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Tea Time Petit Fours

in Diana's Recipe Book

Average Rating: 
(total ratings: 22)
Servings: Makes approximately 2 1/2 dozen
 
Comments:
Petit Four

Definition: [PEH-tee fohr; puh-tee FOOR] 1. Any of various bite-size iced and elaborately decorated cakes. Petits fours can be made with any flavor cake, though white and chocolate are the most common. 2. The French also use this term to describe small, fancy cookies.

Source: The New Food Lover's Companion, Second Edition, by Sharon Tyler Herbst

"When you have your next afternoon tea or get together, serve these colorful little cakes with tea or coffee. They are so pretty and tasty. Your guests will thoroughly enjoy them."..........Diana

Ingredients:
For Cake:
1/4 cup butter or margarine, melted
1/4 cup shortening
1 cup sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1-1/3 cups all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
2/3 cup milk
3 egg whites

For Fruit Glaze:
12 oz. apricot or raspberry preserves (or heated jelly may be used instead)
3 tbsp. water

For Icing:
9 cups confectioners' sugar
1/2 cup water
1/2 cup light corn syrup
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/2 teaspoon almond extract
Food coloring, (optional)

Garnish:
Tiny edible sugar flowers and/or leaves, for decorating tops of petit fours

Instructions:
For Cake:
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (180 C). Grease and lightly flour a 9-inch (23cm) square baking pan.

In a large mixing bowl, cream the butter, shortening and sugar. Beat in the vanilla. Combine the flour, baking powder and salt; add to creamed mixture alternately with milk. In a small mixing bowl, beat egg whites until soft peaks form; gently fold into batter.

Pour batter into prepared baking pan and bake at 350 degrees F (180 C) for 20-25 minutes or until a toothpick inserted near the center comes out clean. Remove cake from oven and let cool in pan for 10 minutes. Turn cake out onto a plate or cooling rack; then chill cake in refrigerator for at least 30 minutes.

Remove cake from refrigerator. Cut a thin slice off each side of chilled cake. Cut cake into 1-1/4-inch (3.175 cm) squares. Place squares 1/2 inch (1.27 cm) apart on a cooling rack over a 15 x 10 x 1-inch (38cmX25cmX2.5cm) pan. Apply fruit glaze (See Fruit Glaze Preparation Below)) evenly over tops and sides of cake squares, allowing excess to drip off. Let dry. Repeat if necessary to thoroughly coat squares. Let glaze dry completely.

For Preparing The Fruit Glaze:
In a medium size saucepan, heat preserves with the 3 tbsp. water on low heat. Drizzle or spread a thin layer of heated preserves over cooled tops and sides of petit fours before icing. (If using jelly, you do not need to add water to it, just heat jelly in saucepan on low heat and spread over cooled tops and sides of petit fours).

To Prepare Icing:
Combine all icing ingredients in the top of a double boiler. Heat over boiling water to lukewarm. Pour icing over tops and sides of petit fours. Once they are set, they should be coated with icing again. After icing hardens, decorate tops of each petit four with a tiny edible sugar flower and/or leaf.

Makes 2 1/2 dozen petit fours.

Storage of Petit Fours


Petits Fours may be made up to 24 hours in advance. Let the icing (or if using a fondant frosting) dry completely before storing in an airtight container. Refrigerate petit fours if they contain perishable fillings and icings, such as dairy products or fresh fruit or berries. The fruit preserves or jelly used in the filling of these petit fours can go bad after 2 or 3 days because of the moisture from the wet fruit filling, so storing them in an airtight container at room temperature for more than 2 days is not advised.

Tips:
1). You can separate the icing, once it's made, into small bowls, and tint each with a different food coloring, adding color until you achieve the desired shade.

2). Icing colors that look nice for petit fours are: White, Pale Yellow, Pale Pink, Pale Blue, Pale Green or Lavender.

3). You may also drizzle melted white or dark chocolate over tops and sides of petit fours instead of using the white or tinted icing.

4). Another idea is to sandwich two of the cake squares together with the heated preserves or jelly glaze; then pour icing over the tops and sides of squares, then decorate when icing has hardened completely.

Note: Fondant icing can be used to cover these petit fours instead of the glaze above. See recipe for "Fondant Icing" under the "Cake Decoration" category on this website.

