Pettit four ideas.

Kitchen Knife Forums

Help Support Kitchen Knife Forums:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

jai

Senior Member
Joined
Oct 16, 2012
Messages
431
Reaction score
5
Hey guys ive been put on pastry and want to make some new pettit fours. What pettit fours do your guys make at work? Any ideas are welcome. Thanks jai
 
rainbow cookies, mini NY cheesecakes, whiskey pecan tartlettes
 
dried apricot and hazelnut shortbread bars, Margarita tartlettes,Caramelized banana and walnut phyllo purses.
 
I'm not a chef or a baker but I can tell you what I like and maybe you can come up with something from that? I don't eat many deserts but these two are the ones I think about often.

My grandma used to make a peppermint cake every christmas. White cake, poke holes in it after it cools, crush up those pastel colored chalky mints and sprinkle them on top of the cake then lightly spray it with water so that the color and the flavor gets into the cake. Then top it with a whipped buttercream and add the second layer. For the top she garnished it with crushed pepper mints.

There's a restaurant here those does these fresh baked to order cookies in these 4" round cast iron pans. It comes to you still gooey with a scoop of ice cream on top. It's heavenly.
 
dried apricot and hazelnut shortbread bars, Margarita tartlettes,Caramelized banana and walnut phyllo purses.

That sounds so ridiculously good. The caramelized banana and walnut phyllo purses might appear in my dreams.
 
Key Lime (real key lime) not the fake stuff ,Disaronno Cream & Carmel , "Kahlua" = White Russian Cream . Just a few of my Favorites .

Sam
 
I think petit fours are really fun and a good opportunity for pastry chefs to play. I used to love to take classic desserts and turn them into petit fours - i.e peach melba might become a raspberry coulis filled peach jube dusted in vanilla sugar with some piped creme pat on top.

Peter Greweling's Chocolates and Confections book is excellent and totally geared to pro pastry chefs. His recipes are very sweet, and sometimes complex,but foolproof. The theory sections of the book are alone worth tracking it down for.
 
Lately... Nougat , honeycomb, Turkish delight , assorted truffles , lime/vodka/pistachio mini cheesecakes.
 
How do you make the cheesecakes? In a slab or mould or tart shells or what?
 
Yeah I make a large slab and cut it down into small squares. I think it looks nicer than the bought in shells. Playing around with the presentation of the top layer of the cheesecake can be fun... Or use a gel / coulis / sauce to put on top of each one.
 
At my work we arent allowed to buy in tart shells we have to make sweet paste and then line and bake them its pretty time consuming and at the moment we are fully booked every lunch and dinner every day.
 
That's great . Sounds like your in a nice place. A slab would be less time consuming for sure.
 
Back
Top