Eva Longoria: Searching for France (2026) s01e02 Episode Script
Paris Pastry
♪♪
[ Bicycle dings ]
♪♪
-So most people come
to Paris for the beauty.
The grand boulevards,
the amazing architecture,
the wrought iron balconies,
some of the greatest
museums in the world.
But me, I've come for the
greatest art form of them all
the art of patisserie.
I mean, look at this.
It's perfection.
Like, how do they do this?
How does it even keep its shape?
Oh, my God, look at this.
That is some serious baking,
and I think
I gotta get studying.
Well, it's heaven.
I'm in heaven.
I'm Eva Longoria,
and I'm a serious Francophile.
[ Speaks in French ]
Over the past 20 years,
my career as an actor
has brought me to France
time and again.
It's my home away from home.
But those trips were more
about work than joie de vivre.
[ Laughs ]
Now I want something deeper.
This is going to be
an adventure.
So I'm setting out
to really experience France
-This is Cabernet Sauvignon.
-[ Gasps ] That's my favorite.
to savor
its world celebrated cuisine
Wow.
and explore
the country's rich history.
And there's one culinary
delight I'm obsessed with.
♪♪
The creme de la
creme French pastry.
Guys, I'm basically French now.
[ Laughs ]
Paris is home to more
award winning pastry chefs
than anywhere else
in the world.
Your brain is on another level.
Here, the day revolves
around patisserie.
Morning begins with the
buttery flakes of a croissant.
Oh, my God.
Whoo.
At midday, a baguette tucked
under the arm signals lunch.
[ Crunches softly ]
-Voila!
-Voila.
And by afternoon,
the ritual of La Goutte arrives
where breathtaking
sweet treats
[ Laughs ]
are savored like
miniature works of art.
Is that a real flower?
-Cake.
-It's cake.
-And tasting these creations
It hits you with the chocolate.
Cause it's like, pow!
is pure seduction.
Hold on, hold on.
-We like? [ Chuckles ]
-And honestly,
resistance is futile.
Whoa, that's a mic drop.
♪♪
♪♪
Paris style is
less about trends
and more about timelessness
clean lines and elegance.
It's je ne sais quoi comes
more from what you leave out
than what you add in.
There is one classic design
that has long represented
this Parisian style --
the artisanal French baguette.
There are hundreds
of boulangeries in Paris,
so when you spot a line
of locals outside of one,
you know these must be special.
But these aren't just special.
They've been crowned
the best in Paris.
Excuse me.
I'm just gonna cut the queue.
♪♪
Mickaël Reydellet has won
Le Grand Prix de la baguette,
the ultimate honor
for the art of bread making,
not once, but twice.
♪♪
♪♪
Wow.
[ Speaks in French ] criteria?
I didn't know that.
I thought baguettes
were all sizes.
-But it's a size.
-Yes.
-Okay, so there's a weight.
Okay.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, my God.
Oh, no. I could smell it
all the way down the street.
-[ Crunches softly ]
-Oh. [ Laughs ]
-Voila.
-Voila.
Yeah, it's got to make
that sound, everybody.
-It's gotta
-[ Crunches softly ]
There you go.
♪♪
-I'm so excited.
You have no idea.
I'm so excited, Mickaël.
I'm gonna make a baguette
in France with you.
-Okay, and a little flower.
[ Laughs ]
-Each wheat brings its own
characteristic to the baguette.
Oh, it's really soft.
[ Speaks in French ]
[ Laughs ]
Oh, wow.
He's like, "Watch out."
Mickaël already told me
I wore the worst color possible
for this activity.
-[ Laughs ]
In 18th century Paris,
bread was the cornerstone
of every meal,
a lifeline for working people.
So when prices soared,
hunger turned to anger.
♪♪
♪♪
♪♪
♪♪
From a loaf stolen in
Desperation in Les Miserables
to the bread riots
in the 1700s,
bread has played
a key part in the story
of the French Revolution.
Ultimately leading to
the downfall of the monarchy
and the king losing his head.
♪♪
♪♪
Oh, my God.
[ Laughs ]
-Yes.
Perfect.
-Yay! I made one.
-It's yours.
-This one's mine?
-Yes.
-Oh, wait. Let me do it again.
I want to do it again.
So you're just sealing it?
You're just closing it.
Oh, my God,
I could do this all day long.
Parisians take the quality
of their baguette tradition
so seriously that
it's now protected by law.
♪♪
♪♪
-So Mickaël and Florian
are certainly not going to let
the quality slip
on my baguette.
-What I didn't do --
-[ Laughs ]
♪♪
Oh. [ Speaks in French ]
-[ Laughs ]
-Each baguette is scored
with a baker's signature.
And these are for today's
special delivery.
♪♪
-You get to make
baguettes for the president?
-Oui.
-That's a big honor.
Had I known that before,
I would have made them better.
I didn't know we were going
to the president's house.
When the baguettes
emerge from the steam oven,
they look incredible,
but the smell is divine.
And just when I think
my day can't get any better
Ah!
This is my dream car.
[ Laughs ]
[ Engine starts ]
Oh, my God.
♪♪
[ Horn honks ]
We're going to
the official home
of every French president
since 1848 --
the Elysée Palace.
Well, this is
a unique experience.
Oui.
I feel properly attired
for a palace.
Who needs designer
handbags when you have
a perfectly baked
baguette under your arm?
Is there a doorbell?
Oh, there is a doorbell.
-[ Laughs ]
♪♪
-After everything I've seen,
it's no surprise
that this baguette
is still the favorite
bread of the people
and the president alike.
Oh, my gosh.
[ Gasps ]
Oh, my God.
The spirit of égalité lives on.
Oh, my God, it's still warm.
♪♪
♪♪
-This is not only
a French pastry classic.
It's my favorite French pastry.
It's a [speaks in French] but
this one is filled with rhubarb.
♪♪
Mmm.
That is Sweet and tart
and tangy and delicious.
And the crazy thing is,
because of the rhubarb,
this is only available about
ten weeks of the entire year.
♪♪
I've hopped across the Seine
to the left Bank of Paris,
or Rive Gauche,
a haven for thinkers, dreamers,
and the beautifully
unconventional.
So, of course, there's a street
famous for its patisserie.
-Eva.
-Nice to meet you.
-Florence Mazo Koenig,
a gastronomy expert
and left Bank resident,
is going to be my guide to the
treasures on the Rue de Bach.
♪♪
Why sweets, specifically
of all other things?
Mmm.
♪♪
[ Laughs ]
Affectionately known
as the Sweet Street.
In the 17th century,
quantities of sugar
from France's new colonies
began arriving here via barge
along the river Seine,
paving the way for Paris's
opulent new haute
patisserie culture.
♪♪
That caramel.
-Yes.
-And the nuts.
-And the cream.
-Oh my God,
the cream is so good.
I could never live
on this street.
This is all too tempting.
The street's association
with decadence
was cemented with
its cathedral of food
the Grande Épicerie.
This is gourmand heaven.
♪♪
♪♪
Oh, wow.
♪♪
Florence has arranged for me to
have a lesson in the kitchens.
A hidden Wonka world
where chefs bake bread
and sculpt sugar delights
for the Parisians above.
-Wow.
-This is really nice.
-Oh, my gosh,
look at all this.
-Bonjour.
-Bonjour.
Another place --
secret place.
-It must smell good
in your neighborhood.
-Yes.
♪♪
-Oh, my God,
I'm in heaven already.
