Napoleon cake
Napoleon cake has no relationship with Napoleon in fact. One saying is that its English name Napoleon is the miscommunication of Napolitain that refers to a name of the pastry from Italy Naples, has been writing Napoleon only. In 17th century, a confectionery chef in Paris bet with others that he would make a 100-layer cake. There was no records of how many layers he made in the end, but now generally only 3 layers. Maybe because 3 layers are too short, so named after the little giant Napoleon, but it needs textual research. The French name of Napoleon cake is
Mille feuille that means 1,000,000 crust pastry, so it is also called
Puff Pastry.
http://www.cztv.com/liv_loadfile/shopping/foods/express/fold4/1291184864_30662600.jpgHow to make Napoleon cake:
Ingredients for Napoleon Cake:
1 lb package of Puff Pastry (Pepperidge Farm brand), thawed according to package instructions.
2 eggs
1 cup light brown sugar (or 1/2 brown sugar, 1/2 white sugar)
1/2 cup milk
2 tbsp flour
1/2 lb (2 sticks) unsalted butter, room temperature
1/2 tsp vanilla powder, optional
1/2 cup chopped walnuts
You will need:
1 large sheet of parchment paper.
How to Make Napoleon Cake Cream:
1. Whisk eggs and sugar in a medium sauce pan – do not beat, just mix.
2. Whisk in milk and flour and put the pot on medium-low heat.
3. Cook the mixture, stirring occasionally – (stir more often towards the end so it doesn’t get lumpy) until it becomes thick, like pudding (approx 15-17 minutes).
3. Cook the mixture, stirring occasionally – (stir more often towards the end so it doesn’t get lumpy) until it becomes thick, like pudding (approx 15-17 minutes).
How to Make Napoleon Cake Layers:
Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F.
1. Roll 1 of the puff pastry sheets onto a large sheet of parchment paper until the dough is double in size and nearly see-through. Thinner is better!
2. Cut the rolled out sheet into 4 equal squares (about 6″x6″ each).
3. Poke Holes all over the top of the pastry or it will puff up. Make sure to really poke all the way through the dough.
4. Place the parchment paper with dough onto a large cookie sheet. Bake at 400 degrees F for 12-13 minutes or until tops are golden. These are easy to burn so keep an eye on them! Set pastry aside, and place the same parchment paper on a cool surface. Re-use the paper to roll out and bake the next sheet of pastry.
5. Repeat steps 1 through 3 for the second sheet of pastry dough.
6. Once the frosting is finished, assemble the cake by placing 2 sheets of pastry side by side and spreading a generous amount of cream over the top.
7. Repeat with all of the pastry. Before glazing the top, gently press down on the cake to make it more compact.
8. To make the topping, Trim the edges of the cake to make it more uniform. Crumble the cut-off sections and sprinkle over the top. (If cut-off pieces do not crumble easily, you may need to bake them until they are browned). 9. Sprinkle 1/2 cup of chopped walnuts evenly over the top.
http://natashaskitchen.com/2011/05/13/napoleon-cake-recipe/