Portuguese custard tarts and a little Soho Cafe
21:41
I first became aware of these tarts when I started dating my
husband almost 13 years ago. Cakewise I had lived a sheltered life in Finland
mostly eating cinnamon buns and bundt cakes, maybe the occasional ginger
biscuit. I met my husband on a hot summer night in a Westend nightclub called
Cheers. Yes – really, modelled after the US sitcom. Unfortunately or maybe
fortunately it no longer exists.
The night we met I think I was out with my Aussie flatmate who’d probably already gone home to make herself a vegemite sandwich. She was quite a sedentary girl rarely moving very far from her TV. Surprisingly some months later she accidentally got herself pregnant and sneaked back to Australia to have a pretty little girl and hopefully live happily ever after.
So home she went, but as I often did those days, new to
London, I partied on. When the handsome tall stranger came to talk to me and
offered to buy me a drink I said I’ll just have a water, not because I am in
anyway a great advocate of sobriety, but because I was getting pretty tipsy.
He romantically got me a bottle a Corona and I remember thinking his eyes were
the most beautiful thing I have ever seen on a man. Couldn’t get a word of what
he was saying, might have been the music,
drink or his accent, but those eyes, oh my word!
At the end of the evening he took me to his regular
late night coffee shop in Soho for a coffee and a Portuguese vanilla custard
tart.
We went back often after that, usually after a few drinks in Cheers, Zoo Bar or the little bar next door called Little Italy. Another one of husband’s favourites was a lovely cream filled cannoli. Sometimes we'd share a mortadella sandwich, a fantastic grilled panini filled with mozzarella, tomato, basil and mortadella. That was another thing my husband introduced me to. It was a hot summer, I remember. We’d sit outside with our coffees in the dark warm night and smoke like Turks. I’m sure the saying is not entirely PC, so I looked up some justification and it appears over 30% adults in Turkey are regular smokers. So there.
We went back often after that, usually after a few drinks in Cheers, Zoo Bar or the little bar next door called Little Italy. Another one of husband’s favourites was a lovely cream filled cannoli. Sometimes we'd share a mortadella sandwich, a fantastic grilled panini filled with mozzarella, tomato, basil and mortadella. That was another thing my husband introduced me to. It was a hot summer, I remember. We’d sit outside with our coffees in the dark warm night and smoke like Turks. I’m sure the saying is not entirely PC, so I looked up some justification and it appears over 30% adults in Turkey are regular smokers. So there.
We still go there. We often go for a few drinks in Little
Italy by the same owner next door and then get coffees afterwards. These two
establishments have seen the entire span of our relationship so far. After our
first night and our first Portuguese custard tart together we have been back
regularly. I am pretty sure apart from a couple of New Year’s Eves that we’ve
spent in Finland we have always toasted the New Year there.
We have had some spectacular fights there. Many of them early on in the relationship when we were not living together and I was still in my punctual Finnish frame of mind naively expecting him to turn up when he said he would. I remember once optimistically ordering Jack Daniels and Coke for both of us and finishing them both before ringing him and finding out he’d fallen asleep on the sofa.
And on one New Year’s Eve there was a lot of shouting and
I stamped my foot so hard that I broke the heel of my new Jones the Bootmaker
boot. And after we got back to his place there was a lot of throwing around of
Christmas presents, so that he found his eye-cream (my metrosexual man!) in the
laundry basket weeks later. I vaguely remember stamping a packet of Jammy
Dodgers to death, they are his favourite biscuit, so that was quite evil on my
part. I’m not sure what all the stamping was about that night, I’m usually not much
of a stamper. I’m much more a door slammer.
In recent years the young love’s passion has settled onto smoother paths, so when we still find the energy to go we always have a
good time. And when he was ready he proposed to me there as well. The bar staff
knew us pretty well by then, Luigi the owner, DJ Keith, the lovely maître
d’ whose name I don’t know, the doormen who look like Bond film baddies from
Belarus, so there were some celebrations, Champagne and sparklers. I’m sure if
we were to have children we’d have to go there to have them. But children are
not in the plan, Luigi will be happy to know.
Portuguese custard tarts – Pasteis de Nata recipe
Packet of ready rolled puff pastry (this was a mistake - next time I make the pastry myself or do the Jamie Oliver filo version, which I've done before and it works better than the ready puff pastry)
For the custard:
2 yolks
1 whole egg
120g sugar
1.5 cups whole milk
2 tbsp corn flour
2 tsp vanilla paste or vanilla extract
Mix the egg, yolks, sugar, corn flower together adding the
mix in whisking the mixture until it’s smooth. Place on the hob and bring to
boil mixing constantly, keep going until it thickens into a custard. Take off
heat and add the vanilla. Pour into a bowl to cool covering it with a
plastic bag or cling film.
Pastry
Fold the pastry sheet once and roll so the layers stick
together. Fold it into a tight roll and slice into 12 discs. Roll each disc
using a little flour into a big enough round to fit to a muffin tin mold. Once
you have rolled all 12 put the in the fridge for a few minutes. Oil the molds
of a muffin tin and place the pastry into the molds. Spoon the custard into the
pastry cups. Bake for 25 minutes in 200C or until the tarts look nicely browned
on top.
1 comments
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