-How are you?
-Fine, and you?
-Nice to meet you.
-Nice to meet you.
What are we doing?
Croissants!
-Yes,
we're gonna make croissants.
-Oh, my God.
I -- I make croissants --
-Yeah?
-At home.
-So you're gonna show me?
-I'm going to show you.
[ Laughs ]
♪♪
Yeah.
This is called laminated dough
as it's been folded
with butter four times.
It's this technique
that gives the croissant
its characteristic flakiness.
-Okay.
♪♪
-He's already fixing mine.
[ Laughs ]
♪♪
What -- [ Laughs ]
Don't press on the middle.
Press on the sides.
-Yeah.
-[ Laughs ]
Guys, I'm basically French now.
[ Laughs ]
Look, you can't even tell
whose is whose.
He goes, "I can."
[ Laughs ]
-Now --
no, [chuckles] you can't.
♪♪
-Okay.
-With the raisins.
-Yeah.
-And is this very popular?
♪♪
Yeah.
-Savoir-faire is that
great French phrase
that proudly boasts,
we know how.
You show me first.
Oh, just like that.
Oh, this I can do.
He doesn't give me
the important thing to do.
He doesn't give me the cream,
but he lets me
sprinkle the raisins.
Why yellow raisins?
Oh, yeah.
They're -- they're softer.
-Small, small, small.
-That's really small.
Ooh, we're getting somewhere.
We're getting somewhere.
♪♪
-And you gotta work fast right
before the dough gets warm?
-Yeah.
♪♪
-Oh, and you put them
in these little things?
-Yeah.
-And after 40 minutes
in the oven
Oh, my gosh.
-Oh.
-That looks beautiful.
Oh, look at this.
Look at this, look at this.
Oh, my God. Like an escargot.
Oh, that's so much easier.
Oh, my God.
Really good.
The pain aux raisins uses the
same dough as the croissant,
but the addition
of raisins and creme pâtissière
creates a totally
different pastry.
-[ Speaks in French ]
-Oh, my God,
that one is amazing.
-Look at that.
-It's really nice.
-Wow.
So it's like, whoom.
You cannot beat
a French croissant
in France by a French baker.
-Yeah.
-It has to be all
of these things
for it to be
a really good croissant.
-And a good coffee, too.
-And a good coffee.
-So the world of pastry
has long been dominated by men.
And today, I am going to
meet the woman
who has broken that streak.
Nina Métayer has been honored
as one of the best chefs
on the planet,
twice named Pastry chef
of the Year by Gault & Millau,
and in 2023,
she became the first woman
to be crowned
World Pastry Chef.
She now leads an
award-winning team of her own,
creating thousands of
edible masterpieces each week,
shaping not just desserts
but the future
of French pastry.
♪♪
-Bonjour.
-Nice to meet you.
I want to hug you
and squeeze you
over this counter.
Oh, my God.
Is that a real flower
or is it a cake?
-A cake. [ Laughs ]
-It's a cake?
Wow.
I need to know how you do this.
Let's go because if I stay here,
I'm eating this whole thing.
Most chefs have a kitchen,
but Nina has a laboratory,
complete with a 3D printer.
This combination
of craft and technology
take her famous floral cakes
like The Dahlia
to another dimension.
How do you even begin
something as beautiful
and complicated as The Dahlia?
That's just you
sketching something out?
That's beautiful.
♪♪
The 3D printer turns
the drawing into a model,
and from this,
Nina casts a silicone mold.
-That's so high-tech.
-[ Chuckles ]
-Like we haven't even
gotten to the baking yet.
But as with all
cooking obsessives,
it's still all
about the flavor.
♪♪
-Yeah.
-[ Laughs ]
-I feel like there
can never be enough.
So this mold will be filled
with a rich vanilla
cream mousse.
How hard was it as a woman
to make it in the pastry world
that has always been
so dominated by men?
♪♪
-So it's okay
to work with them
but not tell them what to do.
-Yes.
-[ Laughs ]
Look at you now
with your 3D-molds.
-[ Laughs ]
-Now I love it.
-Do you find it hard
as a mother to balance it all?
♪♪
Oh, wow.
Prove them wrong.
-Yes.
-Yeah.
And that it's
possible to do both.
♪♪
Okay.
It's precise.
Once it is cooled
and thickened,
Nina folds the vanilla mousse
into the whipped cream
and pipes it into the mold.
How many times did it take
you to perfect this cake?
♪♪
♪♪
Yeah.
♪♪
Yeah.
♪♪
-Well, you want to
involve all the senses.
-Yes.
-These creations are designed
to do just that.
Nina adds a layer
of verbena cream
and a red berry compote
to the vanilla mousse
It's frozen, then you
put it in the middle?
♪♪
-and then tops it
with a cookie layer.
♪♪
Then do we bake it,
cook it, freeze it?
-Freeze it.
-The cake will be frozen
to bind each layer together
before it can be hand-finished.
Nina and her team make
around 1500 cakes every day.
So pretty, like I don't want
to bite it, but I will.
[ Laughs ]
This is how it
comes out of the mold?
-Yes.
-In a city devoted
to art and innovation,
Nina has redefined
what a cake can be.
Okay.
Yet more Vanilla cream
is piped onto each petal
to bring this flower to life.
Usually when I'm with a chef,
they cook something
and I go, "I could do that."
-This is the first time I --
-You want to try?
-No, I really
feel not qualified.
-Try it.
-Oh, gosh.
God.
♪♪
Oh, that's better.
Okay, now I'm getting
the hang of it.
Thank you.
I know.
I just want to eat this, though.
♪♪
Nina's team mounts
the cake on a crunchy base
-[ Speaks in French ]
-Oh, wow.
-and transforms the flour
with a fine mist of color.
So this is sprayed
with red chocolate?
-Yes.
♪♪
-Raspberries filled with
compote are placed on top
and then crowned
with tiny flowers.
All right,
so can I taste it now?
-Yes.
-I would never even
cut into this.
It's so beautiful.
How are you going to do that?
-You do?
-Yeah.
-You find pleasure in that?
-Yeah.
-I get anxiety, but you go.
Oh, my gosh.
[ Gasps ]
Oh, you're right,
there's a sound.
-Mhm. The sound.
-There's a sound to it.
Oh, wait, wait.
Look inside.
Look at the inside.
Look, look, look,
look, look, look, look.
Oh, my goodness.
Look at all of this.
This is the most
beautiful slice of cake.
Mhm. Mmm!
-Wow.
-[ Laughs ]
-Wow. It is like air.
It's so fluffy.
And this little cake at
the bottom and the crust
and all of that custard
and whipped cream.
Wow.
That
is incredible.
This is extraterrestrial.
Like your brain is
on another level
to create something like this.
Only a true artist
could recreate the perfection
of a flower
that's savored for a moment,
but etched on
the memory forever.
I'm gonna just take
the whole cake home with me.
-So happy.
♪♪
-There are over a thousand
pastry shops in Paris.
Some of the best in the world.
And this Parisian love affair
with patisserie
is one of pure devotion,
bordering on obsessive.
[ Indistinct chatter ]
Bonjour.
-Bonjour.
So nice to meet you.
-Nice to meet you.
Muriel Tallandier is a mover
and shaker in
the Paris food scene
and won't mind me saying,
she's a little
crazy about patisserie
and the chefs behind
its evolution.
-Where are we?
-We're at Stohrer.
It's the oldest bakery in Paris.
