
Meet The Art of French Baking by Ginette Mathiot published by Phaidon.
You know Phaidon books, they’re those big tomes in the manner of Silver Spoon that cover various cuisine comprehensively.
Now I’m not knocking this book as a whole yet, because that would be unfair after attempting one single recipe.
But I’m not impressed by what I’ve experienced so far.
And I write this as an open question, just how does stuff end up in books that’s plain darn WRONG?

I was on a mission to make cigarettes. No, not those sort of cigarettes, the tubey biscuits that you see served alongside ice cream.
The irony of this is that I can’t stand wafery biscuits stabbed in my ice cream and always hand them to my husband to eat.
But in the interests of extending my baking expertise, I decided to attempt les cigarettes and picked an authoritative book on French baking to guide me.
One should end up with a wafer thin biscuit that gets rolled up whilst still warm in the manner of a brandy snap.
Knowing how brandy snap batter spreads to a lace like consistency in the oven, I was not put off by instructions to pipe discs of batter 2cm in diameter onto a tray leaving “space” between them. The recipe didn’t instruct how much space exactly so I conservatively piped 8 discs on one tray.
I only baked one tray at a time as I foresaw that rolling them fast enough whilst warm would be tricky enough with 8, never mind more.

But alarm bells did ring when the recipe said to preheat the oven at 200c / Gas Mark 6.
Most biscuits bake at around 180c / Gas Mark 4.
Bearing in mind these guys were tiny, I had concerns this wouldn’t work.
Sure enough, I had black little bullets rather than thin cream circles to roll up into golden cigarette biscuits.

So I tried again. This time with the oven down to 170c / Gas Mark 3.
And I piped larger flat circles.
There’s been some thorough deviation from the published recipe by now.
I’m really winging it on my own initiative, but surely these will work? Bearing in mind macarons still spread a bit at this temperature.

Nope they’re still not spreading thin enough to roll up.
And they’re still burning.
Note to self. Check internet for alternative cigarette biscuit recipes to compare with Ginette’s version.
Something has gone badly wrong here.

To salvage something out of the ingredients used, I piped long sausages of batter and ended up with a few fingers just about suitable for serving with ice cream. I will blog those separately shortly.
So I have my home made ice cream biscuits, but I’m still craving cigarettes.
With thanks to Kerrygold block for product sample. Not exactly the best illustration of it but I can vouch that it is softer than usual butter and it does indeed mix beautifully into cake/biscuit batters without needing to be left out of the fridge for ages. The Art of French Baking was a personal purchase.


Do you remember when I was cooking my way through the first GBBO book and give up in disgust after 6 recipes as it was so bad. The worse was a pie recipe that used shortcrust pastry and had a photo using puff.
It is not surprising that so many people claim that they cannot cook, when it is the recipe not them that is wrong. If you know about cooking you can claim the book, but if not you are not to know that you are not at fault.
It’s seriously annoying when it doesn’t work out the way you want it too. I mean your wrong if you follow a wonky recipe and your wrong if you wing it because you didnt follow instructions! Its a catch 22.
You know the worst thing is, I looked in same chapter at the tuiles recipe and it still says 200c. Starting to wonder if my new oven is dodgy?!
How annoying! I’ve seen some recipes saying 400F online and others saying 375F – realyl confusing…
Thank you for giving me another reason not to bake!
Your blog looks beautiful – even the burnt biscuits. Am enjoying a nosy around as i drink tea and eat Tunnocks teacakes (another good reason not to bake).
Sometimes looking at cake is as much fun as eating it 😉