

Danish Pastry Pockets with Beatrice Ojakangas
Season 2 Episode 2 | 24m 6sVideo has Closed Captions
Chef Beatrice makes a variety of Danish pastry pockets, including jam filled and twisted.
Chef Beatrice makes a variety of Danish pastry pockets, including twisted, jam filled, and sugar topped.
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback

Danish Pastry Pockets with Beatrice Ojakangas
Season 2 Episode 2 | 24m 6sVideo has Closed Captions
Chef Beatrice makes a variety of Danish pastry pockets, including twisted, jam filled, and sugar topped.
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
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Hello, I'm Julia Child.
Welcome to my house.
What fun we're going to have baking all kinds of incredible cakes, pies and breads right here in my own kitchen.
Beatrice Ojakangas, a Scandinavian cookbook author from Minnesota, teaches us how to make real Danish pastries not only plain, but twisted, jam-filled or sugar-topped.
Learn how on... [Captioning sponsored by VIEWERS LIKE YOU] Here is a platter of homemade Danish pastry-- a beautiful braid and these packets with a fruit filling, and this lovely dough that's just tender and buttery.
And Beatrice Ojakangas is going to show us how to make it-- starting with the dough, I guess.
We're starting with the dough, right.
What we have is a quarter of a cup of warm water and we have one package of active dry yeast.
So we're making this liquid mixture because first we want to dissolve the yeast in the warm water.
Then we're going to add a half a cup of milk.
Is this low-fat or just milk?
You can use anything.
Well, another thing that's in the liquid is an egg.
One U.S. large egg.
One U.S. large egg.
And we're going to crack it just to check to see that it's okay and there's no spots or funny pieces in there.
Okay, we'll whisk this up.
And that's our liquid ingredients.
We'll just let that sit.
Now, the second half of it I'm going to measure 2½½ cups of flour.
Dip the flour in, fill the cup heaping full and then level it off with a straight edge.
Then you always know that it's pretty accurate.
It's always accurate-- you have to be sure.
So we want to have it be even up to the top.
And half a cup.
2½½ cups, right.
And that goes in here.
Forgot to add something to our liquids and that's going to be a quarter of cup of sugar.
A quarter of a cup of sugar.
That goes in.
And a teaspoon of salt, which is over here.
I'll measure that.
That's nice, using the... Chopstick?
I love to use a chopstick because it's so handy.
Okay, and then we're going to take our two sticks of butter-- and this is unsalted butter.
Cold and chilled.
Cold and chilled-- it should be pretty stiff because we're going to actually cut it into the flour so that it stays in its own pieces.
We're not making cookie dough, we're making a pastry.
Then we'll just put these into the food processor and put the cover on.
And now what we want to do is pulse it.
It's called "breaking it up."
We're just breaking it up.
And we'll see how big the pieces are after eight times.
Five... Five, yeah.
Six...
Seven...
Eight.
Now I'll take a look.
I always have to hit it.
Okay, now let's check that.
We can see now that at the pieces are pretty big.
Yeah, this is to make a flaky dough.
This is to make a flaky dough.
You want to be sure that the butter is cold and that it stays in pieces big enough so that when you roll out the dough there's a little flat... Mm-hmm.
Little flat pieces.
Like automatic puff pastry.
Automatic puff pastry is what it is, sure.
Okay, now we just take our rubber scraper and just gently fold it into the liquid ingredients just until the flour is moistened.
Now, this makes just like a rough dough and this is how it looks.
All the liquid has been absorbed.
The liquid has been absorbed.
Now we'll just cover this with plastic or if you have a great big plastic bag you could slip it into the plastic bag.
And it goes into the refrigerator at least overnight.
And that will give it time to sort of stabilize and even out.
Fine.
And here we have the dough after it has sat in the refrigerator-- or chilled-- for 24 hours.
And it is chilled but it doesn't look like it's done much.
No, it doesn't.
It looks pretty much like it did.
And we're going to scrape it loose from the bowl.
And then, to make it easier to handle we're going to dust it with flour.
Look at that, that flour shaker-- I've never seen anything like that.
Oh, it's my favorite; I couldn't bake without it.
And then we'll just turn this out onto the board.
So now we have our rough dough, and what I've done is I've just dusted it with flour on both sides.
I can see the pieces of butter in there.
Yes, you sure can.
And once I start rolling it out you will be able to see the butter even more.
Roll the dough.
And what this rolling is going to do... First of all, I kind of call this "taming the dough" because it's really a rough dough.
You're going to have to make it do what you want it to do.
And right now it's a little bit uneven-- see, it's dry here, a little sticky there.
