Cookies Sugar, Spice & Everything Nice Palmiers

Sugar, Spice & Everything Nice Palmiers

These delicacies are irresistible. Sugar caramelizes the layers of puff pastry creating a delightful crunch, while spices and chocolate-dipped edges add a twist on this French classic. Perfect served alone or sandwiched with ice cream or buttercream. Elegant and simple, but they will be talked about long after your party ends.

Watch this video! Get Adobe Flash Player

Tags:

  • desserts
  • dessert
  • pastry
  • chocolate
  • cookies
  • cookie
  • baked goods
  • puff pastry
  • denise swidey
  • about denise
  • denise drower swidey
  • about denise drower swidey
  • sweet siced palmier
  • palmier
  • spiced palmier
  • palmiers
  • puffed pastry
  • cinnamon sugar
  • heart cookies
  • easy cookie
  • frozen puffed pastry
  • chocolate-dipped pastries
  • making palmiers
  • sugar & spice palmiers
  • cookie palmiers
  • puff pastry dough
  • chocolate dipped palmiers
  • chocolate-dipped
  • chocolate-dipped cookies
About Denise Drower Swidey

Watch this video! Get Adobe Flash Player

Tags:

  • cookies
  • making cookies
  • how to make cookies
  • sugar cookies
  • ming tsai
  • denise swidey
  • swidey
  • about denise swidey
  • cookie recipes
  • sugar cookie recipes
  • royal icing
  • halloween cookie bouquet
  • holiday cookie bouquet
  • denise dower swidey
  • holiday bouquet
  • holiday bouquets
  • holiday cookie bouquets
  • halloween cookie bouquets
  • halloween bouquet
  • halloween bouquets
  • royal icing tips & tricks

About Sugar, Spice & Everything Nice Palmiers

These delicacies are irresistible. Sugar caramelizes the layers of puff pastry creating a delightful crunch, while spices and chocolate-dipped edges add a twist on this French classic. Perfect served alone or sandwiched with ice cream or buttercream. Elegant and simple, but they will be talked about long after your party ends.

About Denise Drower Swidey

Denise Drower Swidey has been a cooking devotee since 8th grade. A graduate of the CIA in New York, she was inspired by her mom, whom Denise credits as being an amazing chef and a great artist. Denise expresses her artistry through culinary outlets including: owner/operator of Cook to Order Inc., culinary producer, food stylist for Ming Tsai's Emmy nominated show Simply Ming, writer and contributor to the Boston Globe, recipe testing and private culinary instructor. On top of all that talent, she's one of the nicest people you'll ever meet.

Recipe

Ingredients

Yield: about 48 medium palmiers

  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 tsp ground cinnamon
  • ¼ tsp ground cloves
  • ⅛ tsp kosher salt
  • 1 sheet (about ½ lb) puff pastry dough (available in frozen food aisle), thawed
  • good quality dark chocolate, melted (optional)

Special Equipment

  • dough scraper
  • rolling pin
  • Silpat or parchment paper
  • baking sheet

How-to

  1. Combine sugar with the spices and salt and dust the counter with a quarter of the mixture
  2. Cut the puff pastry square in half lengthwise, and place one half on top of the sugar. Sprinkle another quarter of the sugar on top
  3. With a rolling pin, thin out and elongate the rectangle until it’s about ⅛" thick, continuing to sprinkle with sugar. Keep turning and rolling and moving the dough to incorporate as much sugar as possible. Your finished rectangle should be about 6" x 15"
  4. Place the dough in front of you horizontally. Fold the top edge to the center, then fold the bottom edge to meet in the center to form a longer, skinnier rectangle. Next, fold the dough in half the opposite direction (horizontally) to bring the shorter sides together
  5. Using the side of your hand, make a deep indentation down the horizontal center of the dough and fold in half again. Repeat with second rectangle and remaining sugar
  6. Wrap the dough logs in plastic and refrigerate them for at least 30 minutes until firm (you can do this part ahead and freeze for several weeks – defrost on the counter for ½ hour before using). If you won’t be using the dough log right away, freeze the dough to prevent the sugar pulling the moisture out of the dough
  7. Preheat oven to 425º.  Place a rack in the middle of the oven
  8. Using a sharp knife, cut the chilled log into ¼" thick slices and arrange cut-side-up on a parchment paper or silpat-lined baking sheet, 1" apart. Bake on middle rack about 8-10 minutes or until the sugar begins to caramelize and the bottoms of the palmiers are golden brown
  9. Using a metal off-set spatula, turn the palmiers over and continue baking about 2-3 minutes longer. Cool completely
  10. If desired, dip the edges in the melted chocolate, allow to set, then serve
  11. Can be used for ice cream sandwiches or filled with buttercream. Place in an airtight container and store for up to 1 week

Share this video

Send to a Friend

Want to share this how2heroes video with a friend? Enter your email address and their email address below and hit share. They’ll receive an email from you with the details.


Get code

If you’d like to publish this how2heroes video on your own Web page or blog, copy the code below and paste it into the HTML on your site. Please note that some blogs may require additional steps to publish HTML.

Comments (2)

Log in to comment & post a picture

  1. jzubatkin:

    So easy! I ended up folding them using the technique described in the Parmesan recipe but they still turned out great! (Jan 3, 2010 1:46:29 PM)

  2. carla:

    SO glad to see this video. My mom used to make these for me when I was little... I LOVE THEM!! thank you! (Dec 29, 2009 4:12:33 PM)