Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Karpatka - Polish Carpathian Mountain Cream Cake


Karpatka is a cherished Polish dessert, often compared to cream pie or Napoleonka, yet it carries its own distinctive charm. Built from golden, craggy layers of choux pastry, it embraces a luscious custard or vanilla pudding filling that melts into every bite.

The name Karpatka comes from the Carpathian Mountains (Karpaty) — the uneven, rugged peaks echoed in the pastry’s puffed and jagged surface. It’s as if the dessert itself is a sweet landscape on the plate.

To prepare Karpatka, the choux pastry is baked until airy and crisp. Meanwhile, the filling is lovingly stirred from milk, sugar, egg yolks, and flour or cornstarch, thickened into a silky custard. Some families prefer the simplicity of pudding, while others enrich it by beating in butter to create a velvety crème mousseline. In my home, butter was always essential — giving the cream a luxurious depth and a melt-in-your-mouth finish.

Karpatka is more than a dessert; it’s a tradition. Served at holidays, family gatherings, and festive occasions, it embodies comfort and celebration. The contrast of flaky pastry and smooth custard makes it irresistible to anyone with a sweet tooth, and its rustic beauty ensures it remains one of Poland’s most beloved culinary treasures.


Ingredients (25 × 16 cm pan)

Choux Pastry 

- 80 g unsalted butter
- 170 g water
- 1/4 tsp salt
- 90 g all-purpose flour (better than cake flour here)
- 3 large eggs (~150 g without shells)

Pastry Cream (Crème Pâtissière)

- 500 g milk
- 100 g sugar 
- 45 g cornstarch
- 2 whole eggs + 1 egg yolk (important for richness & stability)
Crème Mousseline
- 180 g unsalted butter (very soft, not melted)

Finishing

- Powdered sugar

Instructions 

1. Choux Pastry
- Preheat oven to 200 °C. Line two pans.
- Boil water, butter and salt.
- Remove from heat, add flour, mix until smooth dough forms.
- Return to low heat for 1–2 minutes, stirring (dries dough → better texture).
- Cool 5–10 min.
- Add eggs one by one until smooth and glossy.
- Divide into pans, spread roughly (make peaks).
- Bake the dough for 15 minutes at 200°C.
- Lower the temperature to 180°C.
- Bake for an additional 20 minutes. 
- This stage dries out the pastry so it stays crisp and holds its shape.
- Do not open the oven door during baking.
- Cool the pastry in an oven for the best results.
2. Pastry Cream 
- In a bowl, whisk eggs, sugar and cornstarch until smooth.
- Heat milk until hot (not boiling).
- Slowly pour milk into egg mixture while whisking (tempering step).
- Return everything to the pot.
- Cook on medium heat, whisking constantly until thick and bubbling (1–2 min after thickening).
- Cover with plastic wrap touching the surface. Cool completely.
3. Crème Mousseline 
- Beat butter until pale and fluffy.
- Add pastry cream one spoon at a time, mixing well each time.
Both butter and cream must be same temperature (room temp) or it can split.
4. Assemble
- Place first choux layer.
- Spread all cream evenly.
- Top with second layer.
- Chill at least 2–3 hours (important for clean slicing).
- Dust with powdered sugar.

0 komentarze:

Post a Comment