Punto Dolce’s millefoglie, called diplomatica, features two stacks of impossibly thin layers of puff pastry that swaddle a lush filling of salted caramel and vanilla-rich cream. (Photo credit: Soojoo Kim)
When husband-and-wife team -- Francesco Mannino and Kim Soo-joo -- opened Punto Dolce in eastern Seoul’s hip Seongsu-dong last December, the concept was clear -- to fuse owner-chef Mannino’s extensive experience as a pastry chef with his Italian roots.Punto Dolce’s millefoglie, called diplomatica, features two stacks of impossibly thin layers of puff pastry that swaddle a lush filling of salted caramel and vanilla-rich cream. (Photo credit: Soojoo Kim)
According to Punto Dolce’s official Instagram account, Kim worked at a fashion company in Korea and then as a wedding cake designer in London before running a cake studio in China while Mannino racked up experience as a pastry chef at Pierre Herme Paris and as executive pastry chef at the Mandarin Oriental Hotel in London and the Four Seasons Hotel in Beijing.At Punto Dolce, the classic cream-filled brioche called maritozzo is amped up with pistachio paste. (Photo credit: Soojoo Kim)
At Punto Dolce, the classic cream-filled brioche is amped up with pistachio paste from a town in Sicily.At Punto Dolce, the classic cream-filled brioche called maritozzo is amped up with pistachio paste. (Photo credit: Soojoo Kim)
The brioche boasts the feather-light texture of cotton candy, while the equally light cream is studded with berries. A sweet and simultaneously tart swab of compote is tucked away in the center of this bouffant treat.Punto Dolce often offers an additional variation of cannoli, sometimes using pear or green tea to give dessert lovers a slightly different twist to the popular Italian dessert. (Photo credit: Soojoo Kim)
Then there is cannoli.At Punto Dolce, the dough for cannoli is crafted using traditional ingredients like Marsala wine and cinnamon, before being shaped into dainty tubes and deep-fried. (Photo credit: Soojoo Kim)
After crafting the dough, shaping it into classic dainty tubes and deep frying them, he fills them with an impossibly light ricotta cream amped up with chocolate pearls, candied orange peel and orange blossom water.Christened Punto Dolce, which roughly translates to “sweet spot,” this dessert shop specializes in Italian treats (Photo credit: Soojoo Kim)
In addition to their Sicilian cannoli, Punto Dolce often offers an additional variation of cannoli, sometimes using pear or green tea to give dessert lovers a slightly different twist to the popular Italian dessert.Husband-and-wife team -- Francesco Mannino and Kim Soo-joo -- opened Punto Dolce in Seongsu-dong, Seoul, last December. (Photo credit: Soojoo Kim)
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