How-To & Diy

Meyer Lemon Eclairs

January 10, 2014

Every other Friday, Yossy Arefi from Apt. 2B Baking Co. shares dessert projects that demand a little extra time and effort. Because your weekends should always be sweet.

Today: Eclairs are classic and elegant -- adding a citrusy cream makes them the perfect dessert to tackle on a gloomy January day. 

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Eclairs are made from a classic French pastry called pâte à choux, which is also the base of cream puffs and delightfully cheesy gougéres. Making pâte à choux requires little more than a good saucepan, a wooden spoon, and a strong arm, but it is one of those recipes that feels like magic. I remember making cream puffs with my mom when I was about ten and marveling over how the heat from the oven turned the paste we made on the stove into little pockets, perfect for stuffing with all sorts of good stuff. I used to fill them with ice cream, but this time of year a hefty spoonful of tart lemon cream is the way to go.

More: Use your pâté a choux to make these State Fair Cream Puffs.

In these cold months, we all need something to brighten up our spirits, and citrus fruit is just about the brightest, sunniest thing around. One of my very favorite citrus recipes is Tartine Bakery’s Lemon Cream, made with sweet and floral Meyer lemons if I can find them. I stumbled upon the genius recipe about a year ago and have made it countless times since. It is sweet, tart, and creamy all in perfect balance, and I love finding ways to tuck it into all sorts of desserts -- like this fresh take on eclairs. 

Meyer Lemon Cream Filling

Makes 12 to 18 eclairs 

One batch of Tartine’s Lemon Cream made with Meyer lemons 
1/2 cup heavy cream 

Prepare the lemon cream according to the recipe and cool completely. 

Whip the heavy cream to soft peaks and fold it into the lemon cream. Keep refrigerated while you prepare the other components.

Meyer Lemon Glaze

Juice and zest of one Meyer lemon
1 1/2 cups confectioner’s sugar

Whisk the juice, zest, and sugar together until smooth. You want a fairly thick glaze that will not run down the sides of the eclairs. 

Pâte à Choux

1 cup water
6 tablespoons butter
2 teaspoons sugar
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 cup flour
4 eggs
1 egg for egg wash

Preheat oven to 425° F. Combine the water, butter, sugar, and salt in a saucepan. Heat over medium until the butter has melted completely.

Remove the pan from the heat and add in all of the flour at once. Stir quickly with a wooden spoon until the mixture is smooth and pulls away from the sides of the pan. Let the mixture cool for a few minutes.

Add in the eggs one at a time, stirring to incorporate each egg completely before adding the next one.

In a small bowl, beat the additional egg with one tablespoon of water. Spoon the mixture into a pastry bag with a large round tip (or a bag with the corner cut).

Pipe even strips about 1 inch by 5 inches long. Smooth any peaks or rough edges with a wet finger and brush the strips with egg wash.

Bake for 15 to 20 minutes, or until golden brown. Cool completely before filling.

To Assemble

Fill a pastry bag fitted with a bismark tip with the chilled lemon cream mixture. Fill each eclair with a few tablespoons of the cream, then dip the top in the Meyer lemon glaze. Garnish with candied citrus peel (I used kumquats). Alternately, slice the top third off of each eclair, fill the bottom with a few tablespoons of lemon cream, replace the tops, and drizzle with glaze. 

Enjoy immediately -- these treats are best the day they are made.

See the full recipe (and save and print it) here. 

Photos by Yossy Arefi

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Yossy Arefi is a photographer and stylist with a passion for food. During her stint working in restaurant kitchens, Yossy started the blog Apt. 2B Baking Co. where, with her trusty Pentax film camera, she photographs and writes about seasonal desserts and preserves. She currently lives in Brooklyn but will always love her native city of Seattle. Follow her work at apt2bbakingco.blogspot.com & yossyarefi.com.

6 Comments

Mary G. March 7, 2016
I tried this recipe twice, once following it as written and once cooking the dough longer after adding the flour. Both times, it simply did not work - the dough turned out as a thin batter. I'm a fairly experienced baker, so I'm not sure why this kept happening, but I finally just made another pate a choux to use with the (delicious) lemon cream. I'm thinking this recipe might be a bad one. The dough needs to be beaten, not just stirred, and it needs to be cooked with the flour.
 
juleeclip January 14, 2014
Wow, wow, wow! Can't wait to try this on some very carefree weekend day :)
 
friedasproduce January 13, 2014
Look at how pretty everything else! Great use of Kumquats too.
 
John January 11, 2014
Thank looks absolutely delightful, thanks for sharing this recipe!
 
M. B. January 10, 2014
I've always wanted to try making eclairs and now, armed with your recipe, I will! The link to "bismark tip" didn't work but I'll google it.
 
Catherine L. January 10, 2014
Thanks for the heads up! Fixing it now.