Photograph taken by Diana Baker Woodall,© 2003

Source: DianasDesserts.com
Date: April 14, 2003

Reviews

Reviewer: Sandra
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ITS GREAT

 
Reviewer: Elena and Tracy
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This recipe took 4 hours and was EXTREMLY sweet and was very disappointing.

 
Reviewer: melissa fischer
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easy to follow directions. turned out right the very first time.

 
Reviewer: Julie
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Great recipe! Petit Fours are supposed to be extremely sweet and you can tell by their appearance that they are going to be time consuming! Don't expect easy when they look this good!

 
Reviewer: JoAnna
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Sweet and delicious! Takes time, (which I fully expected!) but the results are amazing.

 
Reviewer: Kristina
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Found the frosting way too thick, even after fully heating it. Thinned it, but still could not get it to coat the cakes without being bumpy. You need an experienced hand for this.

 
Reviewer: Ella
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I was so Happy to find this recipe. It's great and worth the time too make it.

 
Reviewer: Nicole
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we make this alot .... and it always taste so good

 
Reviewer: Jen
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AHHHHH! this was such a disappointment. they took forever, and even though we followed the recipe mostly (making improvisations where necessary), i just don't see how they could possibly come out looking as nice as the ones at the top of the page. the cake ended up extremely dense, but tasted okay. the fruit glaze was a mess; the cake soaked it all up and was so soggy... then, the icing ended up being so thick, it was impossible to spread, not to mention using such an insane amount of powdered sugar. all in all, after all our time put into them, they ended up right in the trash. this is what mine ended up looking like (don't laugh!): http://i14.photobucket.com/albums/a335/bloatbug/petit1.jpg

 
Reviewer: Erik Alexander
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Time consuming, yes; delicious, even more so.

 
Reviewer: Natasha
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This recipe was hard, but after it was over, it was worth it.

 
Reviewer: adriane
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i found this site to be very helpful

 
Reviewer: Allison
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This recipe is great! followed it to a "T" and it turned out perfectly, just like the picture. One piece of advice...cut off all 4 of the sides of the cake that are 2", do not cut off the top or bottom. Less crumbly and more square this way. Try it, but make sure that you set aside a good amount of time. Well worth it though.

 
Reviewer: Christy
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We worked hard on this recipe and while the cakes were good, we never did get them completely coated in the icing no matter how many different ways we tried. There must be some trick to getting them so smooth and pretty. Also the jelly never did "firm up" once it cooled.

 
Reviewer: Sharonda
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Had anyone here tried using the quick pour fondant or the rolled fondant?

 
Reviewer: Bama
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Only wish I had the time!

 
Reviewer: Sophie
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I only wish I had the time to make them

 
Reviewer: Olga
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petit fours are generally layered little cakes with buttercream icing. was disappointed

 
Reviewer: Tina
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poured fondant icing works wonderfully! rolled would be impossible.

 
Reviewer: Crystal Miller
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Very good! Took a while, like I expected. Did not turn out looking like picture ,but was Delicious! Fondant recipe did not work at all, ended up making a different type of icing. Looked nothing like the picture, but pleased the little kids and was tasty. Loved the recipe, will probably use it just for a cake. Never will use that Fondant recipe though. :( Thanks.

 
Reviewer: Itzel
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The key to this recipe is to have LOTS of time to prepare the cake and to leave it in the refrigerator overnight if possible to tighten the crumb even better and that way get a smoother surface for pouring the icing. The other thing I did was I used a dipping spoon (or fork) to hold the cake and poured the icing on top using a bigger spoon; worked like a charm! They're not perfect but they are very nice looking. My little petits fours are very pretty and tasty, too. The only thing holding me back from giving this an excellent is the taste of the icing. It tastes too much like fondant (which I'm not a huge fan of), but I expect that to be the case. Next time I'm trying chocolate.

 
Reviewer: shing te lingho
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I HAVENT EVEN MADE THEM AND I LOVE THEM!!!!!!!! THEY WERE SO GOOD AND YET AGAIN I HAVENT EVEN TRIED THEM!!!!!!!!!! IF YOU EVER SAY THESE ARE BAD I THINK YOU MIGHT HAVE A PROBLEM WITH WTBS (A.K.A. WEIRDO TASTE BUD SYNDROM)

LIKE DUHH LOVE ALWAYS, SHING TE LINGHO