Aki thought we should make gougères. I laughed. I remember when I first learned to make gougères when I was at Shenorock Shore Club. I had to make a large batch of pâte à choux, and my arm aches just thinking of the memory. Why in the world would I want to make gougères? Then I relaxed because Aki said she would make them. As she started organizing the ingredients and putting them into the pot, I gently pushed her aside (actually, I think she was baiting me) and took over the gougère project. The dough came together, and then we folded in some aged Comté. I filled the pastry bag and lined up the gougères on a parchment-lined sheet pan. After a short turn in the oven, the gougères emerged, crisp on the outside, warm and cheesy on the inside. And the kitchen was perfumed with the heady aroma of toasted bread and melted cheese (the aroma of fresh-baked gougères).
I really enjoyed making gougères again. While I knew another round of gougères was out of the question (we have been trying not to repeat), I felt we could try something else with the gougère base. If I remember correctly, I often do not, I saw a donut festival over on Eggbeater a while back, and part of the process included using pâte à choux to make the donuts. If I am mistaken, the spark still comes from my poor ability to remember since I somehow linked pâte à choux, Eggbeater, and donuts together. Either way, I was going to make some donuts using pâte à choux as the base.
I also did not want a plain donut. Sure, plain donuts are fine, though I knew we could make a donut with a bit of character. Instead of adding cheese to the pâte à choux base for the gougères, I added pressure-cooked pistachio puree and a healthy dose of pistachio oil. I then filled the pastry bag again with the base. Instead of baking the base, I opted to cut sections of piped dough into hot oil. The result was pistachio donuts. We rolled the finished donuts in cardamom-flavored sugar. The sugar acted to pique the flavor of the donuts, keeping them balanced and just a shade on the sweet side of savory.
Today we paired the donuts with white asparagus, rhubarb puree, borage leaves, and a few whole pistachios. I really enjoy the dish. Yet, the breakthrough for me is all the possibilities we now have. What can I flavor the donut with now: paprika, lemon, truffle, tomato, onion, lime leaf, pumpernickel? And what role will these donuts play? Can we serve them as part of a dish, a precursor to a dish, as an element in a dish? And then what will we pair these donuts with: foie gras, vegetable salads, even perhaps a dessert.
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