Religieuse
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Origin | |
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Place of origin | France |
Details | |
Course served | Dessert |
Main ingredient(s) | Flour and crème pâtissière |
Religieuse is a French pastry made of two choux pastry cases, one larger than the other, filled with crème pâtissière, mostly commonly chocolate or mocha.[1] Each case is covered in a ganache of the same flavor as the filling, and then joined decorated with piped buttercream frosting.
The pastry, whose name means "Nun", is supposed to represent the papal mitre. Religieuse itself was supposedly conceived in the mid-nineteenth century, but the first version of the batter was invented in 1540 by Panterelli, the Florentine chef of the Florentine queen of France, Catherine de' Medici. After subsequent iterations, the batter finally took its current form in the early 18th century in the kitchens of Marie-Antoine Carême, "The King of Chefs and the Chef of Kings".[2] Religieuse is a type of éclair.[3]
In popular culture
The film The Grand Budapest Hotel features a bakery that specializes in the fictional Courtesan au Chocolat, a parody of the religieuse, comprising three layers rather than two. The name "Courtesan", or escort, is also a parody of the name "Religieuse", or nun.
See also
References
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