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Monday, August 23, 2010

Parisian Patisserie Boulangerie

19 Keilor Rd
North Essendon, VIC, 3040
Ph: (03) 9379 3815


I've recently gone to Paris for a holiday, and my three favourite things to eat were croissants, almond croissants and macarons. In the seven days that I was in Paris, I ate about 40 croissants and 30 macarons. When I was invited to Parisian Patisserie Boulangerie where their signature item was an almond croissant, I was 90% excited and 10% wary. I was thinking that I had surely tasted the best croissants possible in Paris, but I'm glad to report that a classic can be redone and still taste just as good.

Parisian Patisserie Boulangerie is located in North Essendon. It's a quaint little space and decorated in a very chic black and white decor. I love the simplicity and elegance of the place, with little touches here and there that make you smile. I couldn't help eyeing off the Pierre Herme book on the shelf and wanting to secretly take it without anyone knowing. The black and white photos of Paris were lovely and brought back so many memories of how much I loved Paris. Fresh flowers, little trinkets and ornate lighting fixtures complete both the front and back room.



Neil McKenzie, owner and head chef at Parisian, took some time out of his extremely busy day to chat with my cousin Allan and I for over an hour. We found out that Neil and wife Majella moved to Paris for 9 months, where Neil studied at Le Cordon Bleu for 6 of those months. During that time, Neil went to "every patisserie in Paris" and ate as many croissants as he could. Upon eating all those croissants, he decided to come back to Australia and perfect his own almond croissant, which he has clearly done. I asked Neil if he has plans to expand, as the business seems to be thriving. He said he's thinking of options, but he doesn't want to lose quality control over his products. Hence, mass production is currently not an option until he finds a suitable way. This is a shame for those of us living in the South Eastern 'burbs as we can't readily try Neil's amazing pastries. However, just as we were chatting, a regular patron, Steve, walks in and joins us. I love how everyone knows Neil and are like his friends. Steve starting semi joking about how he has some great ideas for Neil on how to expand. Steve himself is in the retail industry.


Just when I think it can't possibly get any more communal, Neil's wife Majella and daughter Octavia come back from acrobatics class. Octavia produdly shows us the blue ribbon that she has won for acrobatics. She was so adorable and wanted to tell us everything, from how daddy lets her bake when the shops closed, to her favourite pub (the one around the corner, for food of course), to all the shops in Bendigo. We chat with Majella about Bendigo as Allan is going there for a six week internship at the hospital. Apparently steer clear of the markets and head to the main street for some lovely food and coffee.

We all chat on and on about the fact that Neil doesn't hang around other chefs that much and is a "real bogan", loving to spend time with his family and his V8s and boats in his off time. He also recalls that he wanted to be a chef from a very early age, maybe to stop himself from starving as his adopted mum was a terrible cook, except for her beautiful Sunday roast. After reuniting with her natural mum, Neil discovers that his grandmother was a cake maker, so maybe he picked up the genes from her. We discuss more and more topics like how we would both love to meet Pierre Herme, why his macarons are the best, how Neil doesn't mind being known to his patrons and the public, how he likes to use fresh ingredients and that he loves my blog. Oh wait, ok I made that last bit up. But after talking to Neil for on an hour, I felt like I knew so much about him and his vision for his bakery. I can see why his patrons such as Steve, follow him to wherever he opens his bakery.


As for Neil's pastries, especially the almond croissant, Neil said that he uses fresh almonds and a heavier brioche base to give that required flavour and texture. He said that he had to sacrifie that lighter airier texture to have something that will hold the centre almond cream better. And oh, my, goodness, that almond croissant is heaven. The beautiful buttery pastry, the fragrant almond filling, and the crunch of the almonds sprinkled on top and the edges of the croissant. I can seriously eat 5 of those. The apricot brioche was similary amazing, with that apricot flavour really coming through. Lastly, we ate the pizza brioche, which was again so tasty. Neil was explaining that it this and that ingredient and Octavia kept cutting in asking what pesto was, what prosciutto was while all the time licking the snow sugar (sguar that doesn't melt so you get that nice frosted effect on pastries) off her custard donut. I think that she is a spitting image of Jessie from Toy Story 3 with the huge eyes and red hair, so cute. What do you think?




Neil took us on a tour of the tiny kitchen in which everything was cooked. I was so surprised as my home kitchen is bigger. And to think they pump out all those wonderful pastries from that kitchen. We deeply inhaled the beautiful aromas of sugar, butter and yeast before getting out of the chefs way. As Allan and I were leaving, we went to buy some almond croissants and other pastries to take home, but they were ALL GONE. In the hour and a half that we had been sitting there, so many patrons had come in and bought the store clean. Booo. I wanted to buy four almond croissants, strawberry tart, lemon tart, apricot brioche etc. The only things left were some macarons, and the waiter kindly gave us some to take home after seeing our sad faces. The macarons lasted as far as two steps outside the shop, where I inhaled the pistachio one (quite good) and Allan ate the Rose, Lemon and Hazelnut (all pretty good he informs me).


