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Belém, Lisbon, Portugal (Jerónimos Monastery, 1837) Techniques

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Belém, Lisbon, Portugal (Jerónimos Monastery, 1837)
Pastéis de Nata
Belém, Lisbon, Portugal (Jerónimos Monastery, 1837)
The pastel de nata is Portugal's most celebrated pastry: a flaky, laminated pastry shell cradling a custard of egg yolks, sugar, cream, flour, and vanilla, baked at extremely high temperature until the custard billows and blackens in patches. The pastry originated in the early 19th century at the Antiga Confeitaria de Belém in Lisbon, developed by monks from the Jerónimos Monastery who sold their recipe to support the monastery when it was dissolved. The blackened patches on the custard surface are not a defect but a requirement — they indicate the extreme heat (280–320°C) needed to simultaneously set the custard interior and caramelise the surface. The pastry shell must be ultra-thin, crisp, and laminated; the custard should be set but still slightly trembling when removed from the oven. The combination of caramelised custard and flaky crust is only optimal within the first 30 minutes.
Spanish/Portuguese — Desserts & Sweets