-Really?
-Yes.
-How long has it been here?
-It's been here for 300 years.
-No.
-Founded by King Louis,
the 15th's Pastry chef.
-Should we go in?
-Bonjour.
-Wow.
This is beautiful.
I cannot believe
it's endured 300 years.
What made this store
so special in the 18th century?
-In those years,
you know, people had to go
to the bakery to have bread,
to the pastry shop,
to have pastry
and to have candies
in another shop.
So everything was
in different places.
So Nicolas Stohrer was the first
to blend everything
in the same place.
-And now it's all together.
-It's all together
in the same shop.
-So what is the thing
to order here?
-You have to order
the Baba au Rhum.
It was invented
by Nicolas Stohrer.
It's a really true innovation.
-Yeah.
-And it's here for 300 years.
-And they still make it.
-It's the same recipe.
-Wow.
-Oui.
Only, you know,
the brioche and the rum.
-Bread and alcohol.
-Why not?
-In the morning.
[ Laughter ]
[ Both speak in French ]
Oh, it's rummy.
A lot of rum.
-Oh, but it's good.
-Yes.
That's a good combo,
brioche and rum.
-And that just, you know,
an apricot jam on the top.
-Mm. It's so sweet.
-Mmm.
-But why rum?
-Oh it's Caribbean rum.
It's linked to the French
history with the colony
like Martinique and Guadeloupe.
-So all the rum came from
the French colonies
in the Caribbean.
Must have been
very exotic at the time.
-Look --
-Oh, my God.
-Look at you!
You're already drunk.
-No, I'm not.
-Pull yourself together.
-I know.
-[ Laughs ]
In the 1600s, this area was
the center of
the Paris pastry scene.
Thanks to the royal chefs
at the Louvre Palace
and its proximity
to the markets of Les Halles.
[ Bicycle dings ]
-So we're here.
It's where Les Halles
was founded.
It was the original
food market of all of Paris.
And in those times,
all the merchants
were coming from
everywhere in France,
in the heart of Paris,
to bring --
-Their products.
-All the products, yes.
-Chefs like Nicolas Stohrer
would make early morning
pilgrimages here in search
of the fine ingredients
that became
the hallmark
of Parisian pastry.
As the Paris population
grew in the 1960s,
the market was moved
to the suburbs.
It used to be here?
-Yes, but there's still,
you know, the spirit of it.
-The market may have gone,
but some of the centuries-old
food stores remain,
devoted to the art
of patisserie.
Oh my God, it's beautiful.
I want to buy everything.
♪♪
♪♪
[ Both speak in French ]
Muriel is taking me
to her own patisserie.
So you're not a pastry chef?
-I'm not at all pastry chef.
-No.
-No, I'm a pastry devotee.
-Devotee? [ Laughs ]
-I'm completely
made of pastry.
-This is it?
-Yes, it's Fou De Patisserie.
-[ Laughs ]
You are crazy about pastry.
Muriel's concept is simple.
She brings the best patisserie
from the best chefs
all together under one roof
[ Gasps ] Wow.
an art gallery
for all the senses.
-Oh, Bonjour.
-Bonjour. [ Speaks in French ]
-She's Jolie.
She's my partner.
-Nice to meet you.
-Nice to meet you.
-This really is
the all-stars of pastry.
You have a really nice
balance of historic,
iconic pastries with
some up and coming chefs.
-It's really the concept here.
We are curator, we want to
make it accessible, you know?
-We'll curate me a plate, lady.
[ Laughter ]
-So the Paris-Brest
of Maxime Frédéric,
best chef of the year.
-The Paris-Brest is a famous
French hazelnut dessert.
-It was done in 1910,
in homage to a very
famous bicycle race.
♪♪
-I get nervous cutting
into these beautiful things.
I get so nervous.
I don't know why.
It gives me anxiety
to ruin something so beautiful.
-And you know, it's made
with eggs and hazelnuts
from his farm in Normandy.
Maxime is very known for that,
for sourcing the best product.
That's the only secret,
you know?
-The secret, huh?
-And so let me introduce you,
this marvelous mango
from Cédric Grolet.
-I was hoping
you'd pick the mango.
-Cédric Grolet.
Yes. He's massive.
No, he's known all
over the world.
And he has so many followers,
like 30 millions on Instagram.
Because, you know,
pastry today is really visual.
-Let me clean my spoon
because I'm so excited
for the Cédric Grolet.
Oh, my God.
[ Gasps, chuckles ]
This one
I wasn't afraid to break
because these are very exciting.
-Look at that filling.
-The secret is inside, you know?
-It is like a surprise.
-You know, you have the cream,
the mango cream, chocolate.
Everything is balancing
the perfect fruit.
-That is amazing.
Bravo, ladies.
You guys definitely
are crazy for pastry.
[ Laughs ]
This concept is just
an evolution
of the original
18th century store,
putting everything in one place
for people to enjoy.
-Blending all different
kind of pastry.
True. You're right.
Yes, that's it.
♪♪
♪♪
-So legend has it
that the macaron landed
in the French courts
in the 16th century,
thanks to the Queen of France,
Catherine de’ Medici.
But what amazes me is
what happened here in Paris
when the macaron evolved
to the two shell version.
It didn't just rise
in popularity,
it became the superstar
of French pastry.
♪♪
And on the Champs-Élysées,
Paris's most famous boulevard,
stands Ladurée,
where in the 1930s
the humble macaron
was first transformed
into the double-decker gem
called the macaron.
I'm meeting it's executive
pastry creation chef,
Julien Alvarez.
Bonjour, Julien.
-Hello, Eva.
-How are you?
-Welcome to Ladurée Paris.
-In 1900, Ernest Ladurée
wife, Jeanne Souchard,
combined the fashionable
Paris cafe with the patisserie
and the first French
tea-room was born.
It revolutionized the lives
of Parisian women,
finally giving them a place
to socialize unchaperoned.
Wow.
Is this all for me?
-Yeah, especially.
-[ Laughs ]
Especially for me.
You can keep
Breakfast At Tiffany's.
I'll lunch at Ladurée.
Paris knows
how to spoil a girl.
What's this one?
-Oh, this one is
Marie Antoinette.
-Marie Antoinette?
-Yeah.
It's one of the most
iconic of Ladurée.
It's a blend of tea.
It's a black tea with roses,
with some citric, with pomelo.
Very unique.
-That is beautiful.
When did you first
have a macaron?
♪♪
♪♪
♪♪
♪♪
How does that feel
to have this job?
-Very happy.
-There are now over 200 flavors
of these edible jewels
developed by a prestigious line
of pastry chefs.
-Welcome in my world.
-[ Laughs ] This is your world.
-In the kitchen, yeah.
I would like to create
a special macaron for you.
-You mean like a new flavor?
That you've never made before?
-Like this, in this way?
No, never.
-Ah!
Not only do I get to see
the artist at work,
but today I get to be his muse.
God, this is so intimidating.
You have a thermometer out.
First, we make the shell.
-In Ladurée we make with
Italian meringue.
-Italian meringue,
known for its stability,
is made by adding hot sugar
syrup to whipped egg whites.
-The Italian meringue
is ready.
You can see the texture
of the meringue.
-Wow.
That's what you
want it to look like,
that has strong peaks.
-Yeah, we can see
it's perfect.
-It's perfect.
Of course it is.
Freshly ground almonds are
mixed with icing sugar
and a splash of egg white
So you want a paste.
