Well Done
By Evelyn Grosvenor-Smythe
DEAR DAME EVELYN , Ten years ago my then-significant other and
I took our first trip together to Paris. Valentine's Day was
snowy and very romantic, and we traipsed all over the place. But first
thing in the morning we stopped into a little patisserie between the
rue de Rivoli and the river and filled ourselves up with cafés
au lait and brioches. This year, since we're still together, I want
to make brioches in commemoration, and also because they're just good.
Can it be done? Or is French brioche, like French wine, a mystery no
New Worlder may solve?
Paris
My precious,
It can be done, of course. It's not even all that difficult if you
have some comfort level with the basics of baking. Brioche is just more
time-consuming than most other baked goods because it's essentially
half bread, half pastry; you have yeast that must rise, and you have
absolutely gobs of butter and eggs that make the rising a weightier
proposition. The biggest twist is that you must let the dough rise twice
once overnight, in the refrigerator, and again the next day,
before you bake it. (Ideally too you need brioche pans, those flared
and fluted numbers you see in a wide assortment of sizes at cookware
shops. But such pans aren't essential.) You can make either sweet or
savory brioches. Dame Evelyn favors or at any rate tends to make
the former, since a slightly sweet brioche seems to go especially
well with breakfast or teatime jams and spreads. But savory brioche
has its applications, including beef Wellington, if you're thinking
grandly romantic. If you, or anyone else, wants the specific recipe,
contact me at the address below and I will provide it. Although there
might have been enough space here to reproduce it if I hadn't gone on
so, I did and now there isn't.
Sweetly,
E. G.-S.
Dame Evelyn has a brioche recipe, but will she actually share
it?
E-mail Evelyn Grosvenor-Smythe at dame.evelyn@comcast.net.