What better time to highlight the absolute greatest ham-and-cheese sandwich? This week on Serious Eats, my French in a Flash is the perfect sandwich for springtime picnics or Mothers’ Day teas: Parmesan and Gruyere Gougères with Jambon de Bayonne, Arugula, and Dijon-Chive Butter. Warm, homemade gougères, or cheesy, savory profiteroles, are the bread on either side of a light Dijon-Chive Butter, baby arugula leaves, and salty, fragrant Jambon de Bayonne, or French prosciutto. The pate a choux in this recipe is so easy, and so versatile: change up the flavorings to make beignets, eclairs, profiteroles, or even other-flavored gougères. It’s time to pig out.
- 8-10 Parmesan and Gruyère Gougères (recipe follows)
- Dijon-Chive Butter (recipe follows)
- 8-10 thin slices of Jambon de Bayonne, Proscuitto di Parma, or Serrano Ham
- 1 cup of baby arugula leaves
- 20 chives, halved
Sandwich Procedure
- Once the gougères are mostly cool, but still just a bit warm, slice them in half horizontally, revealing the air-pocket within. Spread each half lightly with the Dijon-Chive butter. Place one folded slice of ham on the bottom of each gougère, and top with a small handful of baby arugula leaves and chive halves. Place the gougère lid on top, and <em>voila</em>, your perfect ham and cheese sandwich.
Gougère Ingredients
- 1 stick butter
- 1 cup water
- 1 cup flour
- 1 teaspoon sugar
- 3/4 teaspoon salt
- 3 ounces shredded gruyère (about 1 ½ cups), plus extra for topping the gougères
- 1 ounce shredded Parmagiano Reggiano (about ½ cup), plus extra for topping the gougères
- Coarsely cracked black pepper
Gougère Procedure
- Preheat the oven to 400°F.
- To make pâte à choux, or choux pastry, place the stick of butter and the cup of water in a medium sauce pot and put the lid on it. Bring to a boil. Take the pot off the heat, then add the salt, sugar, and flour all at once, and stir vigorously with a wooden spoon until the flour is absorbed into the butter-water mixture. Lower the heat to medium-low, and return the pan to the heat, stirring the dough continuously for about 30-60 seconds, until the dough comes away from the sides of the pot.
- Scoop the dough out of the pot and into a large mixing bowl. Let stand and cool for about 3 minutes. Then add one egg at a time, and use a hand mixer to incorporate the eggs into the dough. At the very end, add in 3 ounces of Gruyère and 1 once of Parmesan.
- Use an ice cream scoop to mound the gougères onto a parchment-lined baking or cookie sheet. You should end up with 8-10 gougères, depending on your scoop. Then top with the remaining Gruyère and Parmesan, and sprinkle with just a touch of coarse cracked black pepper.
- Bake the gougères at 400°F for 10 minutes. Then lower the heat to 350°F and bake another 35-40 minutes, until they are golden, puffed, and hard to the touch. You don’t want to take them out too early—if you have to return them to the oven, chances are, they’ll deflate a bit. Place the gougères on a cooling rack.
Dijon-Chive Butter Ingredients
- 8 chives, snipped
- 3 tablespoons butter, room temperature
- ½ teaspoon Dijon mustard
Dijon-Chive Butter Procedure
- Stir everything together until combined.