Trees of the Mind

Jodi Kasten

Jodi Kasten
Location
Jacksonville, Florida, USA
Birthday
October 27
Bio
Professional Mommy, Professional Food Writer at EatJax.com, Freelance Writer, Non-committal Paranormal Investigator, Folklorist, All Around Nice Girl

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Salon.com
DECEMBER 18, 2009 10:01AM

I See Your Cookies and Raise You Nutella Cream Puffs

Rate: 21 Flag
 


NOM!


 
We’ll call this one “Jodi vs. Better Homes & Gardens” – as this recipe is a modification of one that appeared under the name “Gianduia Cream Puffs” in the Better Homes & Gardens publication Christmas Baking. Gianduia is the name for a certain sort of Italian chocolate containing hazelnut paste. Originally, Nutella was marketed under the name “Pasta Gianduia” to appeal more to children. You learn something new everyday.

I messed with the recipe, let my kids help and now I present it to you.

Nutella Cream Puffs

Ingredients

1 cup water
½ cup butter (1 stick)
¼ tsp. salt
1 cup all-purpose flour
4 eggs
1 ½ cups heavy whipping cream
¾ cup Nutella
Powdered sugar (optional)

Instructions

FatBat's got his Christmas on!
 


1. Grease (or line with parchment paper) one large sheet pan. If you have an Easy-Bake wall oven like mine, use two smaller pans, then rotate half-way through baking.

2. In a medium saucepan, combine water, butter and salt. Bring to boiling over medium-high heat. Add flour all at once, stirring vigorously. Cook and stir until mixture forms a ball. Remove from heat.

The Ball. 
 

3. Preheat oven to 400°F.

4. Cool puff dough for 10 minutes. Add eggs one at a time, beating well with a wooden spoon after each addition. This is a lot of work. Force random children to help you.

Slave labor is useful!


5. Pipe or drop 12 equal mounds of dough onto the prepared baking sheet(s). Using a moistened finger, smooth any rough peaks in the tops of the cream puffs.


Pipin' the dough
 


6. Bake for 30-35 minutes or until golden brown and firm. Remember if you are using two smaller pans to rotate the pans on the shelves and turn them around. Cool completely. Store in an airtight container until ready to fill.

Ain't they purty?
 

7. Wait to make your filling until less than an hour before serving. In a large bowl, beat whipping cream with an electric mixer on medium speed until soft peaks form (tips curl). Beat in Nutella.

Why would you NOT lick the spoon? Really?
 

8. You can fill the puffs in one of two ways. The first way is to flip them over and poke a hole in the bottom of them then shoot the filling into them with a pastry bag. The other is to cut them in half, then pipe or spoon the filling into the middle like a sandwich. Both are attractive, but if you are taking them anywhere, the piping method is safer.

Piper
 

If you're piping, use a large star tip. You COULD use a coupler, or you could just shove the tip all the way down in the bag like I did above.

Poke a hole in the bottom of the puffs with the fat end of a chopstick or whatever handy thing you have lying around.

DSCN3153
 

Push the tip of your bag into the puff then squeeze until you feel the puff starting to stretch slightly.

Don't even start with me about this.
 

If desired, sprinkle cream puffs with powdered sugar. I didn't think they looked as pretty with the sugar.

Here's what they look like inside:

NOM
  

Here is mine in comparison with Better Homes & Gardens' version:

I think mine is better because I'm haughty like that.
 
(I made one using the "sandwich" method for comparison's sake.)

And, here's the weekly installment of "What's Smeared On Pudge's Face?" (That's Nutella whipped cream, if you're playing the home game.)

Fudgie Pudgie Wudgie 



Don't be intimidated by things like cream puffs! These are not especially difficult. I work in a kitchen that blows the circuit if I run the toaster oven at the same time as the microwave. If I can do it, so can you!

If you MUST store these, put them in an airtight container in the fridge overnight at most. The powdered sugar will melt, the pastry will lose its crisp and  the puffs become chewier. They aren't bad but they aren't what they were the night before. 

These just do not keep well.
You must consume them all immediately.
That’s an order.




















