 AM

Favorite French Dessert?
 
What's the favorite dessert French use to punctuate their meals?

Well it turns out that rather plebean ice cream takes the cake - getting 13% of the vote (actually ice cream and sorbet were lumped together as one unit), followed by fruit tarts (10 %) chocolate mousse (8 %) profiteroles and tiramisu each at 7%.

What the heck are profiteroles and tiramisu? Never heard of those in my 37 years of visiting France??

tcreath Jan 30th, 2006 10:11 AM

All of those beautiful desserts and the favorite is ice cream?!?! :) I personally would choose creme brulee, but apparently my choice isn't very popular.

I've never heard of profiteroles, but tiramisu is an Italian desert made with ladyfingers, espresso and mascarpone cheese...delicious if done correctly.

Tracy

cigalechanta Jan 30th, 2006 10:14 AM

profiteroles are like a small cream puff with a chocolate glazze on top.

julia_t Jan 30th, 2006 10:14 AM

Profiteroles are little choux pastry balls filled with whipped cream, creme anglais or some sort of custard, piled up and with a chocolate sauce drizzled over.

A Chocolate Eclair is a long finger-shaped version of the profiterole.

Guy18 Jan 30th, 2006 10:15 AM

Pear tarte with an almond crust!

DejaVu Jan 30th, 2006 10:17 AM

My faves: tarte tatin, creme brulee, crepes filled with Nutella! :-)

Christina Jan 30th, 2006 10:19 AM

you are citing interesting things.

Profiteroles are my favorite French dessert and I find it astonishing that you have never heard of them in 37 years of visiting France. That's like saying you've never heard of chocolate mousse. They are a very traditional and common French dessert (basically small puff pastry with vanilla ice cream stuffed in them, topped with shavings of almonds and warm chocolate sauce). Well, used to be more common, but that's the problem as they are a little work when served properly so some restaurant don't have them on the menu anymore (properly, the puff pastry must be fresh that day, and the chocolate sauce should be warmed and served immediately).

It may be they are just perceived as more old-fashioned, as a lot of places don't serve chocolate mousse as much, anymore, either.

Tiramisu isn't French as far as I know, but I don't like if very much. It is far far too common at French restaurants and frequently mediocre IMO. I think it's really Italian. Some mushy cake concoction that has no real personality, IMO.

AllyPally Jan 30th, 2006 10:20 AM

I absolutely second DejaVu's choices!! It is my life's mission to find the perfect creme brulee - the one where you can stand a spoon up. And I excavate underneath the caramelised sugar so that I can savour that for last. My dentist would kill me!!

cigalechanta Jan 30th, 2006 10:27 AM

Here's a photo of a profiteroles, though this one is messy. I have seen them everywhere.

http://kaufhaus.blogs.com/photos/coo...fiteroles.html

capecodshanty Jan 30th, 2006 10:30 AM

There's even a wonderful recipe for profiteroles in Ina Garten's Barefoor Contessa goes to France cookbook!!

Mathieu Jan 30th, 2006 10:41 AM


And at christmas time, they arrange the profiteroles (the little round ones, that is, because sometimes profiteroles can be longish, like mini eclairs)in a tall pyramid shape, stuck together with burnt sugar and bound with lacy strings of spun sugar wound round and round to form a showy display called a 'croquembouche'.

grandmere Jan 30th, 2006 10:54 AM

I love ile flottante, tarte tatin, un croquembouche (which consists of small cream puffs stacked up into a conical shape and glazed with spun caramel),and Angelina's Mont Blanc. Paris Brest is pretty good, too! :-)

grandmere Jan 30th, 2006 10:55 AM

Mathieu, missed your post or wouldn't have explained croquembouche--sure is good, though, isn't it?

Mathieu Jan 30th, 2006 11:36 AM

It is grandmere, and if I may say so myself, I've become quite a dab hand now at making them too; starting from the hot choux pastry to make the puffs, all the way through to piping them up with the thickened creme patissiere, then building the pyramid and finally spinning the threads to wrap around the structure.
I sure didn't first make it for the love of it, but did because I was piqued by the challenge of the whole process of making one. My kitchen was a proper mess by the time I finshed that first effort, but I surprised even myself with the end result which turned out betetr than I expected. It is as much an engineering effort as a culinary one.