So now I'm just going to tame this into a foldable dough.
Slap it a little bit, have some fun with it.
Get it loose from here.
Dust the bottom.
Dust the other side.
Dust the top.
It's just like making a puff pastry except you have yeast in it, isn't it?
Yeah.
Okay, but see now, pretty soon it begins to actually look like it's... Like a dough.
Like a dough-- isn't that amazing?
Okay, we have... That's wonderful.
folded that over one time.
Now we're going to take this half and fold it over... and this half, and fold it to the center.
When we're rolling out dough what I do, always is roll from the center outward... Center back.
Center outward... center back.
That makes an even...
So that it's real even.
I'm trying as much as I can to keep it as square as I can.
Mm-hmm.
And I'm going to give it just one more folding over.
At this point, I'll just go ahead and cut it in half before I... before I put it in the refrigerator.
Could you freeze it at this point?
You could freeze it at this point also.
So, we'll rewrap the dough or else put it into a plastic bag and put that into the refrigerator.
How long does it rest now?
30 minutes is all you really need... Because you've activated the ... We've activated it.
And the yeast is going to start working again.
It's amazing how it just starts...
Right away.
Right way, yeah.
All right, next we're going to make the apricot filling that goes into one of our pastries.
And to do that we start out with a cup of sugar.
Now, I'm just going to pack a cupful of apricots here-- add that to the sugar.
And we're going to add one cup of water.
And then we'll just stir that... up a little bit, like this so we don't end up with the sugar all on the bottom.
So, it goes into the oven-- microwave oven.
And... ten minutes.
You should stir it two or three times while it's cooking.
Why is that?
Just to pick the sugar up from the bottom so that it doesn't cake down there.
And we'll start it again.
And here we have our apricots.
We'll put them into the food processor now.
Okay, and... That's a real purée, isn't it?
There we are.
If you didn't have the microwave you'd have to simmer them for several hours, wouldn't you?
And you'd have to be really careful to stir them so that they don't burn-- especially with something that has as much sugar in it as this does.
Okay, then we're going to get two tablespoons of... Fresh lemon.
Fresh lemon.
I'm doing it into a cup because there are some seeds here.
And we'll want to measure off two tablespoons because that's about what it'll take.
We have a strainer.
There's a cup.
There we go.
And now we'll measure two tablespoons... And about a half a teaspoon of almond extract.
Mmm, you can smell that almond extract.
We'll stir this up and that's ready to use in the filling.
Well, now our apricot filling is finished and we'll just put it into a little jar which can go into the refrigerator and you can use it for toast or whatever.
What does that make, about?
Makes a little more than a cup-- about a cup and a third or so.
The prune filling is done exactly the same way only we add cinnamon and vanilla to it.
Okay, we're going to make our confectioners' cream.
This is not a third filling but it's a filling that we add into the pastry along with a fruit filling because it kind of mellows off the flavor.
And we measure out one cup of cream-- half-and-half or if you can afford the whipping-cream calories it's even better.
And then we're going to measure a tablespoon and a half of corn starch into it.
If you have a half tablespoon measure that works really well.
but I'm going to have to kind of to make... You're going to eyeball it.
Eyeball it, right here.
And we'll level it off and put that in.
And then we're going to measure in Two tablespoons of sugar.
You can add an extra third tablespoon if you like the extra sweetness in there.
And so it's two to three tablespoons.
We'll whisk that a little bit here so that you get the corn starch up from the bottom.
It tends to want to sink to the bottom.
Then it will just make a little cake down there.
Now, this goes into the microwave.
This goes in for a minute.
Actually, I'd like to do it a minute at a time.
There we go.
And after each minute, I take it out and stir it and then put it back in.
In the meantime we can the egg yolk and the vanilla ready.
One teaspoon of vanilla.
And one egg yolk.
Pure vanilla extract.
Pure vanilla.
Not the fake stuff.
Nope, the fake stuff just doesn't taste right.
Okay, we'll take this and we'll... give it a stir.
It hasn't come to a boil yet.
But I just stir it just to be sure that cornstarch isn't stuck to the bottom.
Mm-hmm.
After the second minute it's begun to thicken up a little bit but it hasn't thickened enough.
So I'm going to put it in for another minute and it will come to a definite boil.
It has boiled up, hasn't it?
It has boiled way up and that's okay to do when it's just cornstarch.
You wouldn't want to let it boil way up like that with the egg in there.
See how thick it is.
That really is thick, isn't it?
That's how you want it.
Now we're going to add a little bit of that to the egg yolk mixed with vanilla.
So you won't shock the yolk when it comes into the hot stuff.
