Plum and frangipane ensaïmada
- Published: 17 Jul 25
- Updated: 17 Jul 25
Ensaïmada is a much-loved pastry from the Spanish island of Mallorca. Learn how to make this pillowy pastry swirl at home with expert baker Nicola Lamb’s step-by-step recipe. “Ensaïmadas are fun to make because you stretch the dough really thin by hand – don’t worry if there are a few tears!” says Nicola. “Use a dough scraper to help you.”
- Iconic pastry: This light, fluffy pastry scroll is a popular sight across Mallorca. Enriched with plenty of butter or lard with lots of wonderful layers, it’s like a cross between a brioche and a croissant.
- Classic with a twist: Nicola Lamb’s ensaïmada is filled with frangipane and baked plums nestled into the top. These additions elevate the pastry to knockout status.
- Make ahead: You can bake the ensaïmadas up to a day in advance, then refresh them in a 160°C oven for 10 minutes. Don’t dust with icing sugar until you’re ready to eat them, though.
Take it slow with more weekend baking recipes. The results are worth the effort!
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Makes 4 x 15cm ensaimadas (each serving 2) -
Prep time 1 hour 20 min, plus at least 3 hours proving. Cook time 15 min
Before you start
Traditionally lard is used for these pastries but butter works perfectly – and makes them vegetarian.
Nutrition
- Calories
- 372kcals
- Fat
- 19g (7.4g saturated)
- Protein
- 9.1g
- Carbohydrates
- 41g (14g sugars)
- Fibre
- 2.5g
- Salt
- 0.6g
delicious. tips
Nicola’s tips…
Weigh your eggs. A medium egg weighs about 50g, but with baking it’s all about precision so you may as well weigh them and get everything spot on.
Embrace the fat! You need lots of butter or lard on your work surface, your hands and on the dough to help you stretch it as thin as it will go. It’s a satisfying dough to work with but if you skimp on the fat it can be difficult to shape.
Don’t worry about holes. The rolling and coiling process creates so many little layers that holes and tears are easily covered. Despite looking intimidating it’s a surprisingly forgiving dough – and you cover it with icing sugar at the end, which helps hide a multitude of sins!
You can make the frangipane and put it in a piping bag in the fridge up to 5 days ahead. You’ll need to let it come back to room temperature for half an hour or so before it can be piped.
You can bake these up to a day in advance, then refresh in a 160°C/140°C fan/gas 3 oven for 10 minutes. Don’t dust with icing sugar until you’re ready to eat them, though.
To perform the slap-and-fold technique you lift up the dough, slap it down onto the worktop, stretch it upwards, fold over, then repeat. This helps to get a very hydrated, sticky dough like this into a ball without trying to roll it into a ball. You don’t need to flour the surface.