Practice makes perfect, and I've made quite a few since then, thankfully now in about half as much time and mess.
(I'm not a chef - far from it - in case you were wondering, but do love food).

hopingtotravel Jan 30th, 2006 11:46 AM

Tarte tatin with flaming Calvados.
A close second was the Pears Helene (pears covered in chocolate) at Bastide Moustiers.

grandmere Jan 30th, 2006 11:50 AM

Mathieu, I am really impressed! Spinning the threads scares me off. Hats (toques?) off to you! :-)

We have a bona fide French bakery in Pgh.,where the baker makes a lovely croquembouche, and the chef here at the univ. where I work does a fine one, also.

Mathieu Jan 30th, 2006 12:38 PM


Vous etes tres gentille, grandmere.
The spun sugar isn't that difficult once you get the hang of it, but working with heated sugar in all instances is truly a kitchen challenge.

Since this topic is about favourite french desserts, I'll offer one of mine - a simple but well made 'peche melba'. Truly sublime, if made with properly ripened peaches and a smooth, rich vanilla ice cream are a must.

luveurop Jan 30th, 2006 02:05 PM

I had profiteroles on my very first trip to Paris, and have been hooked ever since.

Indeed, they are not on the majority of menus unfortunately.

The best I've had so far is at Au Pied du Cochon.


Luisah Jan 30th, 2006 02:17 PM

Mathieu, I am so impressed with your profiterole proficiency. Yum, I love French profiteroles. I've had them with the pastry cream and with vanilla ice cream. Christina is correct, they are not on a lot of menus because they are a bit of work. Alas, I ordered some in a cafe St. Remy and they were still frozen, so some places are doing it the easy way.
Peche Melba, Paris Brest, Poached Pear ... I need a trip to France.

Grandma Jan 30th, 2006 02:46 PM

The best dessert I ever had in France was at a Relais & Chateau property near Carcasonne... involved prunes and oranges!! My next best has been several that incorporate chestnuts.

moldyhotelsaregross Jan 30th, 2006 03:03 PM

I'll take one or two of everything!

For me, some of my favorites are crème brulée, profiteroles, mille feuilles, éclair, gelato, and just about anything in a crèpe!


Beatchick Jan 30th, 2006 03:09 PM

I thought PalQ must be speaking in jest about the profiteroles & tiramisu since even at the Olive Garden here in the US you can find tiramisu!

And sometimes the ladyfingers are soaked in a liqueur, too - wunderbur!

I'm hoping to try profiteroles at Le Train Bleu, although a friend of mine tried to tell me that they're not that big of a deal. We'll see! :)

daph Jan 30th, 2006 03:27 PM

My favorites are the "fruits rouges" desserts. They usually have strawberries and raspberries or a "coulis" sauce of one of these fruits on the plate with vanilla ice cream or whipped cream and lacy cookies or small piece of cake, sometimes made of almonds. French desserts seem less sweet than American ones, which can be cloying. It's almost impossible to find these red fruit desserts over here and they're not even that common in France.

Beatchick Feb 24th, 2006 04:28 PM

Well, I tried the profiteroles at Au Pied de Cochon and they were merely okay. Besides creme brûlée, a perenniel favorite of mine, I now love Pom' Cannelle which has ice cream in it! Mmmm.

laclaire Feb 24th, 2006 04:32 PM

Crème brulée is my favorite dessert in restaurant world, but give me my kitchen and what do I serve? Cherries jubilee. The first time my mom taught me how to make it we both got properly drunk and have since mastered both the dessert and the "tasting" intake.


cchottel Mar 6th, 2006 06:09 PM

After my daughter went with me to Paris, she was so impressed with the sorbet, that after being home 6 mos. she said she just didn't want American ice cream. So, for Christmas, I bought her an electric ice cream maker and downloaded a variety of recipes from the internet. I must admit, what she has made reminds me of Paris.

Also, now that this thread is going, I had a pastry called I believe a Russo. I believe I got it in Montmarte. Was kinda like a Napoleon, but I believe it was pistacchio since the melt in your mouth filling was green yet not mint. Any ideas? I've wanted to find it again. I couldn't recognize the bakery anywhere in Montmarte, but it was luscious. I will try again this coming trip, but if anyone knows where I can get this...?


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