We don't want to make scrambled eggs here.
I'm going to do this with a scraper because we want to get it all.
When you're dealing with small amounts you can't afford to lose too much.
Okay, and then we'll just stir that in.
And the pastry cream at this point is probably hot enough to cook the egg yolk but just to be sure we'll put it back in the microwave for another 30 seconds.
We're not taking chances with egg yolks.
We're not taking chances with salmonella.
Back in, 30 seconds.
And there's our pastry cream.
Well, that looks beautiful... And as it... it's very thick; and then as it cools it gets even thicker, but it's almost... reminds me of lemon curd.
Lovely and smooth, too, isn't it?
Mm-hmm.
Mmm... it's good.
Very hot.
Good, good.
And now we're going to fill some pastries.
Great.
All set to go?
Ready to go, here's the dough.
The dough's ready for rolling out.
You can see the layers there, can't you?
You certainly can.
Okay, I'm going to dust the dough with flour just to get everything nice and dry.
And we're going to roll this out to do the shaping.
And we're going to roll it out into a 10 x 20 rectangle.
And, I don't know what it is, I get so excited I think I should do this really fast but we don't need to do it that fast and the dough actually performs better if you don't try to rush it.
But if you roll it out slowly... it comes out very even.
We're going to go a little bit further here because what we want to do is get five-inch squares.
So in order to have five-inch squares it's got to be ten inches across.
Okay, now, you can be very precise... Let's be very precise.
Okay, well, we'll... Do it the right way.
There we go-- 20 inches.
Now we're going to cut it in half at the five-inch mark.
Then we'll just draw a straight line... just like a carpenter.
You know, carpenters say you should measure twice and cut once.
That's what my husband always used to say.
Is that right?
Yeah.
Now comes the fun part.
Yeah.
We're going to fill and shape the pastries with our prune filling... with our apricot filling... and the pastry cream.
This will be nice.
That's not... of course, a bare tablespoon, then?
If you're using a teaspoon it's about a rounded teaspoon.
I like to be a little bit generous with the filling so that we have... so it's juicy-- I like juicy rolls.
Yes, yeah.
Next thing I'll do is paint the edges.
That's just beaten egg white?
Just with beaten egg white.
So go all the way around the edges here because it acts as a kind of a glue when we start shaping the pastries here.
Now, the first one that I'm going to shape is a little packet.
You pick up the corners like that-- and if you just pull the corners over they'll... they flop open while they're baking-- but I pick them up and just kind of pinch them together and make a little top hat there, see?
And I give it a little twist like that.
Mm-hmm, just to hold it together.
To hold it together, but you get that nice little... That's that parchment paper here.
And that's parchment paper on the...
I always use parchment paper.
Let's take this one and make what the Danes call the tre-hjorne... the three-corner.
Oh, the three- corner, oh.
And we just seal the edges here with your finger.
And that's how the three-corner is made.
I mean, that's not...
Very simple.
Very, very simple.
You can decorate it with a piece of dough if you wanted, I guess.
Yeah, we have a little... a few little scraps here.
We can brush the top and be fancy.
We should really glue it down with egg white.
Now, one of the favorite things I do with prune filling is at Christmastime I make prune tarts.
And that's a Finnish specialty.
It isn't Christmas without prune tarts.
And the way that those go is like this: you cut the corner to the center... Mm-hmm.
Then you lift up the center...
Lift up every other center.
Every other one.
And there we go: we've got a nice little star.
Well, that's nice, that is nice.
There's one that we didn't do yet that's very simple, and that is to make the spandaur-- is what they call it-- Mm-hmm.
Kind of looks just like that.
It's just like wrapping a baby in a blanket without pulling one end up.
Julia: That's very nice.
There we are.
All set.
And then they sit for about 30 minutes.
We let them rise, and before we put them into the oven we're going to brush them with more egg white.
And we have some here that we did a little bit earlier.
And we'll sprinkle it with pearl sugar.
Julia: Well, I don't think I've ever seen that, that's... That is a sugar that's used all over in Scandinavia and in Minnesota we can find it in the supermarket.
But other people may have to look in the Scandinavian specialty stores or into Scandinavian mail-order catalogs.
Aha.
Beatrice: Okay, now these go into a 400-degree oven and they'll bake for about ten minutes.
Good.
Julia: Oh, they look lovely.
Beatrice: They're all done.
We'll transfer them onto the tray here.
Well, that's a good idea, just slide them on.
We could actually very easily slide them off onto the rack now, too so they don't... Then they'll really cool nicely.
They'll cool nicely and we won't have any... Do you eat them warm or cold or what?
