Day-

Xuixo with ‘crème patalana’
Between the razor clams, bacallà, and lush ribbons of jamớn,
in  Barcelona I came upon a Catalan pastry: the xuixo
(pronounced shoo-show). It is filled with a crème Catalana
and  deep-fried. It is extraordinary, and utterly unforgettable.


The xuixo origin story is one of my favourite love and food
stories. It is set in the Spanish flu pandemic in Girona. The
baker’s daughter was having a sneaky romance with an acrobat
named El Tarlà. During a clandestine bakery rendezvous
El  Tarlà hid behind some sacks of flour. The flour made him
sneeze and the jig was up. To placate the father’s anger, El  Tarlà
ofered him this recipe, along with a promise to marry his
daughter. I hope they all lived as happily ever after as I do
with  these fried treats in my life.

Start 24–48 hours before and make the Croiss-ain’t dough as per
the recipe. To get ahead, also make the Cold-start thick custard
and scrape into a bowl with a piece of plastic wrap pushed onto the
surface to avoid a skin forming. Keep chilled.

The next day, start the assembly. Take the custard and grate half the
orange rind and half the lemon rind in. Add the cinnamon and mix
well. Set aside at room temperature.


Taking the chill off the custard will help the xuixo cook all the way through
at fry time. You won’t need all the custard – keep the rest to serve alongside.

Lightly break up the egg white in a small bowl with a fork. Set aside,
along with a pastry brush. Cut the chilled dough into six equal
pieces – around 80 g (2¾ oz) each. On a lightly dusted work surface,
roll the first portion (keep the remainder chilled) into a rectangle
approximately 23  cm × 12 cm (9 in × in). The dough may get a
little smeary – just use a little extra flour.

Position the rectangle with the short side facing you. Brush the
entire surface lightly with the egg white. Spoon (or pipe) a heaped
tablespoon of the custard in the lower third of the dough piece.


continued
Keeps Best eaten warm, but I have
eaten these after an overnight chill
and they were still mind-bendingly
delicious!
Makes 6 xuixos. Takes Start the dough 24 hour s
before fry-day, and the custard too,
for ease. Fry-day takes 1–2 hours
with lots of hands-off proving time.

1 × batch Croiss-ain’t/faux- ssaint
dough (page 87)
1 × small batch Cold-start thick
custard (page 247)
1 orange
1 lemon
1 g (⅟ ₃₂ oz/ ½ teaspoon) freshly
ground cinnamon
1 egg white for assembly,
left over from the Cold-start
thick custard
cooking oil spray
approx. 1.5 litres (51  fl  oz/ cups)
rice bran oil, for frying (or
other neutral-flavoured oil
such as canola
or peanut oil)
80 g (2¾ oz) raw caster
(superfine) sugar, for dusting