It's very smooth.
before folding
in the Italian meringue.
-You can see at the beginning
it's a little bit matte.
-And now it's getting shinier.
♪♪
-I'll show you
1 or 2 and after --
-Oh, I'm gonna make them?
-Yeah.
-Your own macaron.
-Okay.
-At the end,
we want a shell of
three and four
centimeters of diameter.
-Okay. [ Laughs ]
-You push, you pipe.
-Yep.
-And after you cut.
-Looks easy, but getting
each one identical and precise?
This is years of
craftsmanship on display.
Oh, wow.
Do you just know
this size by heart?
-I pipe so many macarons
-I can make without --
-Blindfolded.
-Yeah.
-[ Laughs ]
-And after.
Just before to wait
to put in the oven.
-So aggressive
for something so delicate.
Oh, that's what makes it bigger.
-[ Laughs ]
-S’il vous plaît, Madame.
-Okay.
♪♪
-Perfect.
-Oh!
-The piping bag,
a little bit more --
-Straight?
-Straight, yeah.
-Told you, Julien,
I'm coming for your job.
-Bravo.
-Yeah!
-Good job.
-Okay, now do your
pop, pop, pop.
-Do that thing.
-Yeah.
-[ Laughs ]
Hard-baked sugar shells
will be sandwiched together
with a filling inspired
by my Mexican roots.
-We have dark chocolate,
but the main ingredient was
the mix of Chile from Mexico.
-Ooh, that smells wonderful.
-And the special vanilla
from Mexico also.
-And this vanilla is --
-Is the best.
-Is the best.
-Yeah. For sure.
And the combination
between the ingredients
are for me, very, very good.
I show you an example.
It's a little bit stronger
for some people.
-Yeah.
-Yeah.
-It has a kick.
Mmm.
I mean sweet, spicy,
and a little fiery?
If that's not me as a macaron,
I don't know what is.
-When you push
and you turn a little bit --
-Twist.
-Yeah, you twist.
Yeah, it's perfect.
-I feel like it's just the glue
to hold the two sides together.
But the filling matters.
-Obviously the shell, the
texture, it's very important.
-But the glue is --
-The glue.
-Is the balance, and it's
the interest of the macaron.
-And it wouldn't be
a modern macaron
without its own
signature color.
You painted these?
Oh, my God, you painted them
the color of the Mexican flag.
♪♪
Mmm.
-It hits you with the chocolate.
-Yeah?
-My God, because it's like --
it's like, pow!
-Do they have names?
-No.
I need your help.
-Well, I think since
you think it's spicy,
maybe it should be the Diablo.
[ Laughter ]
But at least that'll indicate
to the clients
this one's a little spicy.
-Yeah, yeah. Yeah, absolutely.
Thank you for your help.
-Thank you so much.
This experience was the treat.
The macaron embodies
the art of living beautifully.
It's Paris in a bite.
♪♪
♪♪
-So Paris has a reputation
for being hard to break into.
Fiercely protective
of tradition.
But today,
I'm meeting a visionary
who dared to open the first
Parisian artisanal donut shop.
-Hello.
-Hello!
-Oh, my God. Do we hug?
Do we double kiss?
What are we doing?
I don't know, we can do both.
Americans in Paris.
-Pastry chef Amanda Bankert
is the brains behind
Boneshaker Donuts.
Being an American chef
in Paris is bold,
but to take on the city's
legendary pastry chefs
with a donut
now that's next-level courage.
-It was not the easiest route.
[ Laughs ]
French people had
an absolute preconception
that it was kind of like the
worst of everything American.
-[ Laughs ] Yeah.
-We tried to get like,
bank loans and stuff like that.
-Everything was refused.
-They said no.
-They said donuts will
never work in Paris --
-Not because of your talent
and not because you're American.
-Because --
-Donut.
-I gotta say,
I've been in Paris so long,
I'm actually craving a donut.
-Amazing.
♪♪
Yeah, so one of the things
that we got kind of famous for
is doing sort of like
French-American --
-Yeah.
-Mash.
-With Le Cordon Bleu training
and a decade as a pastry chef,
Amanda had already conquered
the city's food scene.
But then she tore
up the rule book,
betting it all on bringing
Paris a taste of her homeland.
What kind of dough
is donut dough?
-Our recipe is based
on a brioche dough because,
again, I wanted to bring
that kind of French aspect in.
-Brioche is typically
a sweet dough enriched
with egg and butter.
-I really love this idea of
mixing traditional French pastry
with, like,
classic American baking.
American Donuts often
have nutmeg in them,
so I added a little bit
of nutmeg to the brioche recipe.
-Once the donuts
are cut out,
they are lowered
into the hot fat.
-What do you fry them in?
-Vegetable shortening.
-It actually makes
them less greasy.
-Oh, yeah.
-When you fry in shortening,
when it cools,
it kind of almost
creates like a little layer.
-A little fat layer.
-A little fat layer. [ Laughs ]
-Little fat layer
never hurt anybody.
One minute it's dough
and the next it's donuts.
With the smell already out
the door, enticing customers.
-They're puffy.
-Yes.
-And while they're hot,
we have to roll them in sugar.
This is just regular
run of the mill sugar.
That's actually the line
of a well proved donut.
So when you bite into that,
that means your donut
is going to be
really, really airy.
-Yeah, we want that.
-Yeah.
-And so now --
-Now we're going to fill it?
-We're gonna fill it.
-Today's donut is based on
a famous French summer dessert,
cherry clafoutis, which is
a cherry and vanilla flan.
-So the first thing
that I have is a compote.
So it's made
using Griotte cherries.
-So why the Griotte cherry?
Is that a special cherry?
-Yeah, so they're in season now.
-Yeah.
-And I like them because again
they have that real tartness.
So with any dessert you
don't want it to be too sweet.
-I'm like, hurry up and fill it.
My mouth is watering
for this donut.
I want to bite into this so bad.
-We're almost there.
And then we're gonna go in
with a vanilla pastry cream,
which is going to act
as the flan aspect
of the cherry clafoutis.
Okay, so you just
pop it in there.
-What?
And you serve them like this
with this filling
flowing out of it?
-Yes, ma'am.
-Okay, so now do we eat them?
-Now we eat them.
-Here?
-I think upstairs.
-Oh, fine.
-Yeah. [ Laughs ]
-I'll go upstairs.
Look at that.
♪♪
-Hold on, hold on.
-We like? [ Laughs ]
-The dough.
I mean, the filling is amazing,
but the star of
this donut is the dough.
How do you get it
to be so light and fluffy?
-So there is a secret.
We are fully vegan.
-What?
-Yeah.
No butter, no cream, no eggs.
-There's no cream
in the cream?
-There's no cream
in the cream.
[ Laughs ]
-What?
I'm so confused.
Just when I think I understand
the secrets
of Great patisserie,
Paris throws me a curveball.
That is crazy.
-A vegan donut shop in Paris.
Like the land
of cream and butter.
Yeah. We're lucky.
We have been, like,
very much embraced
by the Paris pastry scene 100%.
So incredible.
-You're breaking a lot
of rules here, lady.
♪♪
I have sampled the finest
pastries this city has to offer.
And what I've discovered is that
being a pastry chef is a craft.
And their creations are
much more than indulgence.
They demand a moment
of your time.
Because where bread
was born from necessity,
pastry was born
from imagination.
Proof that we've always hungered
for something beyond survival,
for art, for beauty,
and for wonder.
