Bring teatime in Paris to your home
June 1, 2015 by JaneJill Colonna fell in love with a
Frenchman she met in her native Scotland and they moved to Paris
together over 20 years ago. She couldn’t speak much French
and had never needed to entertain before. Soon realising that
her “banana surprise” with custard from a packet mix was not going
to hack it with her new French dinner guests, Jill needed to
improve her culinary skills tout de suite!
Calling herself a “lazy gourmet,” she enjoyed
exploring how to make great French food inexpensively and quickly
while keeping it authentic and full of flavour.
It was as a busy working mum that Jill began to make
Parisian cakes and pastries as a hobby. She mastered macarons
and wrote her popular book, Mad
About Macarons!, a step-by-step demystification of how to make
these delicious confections. After successfully mastering French
patisserie, Jill has now written Teatime in Paris! (Enter our contest for your chance to win a
copy.) Her straightforward approach and guidance will enable you to
create some of Paris’s best-loved teatime pastries and
cakes.
Previously a professional musician, Jill continues to
enjoy playing flute and piano. She also conducts walking
tours of the best patisserie and chocolate establishments around St
Germain-des-Prés in Paris. Jill spoke with us about her love of
Paris and the cookbook writing experience:
Teatime in Paris. These three short words have been constantly on
my mind for the last two years, and, I can tell you, it’s been a
deliciously exciting adventure.
My name is Jill Colonna, and I live in Paris. I grew up in
Edinburgh and moved to Paris over twenty years ago after I met the
Frenchman who was to become my husband. I couldn’t speak much
French then and I couldn’t bake much either. The challenge was
rather intimidating! I worked for ten years, had a family, and
through that period learned how to cook Paris-style, speak fluent
French and most importantly, make macarons! That led to my first
book Mad About Macarons (Waverley Books).
In the last couple of years, I started to guide on sweet walks in
Paris, and show chocolate and pastry-loving visitors around some of
Paris’s most famous pâtisseries and chocolateries.
It was while leading a walk around the teashops in lovely Paris
sunshine, filled with svelte Parisians, that I kept mulling over a
recurring question, ‘How can the French stay so slim yet eat all
these pastries filled with so much cream and butter?’ The
answer is this: the French don’t snack all day, and they stick to
regular mealtimes. Everything is in moderation. But they also often
sit and take pleasure in an official afternoon “snack”, the
goûter, often called quatre heures or 4 o’clock teatime. I
was intrigued. And delighted. So my first Teatime research
was to list typically light French recipes, perfect with tea in the
afternoon, (I adore tea!), and then try them all out.
I wanted to make the recipes as straightforward as I could, and
added step-by-step stages, and easy-to-find ingredients in the hope
budding readers will reach for the aprons and get cracking with the
eggs!
To keep the recipes authentic, I tasted many of the temptations in
high-end patisseries, and on my walks, found myself obsessed with
street signs too. I love the names, and designs, so I photographed
them around Paris just as I snapped the pastries for my book.
The street signs serve as a guide to many personal favourite
addresses and here you’ll find the most wonderful lemon meringue
tartlets, fruity éclairs, salted caramel cream puffs, chocolate
macarons, vanilla millefeuilles, and hot chocolate. From the Eiffel
Tower, the Champs-Elysées, the Louvre, to the Marais area, the book
lists great places to taste excellent patisserie in a bonus
feature. I discovered they’re not all necessarily in the most
famous establishments, either!
While recipe testing, perhaps one of my happiest discoveries has
been how French pastry chefs use less sugar compared to the
particularly sweet commercial pastries. It’s the cheeky play of
good salt (fleur de sel) paired with good quality ingredients that
make them special. Chefs’ pastries are not overly sweet, and so the
exquisite flavours shine. No wonder they present their cakes as if
they’re in a museum of ephemeral art!
For me, I love to try out tasty ideas inexpensively at home and to
mix and match pastries. I’m still discovering new flavour
combinations using the teatime recipes in the book and I hope you
have fun doing the same.
Read more from Jill Colonna at her website, MadAboutMacarons.com.
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