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[personal profile] elusivek
The story of Portuguese Egg Tarts in Macau...

Nowadays, in Macau, the famous egg tarts are from Lord Stow. Their marketing is great and they do a lot of interviews recounting how things came to be.

In the beginning, they did tell the story as it is. More recently, they cut out some credit. Specifically, credit to my Dad.

My Dad is an Austrian chef who came to Macau some 40+ years ago. He worked in a hotel back then and got to work with a certain Portuguese celebrity chef. I'm not too sure about that part of the story because I wasn't born yet.

Anyway, he learnt Portuguese cuisine from this Portuguese chef and then he even opened his own restaurant, called the Restaurant 1999. Not sure how the name came to be, but at that time (1980's-early 1990's) the "upcoming big thing" was 1999 when Macau would be returned to China (long story short, Macau was a Portuguese colony, though I read it wasn't exactly that, but anyway).

The restaurant was located in a super lovely "countryside" and I think would have been a great restaurant nowadays, but back then, the location probably wasn't the best place; not everyone had a car. Eventually the restaurant had to close down. Again, I don't know the full story, the short "child-friendly" story I got was: "You Dad just isn't made to run a business." Okay.

During his restaurant years, I distinctly remember his Portuguese Egg Tarts. They were delicious. So this Stow guy wanted to start a bakery/pastry business making these Egg Tarts to supply to hotels. My Dad taught him how to make it. This English guy tweaks the recipe and starts his own business. Next thing you know he is selling these "Famous Portuguese Egg Tarts."

To this day, Mom is absolutely irritated that Dad just taught the guy how to make them egg tarts for free. And he now has a good business. I guess the story "Your Dad just isn't made to run a business" is true LOL. No wonder they say, a true Macanese person will bring their recipes into their graves. That is so true. That is so so so so sooooooooooo true. (I have a "Midnight Cake" recipe from Mom that I'm explicitly told to never ever share to anyone EVER. Duh. Life of a Macanese). Imagine, if it were my Dad that had that business, I could have been living the good life LOL LOL LOL. Just joking. I like my life as it is now.

Anyway, Stow guy then, I don't know, divorces his wife or doesn't or whatever, all I know that there is some kind of rife, and his wife opens another pastry business, Margaret's. Again, Portuguese egg tarts, but something different as well. So there are 2 egg tart business similar to each other (I know one is sweeter than the other, I don't recall which is which).

Now, many small bakeries sell their own egg tarts as well, but the better ones are still these from Lord Stow and Margaret's.

Fast forward to recently, since my friend opened her own French pastry shop down by our street, I had been egging Dad to start making his egg tarts again. They were his specialty when he had his restaurant! My friend even helped to egg him on by offering free reign of her pastry kitchen if he wanted.

Three weeks ago, he made his first batch at home. It was a failure. The egg tart shells didn't come out right. But the stuffing was delicious. Give Dad some slack, it has been some 20 years since he last made his egg tarts. No photos because the egg tarts didn't even look like an egg tart LOL.

Then last week he made his second batch. The shells came out well, but the stuffing lacked a bit of oompf. Maybe cream? Maybe milk? It just felt very airy and light. But by looks they came out well

9DAB7965-D642-4A14-B940-89D6F1A77F85.jpeg

Today he made his third batch. They looked good and tasted good. Yay. Dad made his egg tarts again!

BB0622FC-99A4-4546-9FC6-8B5934543858.jpeg

So, I now have what I know as the true story of how Portuguese Egg Tarts came to be a Macau thing written down. I'm going to eat another egg tart. Bye.

Date: 2020-03-02 12:11 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] magic-treehouse.livejournal.com
What an amazing story. I love pastel de nata and I ate loads of them when I went to Portugal!

Date: 2020-03-04 00:35 (UTC)
ext_287255: (all warm and fuzzy <3)
From: [identity profile] notte0.livejournal.com
Yeah I also tried pasteis de nata and pasteis de Belem in Portugal, yummy!

Date: 2020-03-02 22:54 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imogen-blue.livejournal.com
I love those egg tarts!!!

Date: 2020-03-03 03:56 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mores0ul.livejournal.com
What an awesome origin story! I loved the ones in Macau (I think I went to Margaret's!) . I was surprised when i tried pastel de nata in Lisbon at how savory they were compared to Macau's and also Hong Kong's by extension. It felt like a proper meal because it was so savory and creamy.

Date: 2020-03-04 00:37 (UTC)
ext_287255: (all warm and fuzzy <3)
From: [identity profile] notte0.livejournal.com
Yes, I think to cater to local taste, they tweaked the stuffing so it’s lighter, but the ones in Portugal were heavy. (Good to have one piece only lol)

Date: 2020-03-03 23:57 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] amw.livejournal.com
This is a great story!

I have to ask - where in Macau is considered the countryside? I have never been there, but i went to Zhuhai last year and it seemed like Macau was very compact, as if you could comfortably walk anywhere.

Date: 2020-03-04 00:41 (UTC)
ext_287255: (all warm and fuzzy <3)
From: [identity profile] notte0.livejournal.com
Nowawadays it’s more outskirts but 20-30 years ago I would consider that “countryside” in parenthesis, lol.

It’s the Coloane island. Now it’s not so much an island as they’ve reclaimed the land between Coloane and Taipa for the Casinos (now the “Cotai strip”). They’ve also started some development (economic housing, etc) in Coloane so it’s way busier than before. Still have a couple of good hiking trails though. You might enjoy them, I read in your LJ you like to hike. But without transport it would be a little hard the reach, as local transport doesn’t make it easy to reach that part of Coloane (only have connections to “downtown Coloane” where Lord Stow is located)

Date: 2020-06-28 23:44 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wanderipity.livejournal.com
OMG!

Hold on a minute-- is that why you live in Macau? Your dad works there? Sorry if I seem nosy, just curious <3

Damn, your dad is amazing. Even with the multiple tries and now that perfection. I am fucking drooling! I am quite lucky that NYC has a bakery that is owned by someone legit!!! Amazing and thank you for sharing this to me <3

Date: 2020-06-29 00:13 (UTC)
ext_287255: (all warm and fuzzy <3)
From: [identity profile] notte0.livejournal.com
Hm... that’s a little complicated to answer, but the short concise version of the story is, my Dad got a job in Macau some 40 years ago, met my Mom (she is a Portuguese born in Macau) and he just stayed on. We do visit Austria and Portugal at times but to me, home will always be Macau.

I was just a little miffed coz at first their interviews did say the story as I detailed, but recently they’ve cut out my Dad from the story and say the guy just invented those egg tarts himself *rolls eyes* it’s not like we’re looking for recognition or what, but that’s what happened.

Even an English couple that were in Macau for many years had commented to us one time “they should tell the story as it is.”

Anyway, the most important thing now is, I got egg tarts to eat LOL

Date: 2020-06-29 00:16 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wanderipity.livejournal.com
Ugh freakin people, he deserves the credit (even without needing the recognition). Anyway, your dad is amazing and that you got these egg tarts to eat from the OG!

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Agueda Umbrella
kat (DW: elusivek | LJ: notte0)
❤︎ loves dogs, dark chocolate, and books.
★ doesn’t exactly hate cats.
◆ hates white chocolate.
more?
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