Especially if you
have a sweet tooth.
♪♪
[ Bicycle dings ]
♪♪
-So most people come
to Paris for the beauty.
The grand boulevards,
the amazing architecture,
the wrought iron balconies,
some of the greatest
museums in the world.
But me, I've come for the
greatest art form of them all
the art of patisserie.
I mean, look at this.
It's perfection.
Like, how do they do this?
How does it even keep its shape?
Oh, my God, look at this.
That is some serious baking,
and I think
I gotta get studying.
Well, it's heaven.
I'm in heaven.
I'm Eva Longoria,
and I'm a serious Francophile.
[ Speaks in French ]
Over the past 20 years,
my career as an actor
has brought me to France
time and again.
It's my home away from home.
But those trips were more
about work than joie de vivre.
[ Laughs ]
Now I want something deeper.
This is going to be
an adventure.
So I'm setting out
to really experience France
-This is Cabernet Sauvignon.
-[ Gasps ] That's my favorite.
to savor
its world celebrated cuisine
Wow.
and explore
the country's rich history.
And there's one culinary
delight I'm obsessed with.
♪♪
The creme de la
creme French pastry.
Guys, I'm basically French now.
[ Laughs ]
Paris is home to more
award winning pastry chefs
than anywhere else
in the world.
Your brain is on another level.
Here, the day revolves
around patisserie.
Morning begins with the
buttery flakes of a croissant.
Oh, my God.
Whoo.
At midday, a baguette tucked
under the arm signals lunch.
[ Crunches softly ]
-Voila!
-Voila.
And by afternoon,
the ritual of La Goutte arrives
where breathtaking
sweet treats
[ Laughs ]
are savored like
miniature works of art.
Is that a real flower?
-Cake.
-It's cake.
-And tasting these creations
It hits you with the chocolate.
Cause it's like, pow!
is pure seduction.
Hold on, hold on.
-We like? [ Chuckles ]
-And honestly,
resistance is futile.
Whoa, that's a mic drop.
♪♪
♪♪
Paris style is
less about trends
and more about timelessness
clean lines and elegance.
It's je ne sais quoi comes
more from what you leave out
than what you add in.
There is one classic design
that has long represented
this Parisian style --
the artisanal French baguette.
There are hundreds
of boulangeries in Paris,
so when you spot a line
of locals outside of one,
you know these must be special.
But these aren't just special.
They've been crowned
the best in Paris.
Excuse me.
I'm just gonna cut the queue.
♪♪
Mickaël Reydellet has won
Le Grand Prix de la baguette,
the ultimate honor
for the art of bread making,
not once, but twice.
♪♪
♪♪
Wow.
[ Speaks in French ] criteria?
I didn't know that.
I thought baguettes
were all sizes.
-But it's a size.
-Yes.
-Okay, so there's a weight.
Okay.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, my God.
Oh, no. I could smell it
all the way down the street.
-[ Crunches softly ]
-Oh. [ Laughs ]
-Voila.
-Voila.
Yeah, it's got to make
that sound, everybody.
-It's gotta
-[ Crunches softly ]
There you go.
♪♪
-I'm so excited.
You have no idea.
I'm so excited, Mickaël.
I'm gonna make a baguette
in France with you.
-Okay, and a little flower.
[ Laughs ]
-Each wheat brings its own
characteristic to the baguette.
Oh, it's really soft.
[ Speaks in French ]
[ Laughs ]
Oh, wow.
He's like, "Watch out."
Mickaël already told me
I wore the worst color possible
for this activity.
-[ Laughs ]
In 18th century Paris,
bread was the cornerstone
of every meal,
a lifeline for working people.
So when prices soared,
hunger turned to anger.
♪♪
♪♪
♪♪
♪♪
From a loaf stolen in
Desperation in Les Miserables
to the bread riots
in the 1700s,
bread has played
a key part in the story
of the French Revolution.
Ultimately leading to
the downfall of the monarchy
and the king losing his head.
♪♪
♪♪
Oh, my God.
[ Laughs ]
-Yes.
Perfect.
-Yay! I made one.
-It's yours.
-This one's mine?
-Yes.
-Oh, wait. Let me do it again.
I want to do it again.
So you're just sealing it?
You're just closing it.
Oh, my God,
I could do this all day long.
Parisians take the quality
of their baguette tradition
so seriously that
it's now protected by law.
♪♪
♪♪
-So Mickaël and Florian
are certainly not going to let
the quality slip
on my baguette.
-What I didn't do --
-[ Laughs ]
♪♪
Oh. [ Speaks in French ]
-[ Laughs ]
-Each baguette is scored
with a baker's signature.
And these are for today's
special delivery.
♪♪
-You get to make
baguettes for the president?
-Oui.
-That's a big honor.
Had I known that before,
I would have made them better.
I didn't know we were going
to the president's house.
When the baguettes
emerge from the steam oven,
they look incredible,
but the smell is divine.
And just when I think
my day can't get any better
Ah!
This is my dream car.
[ Laughs ]
[ Engine starts ]
Oh, my God.
♪♪
[ Horn honks ]
We're going to
the official home
of every French president
since 1848 --
the Elysée Palace.
Well, this is
a unique experience.
Oui.
I feel properly attired
for a palace.
Who needs designer
handbags when you have
a perfectly baked
baguette under your arm?
Is there a doorbell?
Oh, there is a doorbell.
-[ Laughs ]
♪♪
-After everything I've seen,
it's no surprise
that this baguette
is still the favorite
bread of the people
and the president alike.
Oh, my gosh.
[ Gasps ]
Oh, my God.
The spirit of égalité lives on.
Oh, my God, it's still warm.
♪♪
♪♪
-This is not only
a French pastry classic.
It's my favorite French pastry.
It's a [speaks in French] but
this one is filled with rhubarb.
♪♪
Mmm.
That is Sweet and tart
and tangy and delicious.
And the crazy thing is,
because of the rhubarb,
this is only available about
ten weeks of the entire year.
♪♪
I've hopped across the Seine
to the left Bank of Paris,
or Rive Gauche,
a haven for thinkers, dreamers,
and the beautifully
unconventional.
So, of course, there's a street
famous for its patisserie.
-Eva.
-Nice to meet you.
-Florence Mazo Koenig,
a gastronomy expert
and left Bank resident,
is going to be my guide to the
treasures on the Rue de Bach.
♪♪
Why sweets, specifically
of all other things?
Mmm.
♪♪
[ Laughs ]
Affectionately known
as the Sweet Street.
In the 17th century,
quantities of sugar
from France's new colonies
began arriving here via barge
along the river Seine,
paving the way for Paris's
opulent new haute
patisserie culture.
♪♪
That caramel.
-Yes.
-And the nuts.
-And the cream.
-Oh my God,
the cream is so good.
I could never live
on this street.
This is all too tempting.
The street's association
with decadence
was cemented with
its cathedral of food
the Grande Épicerie.
This is gourmand heaven.
♪♪
♪♪
Oh, wow.
♪♪
Florence has arranged for me to
have a lesson in the kitchens.
A hidden Wonka world
where chefs bake bread
and sculpt sugar delights
for the Parisians above.
-Wow.
-This is really nice.
-Oh, my gosh,
look at all this.
-Bonjour.
-Bonjour.
Another place --
secret place.
-It must smell good
in your neighborhood.
-Yes.
♪♪
-Oh, my God,
I'm in heaven already.
-How are you?
-Fine, and you?