 

all photos copyright © 2009 by jodi a. kasten • all rights reserved

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Comments

Type your comment below:
are they puff pastry and/or nutella shorts?
Ooh! Barry gets the cream puff! (Wait... that didn't sound right...)

Yes, she may eat my nutella whipped puff pastried shorts.
Yum, Jodi. Just yum. Cream puffs were my dad's favorite dessert. He'd have loved your twist on it.
No one should be intimidated by cream puffs because even *I* have successfully made them. But nutella whipped cream? Oh, Jodi. That borders on indecent and I want some!
Kathy - I'm pretty sure that if you smeared a Buick with Nutella, I'd at least TRY to eat it.

Julie - Well, look at it this way, heavy cream is packed with calcium ::cough:: and Nutella has, um, hazelnuts in it which everyone says is good for your heart.
Right?
Sure.

This does not change the fact that I'm going to walk an extra mile today even though I only ate half of one.
Well lay off for two freakin' minutes and I blow my return to the latin translation, oh well, bbd, can just Vescere bracis meis!
bob - I'll give you another shot next week. ::wink::

JK - Hey, I had to miss Foodie Tuesday this week due to a nose-crippling illness. I made these in a NyQuil haze! The dough part of this really doesn't take long at all and there are only a few ingredients. You should try it!

And where the hell is Ann?
Perhaps she has retreated to her Safety Burrito under her Shame Rock.
Hey, cream puff! Get in my belly!!!
Yummylicioussss...Cheers!
OMG! I'll be making some of these!
Nice! Nutella is good in/on ANYTHING or straight up on a spoon and directly into my hungry little mouth.

I've never tried piping the puffs before - just drop them from the spoon for that, ahem, rustic look. Next time I'll step it up and try the piping because yours are beautiful.
these look delicious! Of course, anything with Nutella is going to be good. (Nutella on German Leibniz butter crackers is a personal favorite.) My mouth is truly watering now. Gotta go get one of my wife's Christmas cookies.
Thanks, commenters!

For reference - I used a 1M Wilton tip to pipe the dough. This has a star-shaped hole roughly the size of my pinkie. Then I used a 22 Wilton star tip (about half the diameter of the first tip) to do the piping of the cream. That's like the Wearing of The Green, but with 156% of your RDA of saturated fat.

I would also be remiss if I did not mention that at some point yesterday I may or may not have called Ann and asked her which tip I should use.

I only own four tips which I got in a "Cupcake Decor Kit" by Wilton for $8 at Michael's. I also highly recommend disposable piping bags or Ziploc bags.
Uh-oh. It's on. Not with me, mind you. When culinary titans clash, I stay out of it.
Pudge looks delicious covered in nutella. I think I'll take a dozen of those to go.

You just wait though ... I'm gonna bust your chops this weekend - but right now I am reduced to Ice-bag-filler and pillow-adjuster!

I don't know what I'm going to make - but ... yhea ... suck it!!!
Hey, Ann - I just have one thing to say.

...
I'm waiting for them to perfect the technology that will let me inject Nutella directly into my bloodstream. So. . . while I'm waiting, maybe I'll try making these.
Ummmm, uhhhhh, got any leftovers....? Oh, you said to eat them quickly so I guess they're all gone. Darn!
Those curls on Pudge are just about the cutest ever.
My circuit blows if I use the microwave and toaster oven together too.
You're right, though, about cream puffs not being very hard to do and they make a great impression on guests or at a party if you make mini-puffs.
Nutella makes great quickie Smores with graham crackers and marshmallow creme.
Have fun!
Mrs. M - When I was finished, I shot the remaining hazelnut filling directly into The Man's mouth. I think that counts as a sex act.

Life Is Great - I do, indeed, have some left. They are not as tasty, though.
Gorgeous. Nutella is so dreamy, so good. Thanks!
creme puffs are second only to eclairs in my book - I've always been more of a pastry than cookie sort.
I'd just like to advise people to read this post of Jodi's before you go reading anything by O'Really. Otherwise, once you read the title of this post, honestly, it's all over.
Nummie, Nummie, Nummie!