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Tag: pastries

  • Best Of Houston® 2025: Best Dessert Service – Houston Press

    Best Dessert Service: Camaraderie

    Camaraderie proves chef Shawn Gawle didn’t leave his sweet tooth at March, where he was executive pastry chef. The buzzy Heights newcomer splits its personality between a tasting-menu dining room and a laid-back lounge and patio, but both end with show-stopping, whimsical desserts that are almost too pretty to eat (we said almost). Think froyo with stone fruit, granola and olive oil, “Milk & Honey” with beeswax gelato and candied almonds, a miso-butterscotch bombe with toasted buckwheat gelato, and a peachy melba pavlova. Come for dinner, stay for dessert — or skip straight to the sweets with a fancy cocktail in hand.

    608 West 11th 

    camaraderiehtx.com

    Houston Press

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  • Best Of Houston® 2024: Best Bakery

    Best Of Houston® 2024: Best Bakery

    Best Bakery: Magnol French Baking

    Sharpening his pastry cutter at influential spots like Michelin-starred MIX in Las Vegas and “The Most Luxurious Hotel in the World,” Burj Al Arab in Dubai, San Salvador-born chef Otto Sanchez returned to his second home, Houston, opening this lauded Post Oak bakery (with a second location set to make its stamp in the Heights). The city is lucky to have him, and his selection of skillfully prepared organic breads and pastries, from gorgeously crusty boule and baguette to eclair, seasonal tarts, and perhaps the butteriest, most satifsfying croissants in town.

    1500 North Post Oak
    281-846-6661
    magnolfrenchbaking.com

    Houston Press

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  • Obelix New To-Go Pastries Quickly Sell Out

    Obelix New To-Go Pastries Quickly Sell Out

    At a time when some restaurants are downsizing their pastry departments or eliminating them and outsourcing their desserts, the folks at Obelix are leaning into their sweet side more than ever, creating opportunities for their pastry chefs in the process.

    For Courtney Kenyon, executive pastry chef at Obelix and Le Bouchon, and Louise “Lou” Turner, Obélix head baker, along with Obélix pastry sous chef Ashleigh Lyons, the opportunity comes in the form of a new weekly to-go croissant program at the River North French restaurant.

    Turner, who worked at Oriole and owned a bakery in Cincinnati’s Findlay Market, mentioned to Kenyon, a vet of numerous Michelin-starred restaurants (Oriole, North Pond, Miami’s Le Bouchon) that she wanted to offer croissants to-go as a way for her industry friends to be able to try her brunch-only pastries. A few weeks later, Oliver and Nicolas Poilevey, the brothers behind Obelix, Le Bouchon, and Taqueria Chingón, had the same idea.

    “We’re just trying to get more of our pastries in more people’s hands,” says Oliver Poilevey. “I love pastries, and I love getting dessert. It’s important as it’s the last impression you get in a restaurant and shows you are really trying to make the experience special.”

    The selections rotate as a new menu appears on Tock every Monday for weekend pickup. Pastries are available in three packs. A $25 traditional croissant three-pack features butter, pain au chocolat, and pistachio. A $36 specialty box consists of a rotating trio of sweet, savory, and filled croissants. This week’s specialty selection contains a black raspberry milkshake croissant, a peach cream cheese danish, and a potato gratin danish. Online ordering closes on Thursday morning with pick-up at Obelix on Saturday and Sunday.

    Obelix has a new to-go pastry program.
    Obelix

    The pastries come in three packs, but there will also be a few surprises.
    Obelix

    For Turner, who Oliver Poilevey calls “a lamination wizard,” the to-go program has other benefits, especially for her specialty croissants. “I want to highlight seasonality, the farms we source from, and cross-utilize things that might go to waste,” she says. “The specialty box is also inspired by my childhood, various experiences in my life, and my own culture.”

    To-go pastries are a way Kenyon has quickly made her mark as earlier in June she took over the pastry reins from Antonio Incadella, Obelix’s opening pastry chef. Incadella has moved over to Pilsen, where he’s head of pastry at Mariscos San Pedros — a partner in the restaurant alongside Oliver Poilevey and Taqueria Chingon’s Marcos Ascencio.

    Turner arrives at Obelix at 3:30 a.m. on Thursdays to prep the croissants. Friday is dedicated to lamination, the time-consuming process of folding and rolling the butter into the dough, which gives the croissants their desired uber-thin layers. Baking takes place on Saturdays and Sundays. “It will just be increasing the numbers we are already doing,” says Turner of the restaurant’s signature brunch croissants.

    “My job as a pastry chef is to provide tools and assist the people on my team so they can best drive, learn, and develop,” adds Kenyon.