-Nice to meet you.
-Nice to meet you.
What are we doing?
Croissants!
-Yes,
we're gonna make croissants.
-Oh, my God.
I -- I make croissants --
-Yeah?
-At home.
-So you're gonna show me?
-I'm going to show you.
[ Laughs ]
♪♪
Yeah.
This is called laminated dough
as it's been folded
with butter four times.
It's this technique
that gives the croissant
its characteristic flakiness.
-Okay.
♪♪
-He's already fixing mine.
[ Laughs ]
♪♪
What -- [ Laughs ]
Don't press on the middle.
Press on the sides.
-Yeah.
-[ Laughs ]
Guys, I'm basically French now.
[ Laughs ]
Look, you can't even tell
whose is whose.
He goes, "I can."
[ Laughs ]
-Now --
no, [chuckles] you can't.
♪♪
-Okay.
-With the raisins.
-Yeah.
-And is this very popular?
♪♪
Yeah.
-Savoir-faire is that
great French phrase
that proudly boasts,
we know how.
You show me first.
Oh, just like that.
Oh, this I can do.
He doesn't give me
the important thing to do.
He doesn't give me the cream,
but he lets me
sprinkle the raisins.
Why yellow raisins?
Oh, yeah.
They're -- they're softer.
-Small, small, small.
-That's really small.
Ooh, we're getting somewhere.
We're getting somewhere.
♪♪
-And you gotta work fast right
before the dough gets warm?
-Yeah.
♪♪
-Oh, and you put them
in these little things?
-Yeah.
-And after 40 minutes
in the oven
Oh, my gosh.
-Oh.
-That looks beautiful.
Oh, look at this.
Look at this, look at this.
Oh, my God. Like an escargot.
Oh, that's so much easier.
Oh, my God.
Really good.
The pain aux raisins uses the
same dough as the croissant,
but the addition
of raisins and creme pâtissière
creates a totally
different pastry.
-[ Speaks in French ]
-Oh, my God,
that one is amazing.
-Look at that.
-It's really nice.
-Wow.
So it's like, whoom.
You cannot beat
a French croissant
in France by a French baker.
-Yeah.
-It has to be all
of these things
for it to be
a really good croissant.
-And a good coffee, too.
-And a good coffee.
-So the world of pastry
has long been dominated by men.
And today, I am going to
meet the woman
who has broken that streak.
Nina Métayer has been honored
as one of the best chefs
on the planet,
twice named Pastry chef
of the Year by Gault & Millau,
and in 2023,
she became the first woman
to be crowned
World Pastry Chef.
She now leads an
award-winning team of her own,
creating thousands of
edible masterpieces each week,
shaping not just desserts
but the future
of French pastry.
♪♪
-Bonjour.
-Nice to meet you.
I want to hug you
and squeeze you
over this counter.
Oh, my God.
Is that a real flower
or is it a cake?
-A cake. [ Laughs ]
-It's a cake?
Wow.
I need to know how you do this.
Let's go because if I stay here,
I'm eating this whole thing.
Most chefs have a kitchen,
but Nina has a laboratory,
complete with a 3D printer.
This combination
of craft and technology
take her famous floral cakes
like The Dahlia
to another dimension.
How do you even begin
something as beautiful
and complicated as The Dahlia?
That's just you
sketching something out?
That's beautiful.
♪♪
The 3D printer turns
the drawing into a model,
and from this,
Nina casts a silicone mold.
-That's so high-tech.
-[ Chuckles ]
-Like we haven't even
gotten to the baking yet.
But as with all
cooking obsessives,
it's still all
about the flavor.
♪♪
-Yeah.
-[ Laughs ]
-I feel like there
can never be enough.
So this mold will be filled
with a rich vanilla
cream mousse.
How hard was it as a woman
to make it in the pastry world
that has always been
so dominated by men?
♪♪
-So it's okay
to work with them
but not tell them what to do.
-Yes.
-[ Laughs ]
Look at you now
with your 3D-molds.
-[ Laughs ]
-Now I love it.
-Do you find it hard
as a mother to balance it all?
♪♪
Oh, wow.
Prove them wrong.
-Yes.
-Yeah.
And that it's
possible to do both.
♪♪
Okay.
It's precise.
Once it is cooled
and thickened,
Nina folds the vanilla mousse
into the whipped cream
and pipes it into the mold.
How many times did it take
you to perfect this cake?
♪♪
♪♪
Yeah.
♪♪
Yeah.
♪♪
-Well, you want to
involve all the senses.
-Yes.
-These creations are designed
to do just that.
Nina adds a layer
of verbena cream
and a red berry compote
to the vanilla mousse
It's frozen, then you
put it in the middle?
♪♪
-and then tops it
with a cookie layer.
♪♪
Then do we bake it,
cook it, freeze it?
-Freeze it.
-The cake will be frozen
to bind each layer together
before it can be hand-finished.
Nina and her team make
around 1500 cakes every day.
So pretty, like I don't want
to bite it, but I will.
[ Laughs ]
This is how it
comes out of the mold?
-Yes.
-In a city devoted
to art and innovation,
Nina has redefined
what a cake can be.
Okay.
Yet more Vanilla cream
is piped onto each petal
to bring this flower to life.
Usually when I'm with a chef,
they cook something
and I go, "I could do that."
-This is the first time I --
-You want to try?
-No, I really
feel not qualified.
-Try it.
-Oh, gosh.
God.
♪♪
Oh, that's better.
Okay, now I'm getting
the hang of it.
Thank you.
I know.
I just want to eat this, though.
♪♪
Nina's team mounts
the cake on a crunchy base
-[ Speaks in French ]
-Oh, wow.
-and transforms the flour
with a fine mist of color.
So this is sprayed
with red chocolate?
-Yes.
♪♪
-Raspberries filled with
compote are placed on top
and then crowned
with tiny flowers.
All right,
so can I taste it now?
-Yes.
-I would never even
cut into this.
It's so beautiful.
How are you going to do that?
-You do?
-Yeah.
-You find pleasure in that?
-Yeah.
-I get anxiety, but you go.
Oh, my gosh.
[ Gasps ]
Oh, you're right,
there's a sound.
-Mhm. The sound.
-There's a sound to it.
Oh, wait, wait.
Look inside.
Look at the inside.
Look, look, look,
look, look, look, look.
Oh, my goodness.
Look at all of this.
This is the most
beautiful slice of cake.
Mhm. Mmm!
-Wow.
-[ Laughs ]
-Wow. It is like air.
It's so fluffy.
And this little cake at
the bottom and the crust
and all of that custard
and whipped cream.
Wow.
That
is incredible.
This is extraterrestrial.
Like your brain is
on another level
to create something like this.
Only a true artist
could recreate the perfection
of a flower
that's savored for a moment,
but etched on
the memory forever.
I'm gonna just take
the whole cake home with me.
-So happy.
♪♪
-There are over a thousand
pastry shops in Paris.
Some of the best in the world.
And this Parisian love affair
with patisserie
is one of pure devotion,
bordering on obsessive.
[ Indistinct chatter ]
Bonjour.
-Bonjour.
So nice to meet you.
-Nice to meet you.
Muriel Tallandier is a mover
and shaker in
the Paris food scene
and won't mind me saying,
she's a little
crazy about patisserie
and the chefs behind
its evolution.
-Where are we?
-We're at Stohrer.
It's the oldest bakery in Paris.
-Really?
-Yes.
-How long has it been here?
