Advertisement

Dungeness crab puffs

Share

Total time: 1 hour, 50 minutes

Servings: About 4 dozen 1-inch puffs

Note: This dough is my standard savory pâte à choux, which I learned from Madeleine Kamman.

Pastry dough

1/4 cup ( 1/2 stick) butter, diced

1/4 teaspoon salt

Pinch sugar

Pinch white pepper

1/2 cup sifted flour

3 eggs, lightly beaten

Butter

1. Position a rack in the upper third of the oven and heat the oven to 400 degrees. In a small saucepan, bring one-half cup water, butter, salt, sugar and white pepper to a boil, and simmer until the butter is completely melted and the mixture looks milky, about 2 to 3 minutes.

2. Remove the pan from the heat and all at once dump in the flour. Stir until a rather firm ball forms.

3. Dry the dough by returning the pan to medium-low heat and cook the dough, stirring constantly, flattening the ball to expose as much of the surface as possible to the heat. Cook until you see little bubbles of butter oozing from the paste and a sandy film of paste appears on the bottom of the pan, 5 or 6 minutes.

Advertisement

4. Remove from the heat and beat in the eggs, about a third at a time, stirring briskly to incorporate the egg into the dough as quickly and thoroughly as possible before adding another portion of egg. Stir vigorously. At first, the mixture will loosen and separate, but as you continue beating, it will come back together, thicken and become shiny and sticky.

5. Butter a cookie sheet generously and rinse it under cold water. (The water will evaporate while the puffs bake and prevent the bottoms from scorching.) Fit a plain nozzle into a pastry bag and fill the bag with the dough. Pipe balls about 1 inch in diameter onto the cookie sheet, leaving about 2 inches in between for expansion during cooking. You can also use two spoons to scoop out the dough and form it into balls.

6. Bake the puffs until they are dry and brown, about 30 minutes. Use a paring knife to cut a slit in each puff, then return them to the oven for 5 to 10 minutes to finish browning and drying. Do not let them scorch.

7. Remove the puffs to a wire rack and let them cool. The puffs can be prepared 8 hours in advance and stored on the wire rack at room temperature.

Dungeness crab salad

6 radishes

1/2 pound Dungeness crab meat

1/4 cup mayonnaise

1 tablespoon snipped chives

1 1/2 teaspoons minced

tarragon

1/2 teaspoon tarragon vinegar

Salt

1. Cut the radishes in half and then cut them crosswise in moderately thin slices. They should be thick enough that they crunch, but not so thick they dominate the crab. Combine the sliced radishes, crab, mayonnaise, chives, tarragon and vinegar in a mixing bowl and stir to combine. Taste and add salt if necessary. You should have about 2 cups of salad. (The recipe can be made to this point and refrigerated, tightly covered, up to 8 hours in advance.)

Advertisement

2. Slice the top third off of each cream puff shell using a serrated knife. Pull out any moist dough from the center and discard (the better you dry the dough after you’ve added the flour, the less you’ll have to throw away).

3. Spoon a heaping teaspoon of crab salad into the center of each shell and replace the lid. It should sit jauntily on top. Serve within an hour.

Each crab puff: 30 calories; 2 grams protein; 1 gram carbohydrate; 0 fiber; 2 grams fat; 1 gram saturated fat; 20 mg. cholesterol; 41 mg. sodium.

Advertisement