The State Fair brings me my ultimate favorite treat, the
famous WI State Fair Cream Puffs. I never have enough and
come home and make them myself, with the original recipe,
for a few weeks.
It's easy and so delicious. I've shared it here before but
just have to again...
The Wisconsin State Fair Cream Puff Original Recipe
Makes 12 cream puffs
1 cup water
4 Tbsp (1/2 stick) butter
1/4 tsp. iodized salt (the fact that this is mentioned
indicates how old this recipe is.)
1 cup all-purpose flour, sifted
4 eggs
1 egg yolk, lightly beaten
2 Tbsp. milk
2 cups whipping cream, whipped with vanilla extract and
sugar (see below) (Cool Whip will work but it won't be as
good. Some people like to use vanilla pudding, with or
without sugar, too.)
Sifted powdered sugar
Made from the ingredients Wisconsin is famous for ? milk,
cream, butter and eggs ? cream puffs were a natural addition
to the Wisconsin State Fair. Since their introduction in
1924, cream puffs have grown to be a signature Fair item,
selling more than 365,000 annually. The Wisconsin State Fair
dairy bakery operates around-the-clock during the Fair to
meet the ever-growing insatiable demand.
Some fairgoers wait all year for a chance to indulge in the
rich sweetness of a State Fair cream puff, but now you can
make them year-round in your own kitchen. The following
recipe does not take dozens of employees or tons of whipping
cream to make, but the taste is as genuine as the Fair. So,
go ahead ? indulge and savor the memories.
1. Heat oven to 375 degrees. Butter and flour one very large
or two small baking sheets, or line with parchment paper.
2. Pour water into heavy saucepan. Cut butter into small
pieces and add to water. Add salt. Place saucepan over
medium-low heat so butter melts before water boils. Bring
water just to boil.
3. Remove pan from heat and add flour all at once, stirring
vigorously with a wooden spoon until dough forms into a ball
and bottom of pan is filmed with flour. Let dough rest 5
minutes.
4. Add whole eggs, beating in one egg at a time. Dough
should be stiff but smooth.
5. Immediately drop 1/4 cupfuls of dough 3 inches apart on
baking sheet. (Or for a neater appearance, use pastry bag
with 3/4-inch plain tip and pipe dough onto baking sheet.)
6. Combine egg yolk and milk in a small bowl. Brush each
puff with glaze mixture, taking care not to let liquid drip
onto pan.
7. Bake 35 minutes, until puffed, golden brown and firm.
8. Cool puffs on wire racks, pricking each with a cake
tester or toothpick to allow steam to escape, or leave them
in a turned-off oven with the door propped open for about an
hour, until firm. (If baked pastry is filled before cool and
firm, it will be soggy and may collapse.) Baked puffs should
have hollow, moist interiors and crisp outer shells that are
lightly browned.
9. Cut off tops, fill with whipped cream (use pastry bag
with star tip or scoop the whipped cream with a large
spoon). Replace tops of the puffs and sprinkle with powdered
sugar. Enjoy!
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