We had a fantastic time at Parisian and only wished that we lived closer so could go more often. Neil, Majella and Octavia were a delight to get to know and the pastries were stunningly delicious.

EDIT: I asked my cousin Allan to guest blog occasionally and he decided to start on this post, so below is his opinions of Parisian.

About Me
A 24 year old Melbourne-born food lover, who’s always hungry and is therefore always seeking to eat! Has a rather Asian palate, but has a growing zeal for all ‘walks of food’. Please excuse my conversational style, msn-influenced and sometimes analytical expression. I’ll try my best to write with convention, be decipherable, and hopefully shed a little light from a different slant. And, many thanks to Thanh for inviting me to be a guest blogger on I Eat Therefore I Am.

Parisian Patisserie – indulging my butter senses!

Croissants d'amande (almond) – had a slightly crispy shell with a divine light texture. It is a little different from your average flaky croissant, err-ing slightly on cake-like, just heavy enough to keep the almonds from sagging in like a biscuit. The subtle aromas of unsalted butter (sourced locally of course) and beloved custard filling were marvellous – tis heaven!!!

Brioches d'abricot et d'amande (apricot) – had an almost airy bouyancy about it. Made with heaps of butter & eggs, with a little apricot tart'ness – I had one bite after the next, all the while Neil & Thanh were conversing away. I just couldn’t help myself: Eat first, talk later!

Brioche savoury pizza - a savoury brioche, to my surprise a delight on the tastebuds. The base had the fluffy brioche texture, contrasted by an explosion of flavours from the savoury pesto and prosciutto.

Macarons (lemon, pistachio, rose water, hazelnut) – fantastic flavours, slightly chewy middle with a delicately crunchy shell.

It was a pleasure speaking with Neil, Majella & Octavia - they were incredibly welcoming. My only regret was not being able to sink my teeth into every piece of pastry, and bathing my tastebuds in its awesome’ness (great English, haha). P.S. I did take photos, but maybe save them for next time, one set for one place is enough. Though I must say, one can never salivate too much over delicious food.

Food: 17.5/20 will definitely be back for more!!
Service: super welcoming & unpretentious.

Thanks to Eugiena Pratley from Harvey Publicity for the invite and to Neil, Majella and Octavia for entertaining and feeding Allan and myself.

For even more photos and detailed reviews of the pastries, see my fellow Melbournian food bloggers posts below.
Iron Chef Shellie
Jeroxie
Off The Spork
Eating Melbourne

Parisian Patisserie on Urbanspoon

10 comments:

  1. gah, damn far, and i was coming from preston market and still took so long LOL... no luxury of a freeway in between.
    i did notice though that the almond croissants we saw + ate that day did not have whole almond flakes, hmprh... wonder if there are different ones. For sure could taste the almond, but i wanted the WHOLE slices that gave an extra shiny glory'ness =)

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  2. nice review!! how gorgeous you got to meet the family.

    man i have been craving almond croissants and brioche ever since.

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  3. ooo comment regards to blog "look":
    re: 1st set of photos
    would be geometrically softer to the eyes, if you placed the small pics lateral to (either left or right) of the BIG photo.
    And above/below for landscape ones. =) just a thought.
    ...sigh clearly i spend too much time on photoshop @_@ manipulating things

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  4. Heh heh heh.... it's on my side of town - I'm definitely going back soon!

    That's so sweet that you got to meet the family.

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  5. Gosh.. I've never heard of this place before.. and it's so far away! I must go visit!!

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  6. I am heading back... soon. Very soon! Must get more brioche and also almond croissant.

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  7. Wow lucky you Agnes, it looks like a beautiful Parisien cafe!
    OK one day, if I feel like it I may just drive all the way there... one day.
    I love the look on the macarons too.

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  8. Hey Thanh,

    Great post! So lucky you got the savoury brioche. They weren't ready when I was there, booooo! How nice was Neil!

    Good work cousin Allan - perhaps we'll see your own blog soon! :)

    xox Sarah

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  9. Allan, I hate how it's so far from us. Maybe they do have almond flakes on some, not sure. Also, agree about photos but I suck at Photoshop and it takes long enough to process and link the photos as it is. Maybe you can be my official photo editor/hyperlinker. I'll pay in croissants.

    Michele, it was a total delight to meet Majella and Octavia as well. Octavia wanted to tell us everything, and seriously she was so cute. I thought she looked just like Jessie in Toy Story 3. I think we all want those croissants and brioche. Mmmmm.

    Agnes, you are so so lucky. I can't wait to see your Twitpics and live off the memories.

    Ms I-Hua, it is definitely far, but so worth it.

    Penny, I must go back too, but need to make a day out of it. It is so farrrrrrrr.

    Ling, it's worth the drive. Almond croissants to die for.

    Sarah, the savoury brioche was delicious too, even though the base was slightly sweet. Neil was so nice. Cousin Allan got his first praise, hooray.

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  10. ooo payments in croissants... yum...
    i'd do that any day. though what's the payment ratio? =P i hope its not too stingy HAHA

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