Oh... that's the best way!
Warm.
Warm.
Yeah.
Okay, well, now we're going to make our frosting.
We're going to add two or three teaspoons of milk to a half a cup of powdered sugar.
And it can be kind of a thin glaze.
We had to sift the powdered sugar because it had some little lumps in it.
Oh, yeah, you always do.
I always do.
And then I'm putting it into a plastic bag.
I'm going to close it up.
Oh, that's in a zipper-lock, that's a wonderful... Yeah.
And then cut a little bit of the corner off.
Yeah.
And then we'll just drizzle.
Oh, well, that's very clever.
It's kind of a royal icing, isn't it?
A royal icing made with milk so it's not going to be as stiff as a royal icing would be.
Well, that's nice, isn't it?
Nice little glaze over the top and they're all set... That's, that's beautiful.
...for eating.
Beatrice: Okay, here we have three different kinds of berries: beautiful raspberries, blackberries and blueberries that we're going to crush down to make about two cups of crushed berries.
Get them coarsely crushed because the rest of them... of the mashing will happen as it cooks.
So we're going to add a cupful of sugar to this.
And we'll mix the sugar in... Well, the sugar draws out the juices, too, doesn't it?
It does, you don't need to add any extra water.
Okay, now these are ready for the microwave and they'll cook for 18 minutes.
We'll stir them two or three times in the middle.
But I've already programmed this for 18 minutes.
Okay, here it is, it's all cooked and cooled and we added a tablespoon of lemon juice to it.
That's, that's thickened up, too, hasn't it?
Yeah, one thing you have to be sure to do is to cook it without a cover on it in the microwave because you want that... all the moisture and the liquid to evaporate.
It makes a lovely jam.
Fresh tasting.
Mm-hmm.
Okay, well, we'll roll out our dough now.
Now we have the second half of our pastry remember we made our packets out of the first half And you have your cold... And sometimes when the dough is really cold it's hard to start rolling, so I either pound it with my fist or I'll pound it with the... rolling pin.
Is this again go... 20 by... ?
No, this one goes 16 x 10.
16 x 10.
Very fine.
Very fine-- now we're going to take our parchment paper and put it underneath.
This makes it a lot easier to transfer the filled braid... That gets to be awfully difficult otherwise.
Now, um, the next thing I'll do is cut strips along each edge.
About three-quarters of an inch or an inch apart.
About a third of the way into the dough.
Now the next thing we'll do is take our lovely jam...
Here you are.
Bottled jam never tastes like this, does it?
Never tastes the same, does it?
And we'll just spread it right down the middle because we're filling this braid with this jam.
Well, it doesn't look at all like a braid.
I'll be very interested to see your movements from now on.
How this braid happens.
Yeah.
And then, one thing I needed to do is... brush the edges with... That's your same beaten egg white.
Mm-hmm, beaten egg white.
That same nice pastry cream.
The pastry cream, we just spoon that right over the top.
And that's just like having berries and cream inside a Danish or a flaky pastry.
So it's almost like a pie.
Mm-hmm.
Now... what the next thing we're going to do is turn this into a braid.
And we'll do it just the way you braid.
You pull the left side over the top like that.
Oh.
There we go.
That's nice, isn't it?
Makes a nice little braid.
Kind of looks like lacing up a moccasin, doesn't it?
Yes.
Okay.
Now we'll brush this with some egg white.
And now we'll transfer this onto the baking sheet so if you want to put the baking sheet here.
Just move this over.
Sprinkle the top with some of our pearl sugar again.
Now, this has to rise for about 30 minutes and then it goes into the oven to bake.
Do you want a cover on it?
We'll put a cover on it.
There we are.
Here it is.
Look at that.
All baked.
It's swelled... swelled up nicely, hasn't it?
And then we'll just slide it right off the cookie sheet.
See that... wonderful having that paper, isn't it?
The paper makes it so handy.
Then we have a glaze to put on top of the... just to decorate.
Is that the same glaze we had?
It's not, it's almost the same except instead of cream we use coffee.
Ah.
With... with the powdered sugar.
That'll show up more, too, won't it?
Well, and, you know, coffee is such an appropriate flavor here.
Mm-- oh, now that looks very nice.
It doesn't take a whole lot just enough to give it a shininess.
So there.
It's wonderful what you've taught us today, Beatrice.
This wonderful braid and then all these cute little pastries.
They're so good to eat.
Well, thank you, I love them myself.
Well, it was just so dear of you to come all the way from Minnesota.
Any day.
Any day.
And we thank you... very much.
Thanks for having me.
Julia's got the tastieation] Julia: Bon appétit!