Are you using puff pastry, 2 dough pastry, pie pastry?
How do you keep the custard from boiling over?
Do you keep a pan of water in the oven during the baking step?
Show all! Tell everything! No secrets allow among eGulleteers.
Posted 14 April 2005 - 08:12 PM
Posted 14 April 2005 - 08:45 PM
Posted 14 April 2005 - 08:52 PM
What's 2 dough pastry?
Think it's time I dug out my Wei Chuan and Pei Mei cookbooks (I own full collection).
Posted 14 April 2005 - 09:56 PM
Posted 14 April 2005 - 10:47 PM
Kristin Wagner, aka "torakris"
Manager, Membership
kwagner@egstaff.org
Posted 14 April 2005 - 11:57 PM
Posted 15 April 2005 - 03:37 PM
Kristin Wagner, aka "torakris"
Manager, Membership
kwagner@egstaff.org
Posted 15 April 2005 - 03:47 PM
I have a bunch of fluted tins that are too small for the recipe (more like candy tins!) and others that are too large and sloped (mini brioche pans). I think I'm going to use my muffin pans! Okay, so they aren't fluted, but I can put the finished products into cupcake papers and they'll look reasonably like the real thing.I found a recipe in Essentials of Asian Cuisine by Corrine Tran and the pastry recipe actually looks easy enough for me to try.
![]()
Next question....
I just realized that these things are made in little fluted tins tins which I don't have...
anyway to get around this?![]()
I may have to go to the store on Monday.
Posted 15 April 2005 - 03:49 PM
I have a bunch of fluted tins that are too small for the recipe (more like candy tins!) and others that are too large and sloped (mini brioche pans). I think I'm going to use my muffin pans! Okay, so they aren't fluted, but I can put the finished products into cupcake papers and they'll look reasonably like the real thing.I found a recipe in Essentials of Asian Cuisine by Corrine Tran and the pastry recipe actually looks easy enough for me to try.
![]()
Next question....
I just realized that these things are made in little fluted tins tins which I don't have...
anyway to get around this?![]()
I may have to go to the store on Monday.
Kristin Wagner, aka "torakris"
Manager, Membership
kwagner@egstaff.org
Posted 15 April 2005 - 03:51 PM
Posted 15 April 2005 - 03:55 PM
I don't see why not... I'll press the pastry about halfway up the sides to compensate for the greater depth. They might be a little harder to unmold than individual tins, but the recipe I have calls for lining up the individual tins on a baking sheet anyway. Can't hurt to try it! That'll be my experiment, anyway.do you think they will work in muffin tins? I have muffin tins, mini muffin tins and popover tins.....
Posted 15 April 2005 - 04:11 PM
Posted 15 April 2005 - 04:14 PM
Kristin Wagner, aka "torakris"
Manager, Membership
kwagner@egstaff.org
Posted 15 April 2005 - 08:51 PM
Edited by jschyun, 15 April 2005 - 08:53 PM.
Posted 15 April 2005 - 09:37 PM
When I've bought dan tat for takeout, they've been in little foil pie pans & look like the pastry was rolled out the cut with a fluted biscuit cutter.Actually, I don't think using fluted tins is right either. They have to be round little baby pie pan thingies, I thought, the better to show off the many layers of the crust, right?
Posted 15 April 2005 - 11:33 PM
Posted 16 April 2005 - 02:31 PM
Yeah, I use muffin tins for all sorts of little tarts including these cute little key lime tarts that nobody guesses were formed from muffin tins. The only reason why I wouldn't use it for dan tat is that I wouldn't know how to get it out of hte pan easily, but if you can figure it out, I'd love to hear about it.
So about the two dough pastry, I have never been privy to a professional kitchen but it seems to me that they take long layers of dough and fold each of the two doughs over each other until they have a bunch of layers. Then I am guessing they stamp out each individual tart. Then maybe they reuse the trimmings as base for the shortening dough or something. The fact that you can see the layers on the cooked product suggests this manner of production to me. What do you think? I personally think the Wei-Chuan recipe is a crock of **** but gives hints to what I think we're actually supposed to be doing.
