Alexander Calder’s menu
The Fouée, a Hollow Little Bread Filled by Hand (troglodyte snack)

Fouées Stuffed with Rillettes and Goat Cheese

Street foodDocumented🧂moyen2 h (including 1 h 30 rising)

A simple bread dough rolled into small disks that puff up instantly in the oven's high heat, forming hollow balls. Split while warm and stuffed with rillettes, semi-salted butter, or fresh goat cheese.

The Fouée, a Hollow Little Bread Filled by Hand (troglodyte snack)

A simple bread dough rolled into small disks that puff up instantly in the oven's high heat, forming hollow balls. Split while warm and stuffed with rillettes, semi-salted butter, or fresh goat cheese.

This is the favorite game of kids and grown-ups at my table! You slide your little disks into the hot oven, and pop—they swell up like balloons, all hollow inside. You grab them burning hot, split them open, and stuff them with whatever you like: my rillettes, a pat of butter, some fresh goat cheese. You eat ten without realizing it, laughing, fingers greasy. The best cooking is what you do with your hands.
Alexander Calder
Ingredients
  • Wheat floura pound (dough)
  • Sourdough or yeasta little (leavening)
  • Warm water and saltas needed (dough)
  • Rillettes, butter, fresh goat cheeseas desired (fillings)
How it was made : In the troglodyte caves of Touraine and Anjou, fouées were traditionally baked to test the bread oven's heat before sliding in the big loaves: these little puffed cakes were the baker's and children's snack, eaten piping hot on the spot.
Sources : Traditions boulangères de Touraine-Anjou · Curnonsky, La Touraine gourmande

See also