-It's been here for 300 years.
-No.
-Founded by King Louis,
the 15th's Pastry chef.
-Should we go in?
-Bonjour.
-Wow.
This is beautiful.
I cannot believe
it's endured 300 years.
What made this store
so special in the 18th century?
-In those years,
you know, people had to go
to the bakery to have bread,
to the pastry shop,
to have pastry
and to have candies
in another shop.
So everything was
in different places.
So Nicolas Stohrer was the first
to blend everything
in the same place.
-And now it's all together.
-It's all together
in the same shop.
-So what is the thing
to order here?
-You have to order
the Baba au Rhum.
It was invented
by Nicolas Stohrer.
It's a really true innovation.
-Yeah.
-And it's here for 300 years.
-And they still make it.
-It's the same recipe.
-Wow.
-Oui.
Only, you know,
the brioche and the rum.
-Bread and alcohol.
-Why not?
-In the morning.
[ Laughter ]
[ Both speak in French ]
Oh, it's rummy.
A lot of rum.
-Oh, but it's good.
-Yes.
That's a good combo,
brioche and rum.
-And that just, you know,
an apricot jam on the top.
-Mm. It's so sweet.
-Mmm.
-But why rum?
-Oh it's Caribbean rum.
It's linked to the French
history with the colony
like Martinique and Guadeloupe.
-So all the rum came from
the French colonies
in the Caribbean.
Must have been
very exotic at the time.
-Look --
-Oh, my God.
-Look at you!
You're already drunk.
-No, I'm not.
-Pull yourself together.
-I know.
-[ Laughs ]
In the 1600s, this area was
the center of
the Paris pastry scene.
Thanks to the royal chefs
at the Louvre Palace
and its proximity
to the markets of Les Halles.
[ Bicycle dings ]
-So we're here.
It's where Les Halles
was founded.
It was the original
food market of all of Paris.
And in those times,
all the merchants
were coming from
everywhere in France,
in the heart of Paris,
to bring --
-Their products.
-All the products, yes.
-Chefs like Nicolas Stohrer
would make early morning
pilgrimages here in search
of the fine ingredients
that became
the hallmark
of Parisian pastry.
As the Paris population
grew in the 1960s,
the market was moved
to the suburbs.
It used to be here?
-Yes, but there's still,
you know, the spirit of it.
-The market may have gone,
but some of the centuries-old
food stores remain,
devoted to the art
of patisserie.
Oh my God, it's beautiful.
I want to buy everything.
♪♪
♪♪
[ Both speak in French ]
Muriel is taking me
to her own patisserie.
So you're not a pastry chef?
-I'm not at all pastry chef.
-No.
-No, I'm a pastry devotee.
-Devotee? [ Laughs ]
-I'm completely
made of pastry.
-This is it?
-Yes, it's Fou De Patisserie.
-[ Laughs ]
You are crazy about pastry.
Muriel's concept is simple.
She brings the best patisserie
from the best chefs
all together under one roof
[ Gasps ] Wow.
an art gallery
for all the senses.
-Oh, Bonjour.
-Bonjour. [ Speaks in French ]
-She's Jolie.
She's my partner.
-Nice to meet you.
-Nice to meet you.
-This really is
the all-stars of pastry.
You have a really nice
balance of historic,
iconic pastries with
some up and coming chefs.
-It's really the concept here.
We are curator, we want to
make it accessible, you know?
-We'll curate me a plate, lady.
[ Laughter ]
-So the Paris-Brest
of Maxime Frédéric,
best chef of the year.
-The Paris-Brest is a famous
French hazelnut dessert.
-It was done in 1910,
in homage to a very
famous bicycle race.
♪♪
-I get nervous cutting
into these beautiful things.
I get so nervous.
I don't know why.
It gives me anxiety
to ruin something so beautiful.
-And you know, it's made
with eggs and hazelnuts
from his farm in Normandy.
Maxime is very known for that,
for sourcing the best product.
That's the only secret,
you know?
-The secret, huh?
-And so let me introduce you,
this marvelous mango
from Cédric Grolet.
-I was hoping
you'd pick the mango.
-Cédric Grolet.
Yes. He's massive.
No, he's known all
over the world.
And he has so many followers,
like 30 millions on Instagram.
Because, you know,
pastry today is really visual.
-Let me clean my spoon
because I'm so excited
for the Cédric Grolet.
Oh, my God.
[ Gasps, chuckles ]
This one
I wasn't afraid to break
because these are very exciting.
-Look at that filling.
-The secret is inside, you know?
-It is like a surprise.
-You know, you have the cream,
the mango cream, chocolate.
Everything is balancing
the perfect fruit.
-That is amazing.
Bravo, ladies.
You guys definitely
are crazy for pastry.
[ Laughs ]
This concept is just
an evolution
of the original
18th century store,
putting everything in one place
for people to enjoy.
-Blending all different
kind of pastry.
True. You're right.
Yes, that's it.
♪♪
♪♪
-So legend has it
that the macaron landed
in the French courts
in the 16th century,
thanks to the Queen of France,
Catherine de’ Medici.
But what amazes me is
what happened here in Paris
when the macaron evolved
to the two shell version.
It didn't just rise
in popularity,
it became the superstar
of French pastry.
♪♪
And on the Champs-Élysées,
Paris's most famous boulevard,
stands Ladurée,
where in the 1930s
the humble macaron
was first transformed
into the double-decker gem
called the macaron.
I'm meeting it's executive
pastry creation chef,
Julien Alvarez.
Bonjour, Julien.
-Hello, Eva.
-How are you?
-Welcome to Ladurée Paris.
-In 1900, Ernest Ladurée
wife, Jeanne Souchard,
combined the fashionable
Paris cafe with the patisserie
and the first French
tea-room was born.
It revolutionized the lives
of Parisian women,
finally giving them a place
to socialize unchaperoned.
Wow.
Is this all for me?
-Yeah, especially.
-[ Laughs ]
Especially for me.
You can keep
Breakfast At Tiffany's.
I'll lunch at Ladurée.
Paris knows
how to spoil a girl.
What's this one?
-Oh, this one is
Marie Antoinette.
-Marie Antoinette?
-Yeah.
It's one of the most
iconic of Ladurée.
It's a blend of tea.
It's a black tea with roses,
with some citric, with pomelo.
Very unique.
-That is beautiful.
When did you first
have a macaron?
♪♪
♪♪
♪♪
♪♪
How does that feel
to have this job?
-Very happy.
-There are now over 200 flavors
of these edible jewels
developed by a prestigious line
of pastry chefs.
-Welcome in my world.
-[ Laughs ] This is your world.
-In the kitchen, yeah.
I would like to create
a special macaron for you.
-You mean like a new flavor?
That you've never made before?
-Like this, in this way?
No, never.
-Ah!
Not only do I get to see
the artist at work,
but today I get to be his muse.
God, this is so intimidating.
You have a thermometer out.
First, we make the shell.
-In Ladurée we make with
Italian meringue.
-Italian meringue,
known for its stability,
is made by adding hot sugar
syrup to whipped egg whites.
-The Italian meringue
is ready.
You can see the texture
of the meringue.
-Wow.
That's what you
want it to look like,
that has strong peaks.
-Yeah, we can see
it's perfect.
-It's perfect.
Of course it is.
Freshly ground almonds are
mixed with icing sugar
and a splash of egg white
So you want a paste.
It's very smooth.
before folding
in the Italian meringue.
