Pasticciotto


Try making this South Italian pastry at home. Pasticciotto Leccese ticks all the boxes for what a perfect pastry should be – sweet, sumptuous, and irresistible. Treat yourself to a serving of Italian cream filled pastry on your next break!

An overhead shot of three pieces of Italian breakfast pastries, served with espresso.

Italian Cream Filled Pastry (Pasticciotto)Play Video

If there’s such a thing as ‘comfort pastry,’ that’s pasticciotto for me. Sweet, creamy, and with a bit of crispiness from the pastry, what more could you ask for?

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I discovered this delight when we went to Puglia in the summer of 2016.  In the southern part of Puglia, a city called Lecce, where this pastry is as ubiquitous as orecchiette (the region’s pasta). 

Pasticciotto is basically a sweet pie with a pastry cream as its filling.

The locals normally enjoy them as breakfast pastries, but I’ve also met some who would heat them after dinner and have them for dessert.  Still as delicious as they were in the morning.

INGREDIENTS

Updated image showing all the ingredients you need to make Italian Cream Filled Pastry.
  • Eggs – at room temperature.
  • Cornstarch – in case you can’t find any cornstarch, potato flour is a good substitute.
  • Sugar – regular white sugar.
  • Lemon – you would only be using the lemon zest for the cream (not in the image above).
  • Milk – regular full-cream milk is preferred.
  • Pastry dough – if you already have a favorite recipe for making pastry dough, feel free to use that.  Otherwise, give my pasta frolla recipe a try!
Two servings of Pasticciotti, served with coffee, sprinkled with powdered sugar.

PREPARATION

Start by preparing your pastry/muffin tins by greasing them with butter and a dust of flour.

Prepare the Italian pastry cream by heating milk on a small or medium-sized saucepan, placed over medium heat (photo 1).

While waiting for the milk, combine egg yolk, sugar, cornstarch, and lemon zest in a medium mixing bowl — use a whisk to mix (photo 2).

Slowly pour the heated milk on the egg mixture while constantly whisking the mixture. Do not pour the milk all at once, or you might end up cooking the eggs instead of making pastry cream.

Updated first part of a collage of images showing the step by step process of making pasticciotti.

Pour the pastry cream back into the saucepan and bring to a slow boil and until it has thickened to your desired consistency (photo 3).

Set pastry cream aside to cool.

Preheat up the oven to 180°C (350°F).

Start rolling the pastry dough and place them on your pastry/muffin tins.  Leave some pastry dough hanging out on the tins’ side; you will be using this part later for sealing the pastry (photo 4).

Prepare (cut out) the pastry dough for covering the top of each tin as well.

Updated second part of a collage of images showing the step by step process of making pasticciotto at home.

Use a spoon to add pastry cream to each tin.  Try not to put more than the top of the tin (photo 5). 

Cover each tin with the rest of the prepared pastry dough.  Fold the top pastry under the lower pastry to seal the sides and ensure that no cream will seep through (photo 6).

Brush top with egg whites.

Place in the oven for twenty to twenty-five minutes or until they turned golden.

Serve — enjoy your pasticciotto Leccese with a dusting of powdered sugar, if desired.

An overhead shot of pasticciotti, one of them cut into half, to show the cream inside.

HELPFUL TIPS

  • If you are using your own pastry dough, try not to make it too sweet.  Remember that you are adding the cream later, and the resulting pasticciotto might become overly sweet.
  • Muffin tins or mini-tart forms are great alternatives if you don’t have the molds used in this recipe. I just got lucky that my mother-in-law gave them to me. 🙂
  • Remember not to add the hot milk into the eggs all at once — do not waste the yolks by cooking them.
A closer shot into the cream inside a pasticciotto.

FAQS

Can I add vanilla in the cream?

Absolutely.
Vanilla extract is fine, but using a vanilla pod is even better.  

What can I serve with it?

Coffee. I always have mine with an espresso (and I would have it no other way 😉 ). 

Pasticciotto is best served warm and heating it in the microwave for a few seconds will always do the trick.  

Be careful when eating though, hot pastry cream CAN burn!  Enjoy!