paris-brest

Paris-Brest — praline cream choux ring

Paris-Brest is a French pastry shaped like a bicycle tyre — a ring of choux pastry split horizontally and filled with hazelnut praline cream (crème mousseline praliné), topped with flaked almonds. It was reportedly invented in 1910 to commemorate the Paris-Brest-Paris bicycle race.

i. Origin & history

The pastry was created by pastry chef Louis Durand at Maisons-Laffitte, on the route of the Paris-Brest-Paris race. The Durand family bakery still operates and still claims the original recipe.

ii. Ingredients

Makes 8 servings · scroll the side panel to adjust

  • 120 ml water
  • 120 ml whole milk
  • 100 g unsalted butter
  • Pinch salt
  • 2 tsp sugar
  • 150 g plain flour
  • 4 large eggs
  • Flaked almonds
  • Beaten egg for glaze
  • 500 ml whole milk
  • 100 g caster sugar
  • 60 g plain flour
  • 2 eggs + 2 yolks
  • 250 g unsalted butter, soft
  • 200 g hazelnut praline paste

iii. Method

  1. Make choux: bring water, milk, butter, salt and sugar to a boil. Off heat, beat in flour to a smooth paste. Return to heat 2 min, stirring, to dry. Cool 5 min. Beat in eggs one at a time until shiny.
  2. Pipe a 20 cm ring on a lined tray. Brush with egg; sprinkle almonds.
  3. Bake at 200 °C 15 min, then 170 °C 20 min until deeply golden and dry. Cool.
  4. Make praline cream: cook milk, half sugar to simmer. Whisk yolks and eggs with remaining sugar and flour; temper; cook to thick custard. Cool fully with cling film on the surface.
  5. Beat soft butter with praline; gradually beat in the cooled pastry cream.
  6. Split the choux ring horizontally. Pipe praline cream generously on the bottom; replace top; dust with icing sugar.

iv. Tips & common mistakes

  • Use the freshest ingredients you can. The recipe relies on them.
  • Read the method through first. Several steps must be ready in advance.
  • Season patiently. Sweetness and salt are tuned at the end, not the start.

v. Variations

Paris-Brest individuel is the single-portion version. Chocolate Paris-Brest uses chocolate praline. Modern Paris-Brest sometimes incorporates whole roasted hazelnuts.

vi. Common questions

What is paris-brest?

Paris-Brest is praline cream choux ring, from french cuisine. It was reportedly invented in 1910 to commemorate the Paris-Brest-Paris bicycle race

Where is paris-brest from?

Paris-Brest is from the french dessert tradition; the recipe and history are detailed above.

How long does paris-brest keep?

See the storage note in the Quick facts panel: 1 day refrigerated.