Posted 16 April 2005 - 02:36 PM
If you can read Chinese, here is a recipe of Dan Tart in Leisure-Cat.com:
http://www.leisure-c...om/frm_1176.htm
Posted 16 April 2005 - 11:18 PM
Posted 17 April 2005 - 07:21 AM
Ohh, dan tart. I'd really like to make this, but my parents have explicitly told me not to make it. "Why make something so cheap?" Honestly, they're the most expensive item (by weight/size) in bakeries, at the same price as a bun. I even have these strange tart/brioche hybrid tins that I could use for some enormongous* dan tart.
*Not a real word
Posted 17 April 2005 - 12:33 PM
Posted 17 April 2005 - 12:55 PM
Edited by sheetz, 17 April 2005 - 12:56 PM.
Posted 17 April 2005 - 04:05 PM
Did you use only egg york or both egg york and egg white in making the filling?.....The filling was a terrible colour...very pale yellow with a greyish tinge. Did not look appetizing at all. It used eggs, water and sugar.
.....
The filling called for eggs, milk and half'n'half. I thought the colour was still too pale, so for 3 of the tarts, I added the tiniest dab of yellow cake decorating colour.
.....
Edited by hzrt8w, 17 April 2005 - 04:06 PM.
Posted 17 April 2005 - 04:14 PM
There are so many recipes out there in making tarts.I actually followed the recipe( for the first time in my life without wavering) to a gram by using a newly purchased electronic scale. Followed the instructions carefully, but it must be my technique in rolling the dough with the two layers.
Posted 17 April 2005 - 05:38 PM
Kristin Wagner, aka "torakris"
Manager, Membership
kwagner@egstaff.org
Posted 17 April 2005 - 06:31 PM
So, I have another recipe done up and 12 are now in the oven. This is a recipe by Rhonda Yee. She uses a recipe with butter and lard...single layer. None of this outsy and innsy stuff. The filling called for eggs, milk and half'n'half. I thought the colour was still too pale, so for 3 of the tarts, I added the tiniest dab of yellow cake decorating colour.
We'll see what happens. I took pictures of the process from the first batch, and the rexults before I threw them into the garbage. The seond batch, I didn't take pictures of the process but I will post the results.
"sigh"
Posted 17 April 2005 - 06:35 PM
I seem to remember reading/hearing somewhere that the Chinese egg tarts were developed under British rule in Hong Kong as an offshoot of English custard tarts. And suddenly, what I knew as "don tot" made sense as "tart"! They're also popular in Singapore & Malaysia, so it's possible they started as a Western concept there...I understand tarts are western bakery concepts. But are Egg Tarts a unique Hong Kongers' creation? Anybody knows?
Posted 17 April 2005 - 09:21 PM
Posted 17 April 2005 - 11:05 PM
I understand tarts are western bakery concepts. But are Egg Tarts a unique Hong Kongers' creation? Anybody knows?
Definitely DO NOT USE PUFF PASTRY for dan tart.
The Kitchen →
Kitchen Consumer →
World's best Fish Sauce?Started by TheCulinaryLibrary , 30 Apr 2013 |
|
|
||
The Kitchen →
Cooking →
Chinese breaded chicken wingsStarted by FeChef , 15 Mar 2013 |
|
|
||
Regional Cuisine →
India, China, Japan, & Asia/Pacific →
China →
China: Cooking & Baking →
Substitutes for Chinese IngredientsStarted by DanM , 13 Feb 2013 |
|
|
||
The Kitchen →
Cookbooks & References →
"Florence Lin's Complete Book of Chinese Noodles, Dumplings anStarted by Ader1 , 13 Feb 2013 |
|
|
||
Regional Cuisine →
India, China, Japan, & Asia/Pacific →
China →
China: Cooking & Baking →
Problem: cast iron wok, extra hot, burning aromatics and suchStarted by Astrbac , 12 Feb 2013 |
|
|