-You can see at the beginning
it's a little bit matte.
-And now it's getting shinier.
♪♪
-I'll show you
1 or 2 and after --
-Oh, I'm gonna make them?
-Yeah.
-Your own macaron.
-Okay.
-At the end,
we want a shell of
three and four
centimeters of diameter.
-Okay. [ Laughs ]
-You push, you pipe.
-Yep.
-And after you cut.
-Looks easy, but getting
each one identical and precise?
This is years of
craftsmanship on display.
Oh, wow.
Do you just know
this size by heart?
-I pipe so many macarons
-I can make without --
-Blindfolded.
-Yeah.
-[ Laughs ]
-And after.
Just before to wait
to put in the oven.
-So aggressive
for something so delicate.
Oh, that's what makes it bigger.
-[ Laughs ]
-S’il vous plaît, Madame.
-Okay.
♪♪
-Perfect.
-Oh!
-The piping bag,
a little bit more --
-Straight?
-Straight, yeah.
-Told you, Julien,
I'm coming for your job.
-Bravo.
-Yeah!
-Good job.
-Okay, now do your
pop, pop, pop.
-Do that thing.
-Yeah.
-[ Laughs ]
Hard-baked sugar shells
will be sandwiched together
with a filling inspired
by my Mexican roots.
-We have dark chocolate,
but the main ingredient was
the mix of Chile from Mexico.
-Ooh, that smells wonderful.
-And the special vanilla
from Mexico also.
-And this vanilla is --
-Is the best.
-Is the best.
-Yeah. For sure.
And the combination
between the ingredients
are for me, very, very good.
I show you an example.
It's a little bit stronger
for some people.
-Yeah.
-Yeah.
-It has a kick.
Mmm.
I mean sweet, spicy,
and a little fiery?
If that's not me as a macaron,
I don't know what is.
-When you push
and you turn a little bit --
-Twist.
-Yeah, you twist.
Yeah, it's perfect.
-I feel like it's just the glue
to hold the two sides together.
But the filling matters.
-Obviously the shell, the
texture, it's very important.
-But the glue is --
-The glue.
-Is the balance, and it's
the interest of the macaron.
-And it wouldn't be
a modern macaron
without its own
signature color.
You painted these?
Oh, my God, you painted them
the color of the Mexican flag.
♪♪
Mmm.
-It hits you with the chocolate.
-Yeah?
-My God, because it's like --
it's like, pow!
-Do they have names?
-No.
I need your help.
-Well, I think since
you think it's spicy,
maybe it should be the Diablo.
[ Laughter ]
But at least that'll indicate
to the clients
this one's a little spicy.
-Yeah, yeah. Yeah, absolutely.
Thank you for your help.
-Thank you so much.
This experience was the treat.
The macaron embodies
the art of living beautifully.
It's Paris in a bite.
♪♪
♪♪
-So Paris has a reputation
for being hard to break into.
Fiercely protective
of tradition.
But today,
I'm meeting a visionary
who dared to open the first
Parisian artisanal donut shop.
-Hello.
-Hello!
-Oh, my God. Do we hug?
Do we double kiss?
What are we doing?
I don't know, we can do both.
Americans in Paris.
-Pastry chef Amanda Bankert
is the brains behind
Boneshaker Donuts.
Being an American chef
in Paris is bold,
but to take on the city's
legendary pastry chefs
with a donut
now that's next-level courage.
-It was not the easiest route.
[ Laughs ]
French people had
an absolute preconception
that it was kind of like the
worst of everything American.
-[ Laughs ] Yeah.
-We tried to get like,
bank loans and stuff like that.
-Everything was refused.
-They said no.
-They said donuts will
never work in Paris --
-Not because of your talent
and not because you're American.
-Because --
-Donut.
-I gotta say,
I've been in Paris so long,
I'm actually craving a donut.
-Amazing.
♪♪
Yeah, so one of the things
that we got kind of famous for
is doing sort of like
French-American --
-Yeah.
-Mash.
-With Le Cordon Bleu training
and a decade as a pastry chef,
Amanda had already conquered
the city's food scene.
But then she tore
up the rule book,
betting it all on bringing
Paris a taste of her homeland.
What kind of dough
is donut dough?
-Our recipe is based
on a brioche dough because,
again, I wanted to bring
that kind of French aspect in.
-Brioche is typically
a sweet dough enriched
with egg and butter.
-I really love this idea of
mixing traditional French pastry
with, like,
classic American baking.
American Donuts often
have nutmeg in them,
so I added a little bit
of nutmeg to the brioche recipe.
-Once the donuts
are cut out,
they are lowered
into the hot fat.
-What do you fry them in?
-Vegetable shortening.
-It actually makes
them less greasy.
-Oh, yeah.
-When you fry in shortening,
when it cools,
it kind of almost
creates like a little layer.
-A little fat layer.
-A little fat layer. [ Laughs ]
-Little fat layer
never hurt anybody.
One minute it's dough
and the next it's donuts.
With the smell already out
the door, enticing customers.
-They're puffy.
-Yes.
-And while they're hot,
we have to roll them in sugar.
This is just regular
run of the mill sugar.
That's actually the line
of a well proved donut.
So when you bite into that,
that means your donut
is going to be
really, really airy.
-Yeah, we want that.
-Yeah.
-And so now --
-Now we're going to fill it?
-We're gonna fill it.
-Today's donut is based on
a famous French summer dessert,
cherry clafoutis, which is
a cherry and vanilla flan.
-So the first thing
that I have is a compote.
So it's made
using Griotte cherries.
-So why the Griotte cherry?
Is that a special cherry?
-Yeah, so they're in season now.
-Yeah.
-And I like them because again
they have that real tartness.
So with any dessert you
don't want it to be too sweet.
-I'm like, hurry up and fill it.
My mouth is watering
for this donut.
I want to bite into this so bad.
-We're almost there.
And then we're gonna go in
with a vanilla pastry cream,
which is going to act
as the flan aspect
of the cherry clafoutis.
Okay, so you just
pop it in there.
-What?
And you serve them like this
with this filling
flowing out of it?
-Yes, ma'am.
-Okay, so now do we eat them?
-Now we eat them.
-Here?
-I think upstairs.
-Oh, fine.
-Yeah. [ Laughs ]
-I'll go upstairs.
Look at that.
♪♪
-Hold on, hold on.
-We like? [ Laughs ]
-The dough.
I mean, the filling is amazing,
but the star of
this donut is the dough.
How do you get it
to be so light and fluffy?
-So there is a secret.
We are fully vegan.
-What?
-Yeah.
No butter, no cream, no eggs.
-There's no cream
in the cream?
-There's no cream
in the cream.
[ Laughs ]
-What?
I'm so confused.
Just when I think I understand
the secrets
of Great patisserie,
Paris throws me a curveball.
That is crazy.
-A vegan donut shop in Paris.
Like the land
of cream and butter.
Yeah. We're lucky.
We have been, like,
very much embraced
by the Paris pastry scene 100%.
So incredible.
-You're breaking a lot
of rules here, lady.
♪♪
I have sampled the finest
pastries this city has to offer.
And what I've discovered is that
being a pastry chef is a craft.
And their creations are
much more than indulgence.
They demand a moment
of your time.
Because where bread
was born from necessity,
pastry was born
from imagination.
Proof that we've always hungered
for something beyond survival,
for art, for beauty,
and for wonder.
Especially if you
have a sweet tooth.
♪♪