    Plans are already in the works to grow the to-go pastry program. “Once we feel comfortable, we will offer specialty croissants that highlight ingredients like truffles or do a pastry special like canelés,” says Kenyon, adding that holiday baked goods are an option too.

    “I’m most excited about expanding more into the community of Chicago and have different parts of the city see what we are doing here,” Turner says. “Brunch is very busy, and our dinner service is wonderful but allowing people to take a little piece of us home with them is special.”

    Obelix, 700 N. Sedgwick Street, weekend to-go pastries start Mondays via Tock.

    Lisa Shames

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  • Japanese Pastries Take Center Stage in West Town

    Japanese Pastries Take Center Stage in West Town

    As business names go, it doesn’t get more on the nose than Puffy Cakes. Recently opened in West Town, the bakery and coffee shop specializes in Japanese cheesecake, which features a fluffy texture that’s a cross between a souffle and brioche French toast.

    Chicago, like other major cities, has been experiencing a major bakery renaissance. From favorites like Mindy’s Bakery, Kasama, Publican Quality Bread, Good Ambler, Justice of the Pies, and Loaf Lounge to upstarts like Swadesi, Umaga Bakehouse, Sugar Moon, and Loba Pastry, satisfying a sweet tooth in Chicago has never been easier or more delicious. And the trend shows no signs of slowing down.

    When Julian Coltea and his Puffy Cakes partners began delving into a dessert-focused business, they knew they had to do something different.

    “There are so many places in Chicago that make great cookies, pies, and classic American desserts,” says Coltea. “We wanted to go beyond that and expand to something else.”

    Hokkaido cheese tarts
    Fluffy Cakes

    A matcha drip.
    Fluffy Cakes

    That something else turned out to be Japanese cheesecake, which is lighter and less sweet than its American counterpart. “We really wanted to make it our primary focus and bring the dessert, which I think is delicious, to the masses,” he adds.

    Prior to opening in June, the Puffy Cakes baking team went through rounds of experiments to perfect the recipe and achieve the desired jiggly texture. (Turns out, folding in the egg white meringue by hand is crucial, says Coltea.) The airy cream cheese batter is placed in ramekins that are then baked low and slow in a water bath.

    Available in three flavors — traditional, matcha, and ube — the 4-inch cheesecakes are designed for one to two people. Additionally, 6- and 8-inch versions are available via advance ordering. Housemade sauces are available for those who want to add a touch more sweetness. Signature sauces include caramel drizzle, dark chocolate, matcha, Nutella, and strawberry with additional flavors in the works. Look for candy toppings to be offered soon.

    Japanese-style cheesecake
    Fluffy Cakes

    Cakes in different flavors.
    Fluffy Cakes

    Beyond the Japanese cheesecakes, which are baked fresh daily, Puffy Cakes also features a handful of other desserts. Petite Japanese cheese tarts include a mixture of three cheeses (cream cheese, mascarpone, and Parmesan), housemade seasonal fruit jams, and fresh fruit toppings. The menu also features traditional baked tarts, including a recent lemon blackberry meringue tart with a bruléed Italian meringue dome. A curated list of macarons will soon be joined by a selection of Asian-inspired cookies.

    To ensure none of its leftover cheesecakes goes to waste, Puffy Cakes crafted a bread pudding. Cut-up pieces of a mix of their cakes are baked like a traditional bread pudding before being topped with different garnishes that might include pecans, white chocolate, and walnuts.

    A partnership with La Colombe Coffee Roasters, Puffy Cakes offers specialty coffee drinks, including cold brew on tap.

    The interior design of Puffy Cakes includes a few couches, round tables, and a banquette on one side of the cozy 950-square-foot space, accented with hues of red, yellow, and black. Lantern-like light fixtures hang overhead. A fireplace will keep things toasty when winter arrives.

    “We’re a dessert shop first,” says Coltea, “but from the beginning, we knew we wanted to serve high-quality coffee and make this a really warm, inviting place for people to come and hang out or work.”

    Puffy Cakes, 1651 W Chicago Avenue, open 8:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday to Friday, 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, and closed Mondays.

    Lisa Shames

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  • Where to Find Savory Pastries in Chicago

    Where to Find Savory Pastries in Chicago

    The seasonal doughnuts and pastries at Brite change every week, but the lineup always includes at least one savory option. Past entries include an Everything croissant filled cream cheese bacon jam, Funyun croissant, and a hot dog bouquet stuffed with pieces of Viennas and topped with poppy seeds, relish, onions, tomatoes, sport peppers, and mustard.

    Eater Staff

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