Gougères With Pancetta and Sage

- Total Time
- 1 hour
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 6ounces/170 grams pancetta, cut into cubes, or bacon
- A dozen whole sage leaves
- 4tablespoons/57 grams unsalted butter
- ½teaspoon fine sea salt or kosher salt
- ¼teaspoon cayenne
- 1cup/125 grams bread flour or all-purpose flour (see Note)
- 4eggs, at room temperature
- 5ounces/142 grams shredded Gruyère, or another firm cheese like Manchego or aged Cheddar
- ⅓cup/50 grams grated Parmesan cheese
Preparation
- Step 1
Put pancetta in a large skillet and place over medium heat. Cook slowly, stirring, until fat is rendered and meat is well browned and crispy all over, 12 to 17 minutes. Use a slotted spoon to transfer to a paper towel-lined plate.
- Step 2
Sprinkle sage into the hot fat in the skillet and cook until crisp, about 1 minute. Transfer to plate with pancetta. When cool, finely chop pancetta and sage together.
- Step 3
Heat oven to 425 degrees and line two rimmed baking sheets with parchment paper. Have ready an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment (or use a sturdy mixing spoon).
- Step 4
In a saucepan, bring 1 cup water, butter, salt and cayenne to a boil. Stir in flour all at once, and cook, stirring continuously with a wooden spoon, until dough forms a mass and pulls away from the sides of the pot, 2 to 3 minutes. The dough will be quite stiff.
- Step 5
Scrape into the mixer and beat until cooled slightly, about 30 seconds. Add one egg at a time, letting it fully incorporate before adding the next. (If you don’t have a mixer, you can do this by mixing dough vigorously with a sturdy spoon.)
- Step 6
When eggs are incorporated, add Gruyère and continue to beat until it is mostly melted into batter, then add pancetta and sage and mix until combined.
- Step 7
Transfer batter to a large resealable plastic bag, and snip off ¾-inch from one corner, or use a pastry bag. Pipe into balls, about 2 teaspoons each, leaving 1 inch of space between them. (Or, use a spoon to form the balls and drop onto baking sheets.)
- Step 8
Sprinkle Parmesan on top, and bake 15 minutes. Reduce oven temperature to 350 degrees, and continue to bake until golden and cooked through, 10 to 15 minutes more. Serve immediately, while still warm.
- The gougères will still be delicious if you use all-purpose flour, but bread flour makes them rounder and puffier.
Private Notes
Comments
If baking from frozen, where should I add the longer baking time -- before or after reducing the oven temp to 350?
Bake as the recipe states. Let them cool to room temperature. Put them in a zip-lock bag or plastic container and freeze them. When you want to use them, put them frozen in a 350 degree oven for 10 to 20 minutes. Slightly cool and serve. Or serve at room temperature.
Made these for a party and somebody said they were the best things they'd ever eaten. A few tips: the cayenne is pretty much undetectable. I added a good dose of fresh black pepper. As soon as they come out of the oven, poke a hole in the bottom to let the steam out so that they don't deflate (I use my thinnest pastry bag tip), and let them cool on a rack. Finally, you can bake and let cool, put into Ziploc bags and freeze, then bake at 350 for 10 minutes and serve. So easy!
This recipe did not work out for me. Was labor intensive and was not at all tasty or worth it.
For anyone not using a mixer, I hit on the following method that seemed to make it easier to manage the stiff dough during the egg incorporation phase. Start with a large rubber spatula in your dominant hand, using it to scrape errant bits of the egg and dough together, and a wooden spoon in your other hand. Stir until the dough forms large scallops, then switch the wooden spoon to your dominant hand and the rest of the incorporation will happen quickly. Repeat for each egg.
These were delicious and gobbled up quickly by guests despite deflating out of the oven and looking rather ugly. They were difficult to shape even when using the piping bag. Used gruyère and unsmoked lardons as I had leftover from the Melissa Clark Beef Bourguignon recipe.
