Sir, I am very sorry, I had forgotten somehow! So we have established that, rather than the master, I am the least-qualified member of the bakery team, I should be washing bowls and licking spatulas, that is fine with me! I have never made vols-au-vent, the prospect is terrifying.
Hah! Unless you are actually making puff-pastry dough, which is terrifying, the construction of
vol-au-vent is incredibly simple. Using pre-fab frozen sheets of puff-pastry dough it is incredibly simple. All you need is two circular cookie cutters (or any shape really, they merely need to be somewhat congruent in shape and one slightly smaller than the other), an appropriately temperatured oven, a sheet pan, some melted butter or egg wash to brush between the layers to act as a "glue," and some sort of savory or sweet filling for them.
Hear a vidya:
I think we made slightly smaller diameter ones that had two or three layers and thus were taller. We would fill them with a Lobster & Saffron
bechamel which sounded a lot fancier in French when printed on the menu "
Vols-au-vents de Bechamel homarde et saffron" or something like that. Sometimes there was an actual name for a "
bechamel + lobster + saffron" sauce that made it even more inscrutable WTAF you were going to eat so it could have been something along the lines of "
Vols-au-vents Rozalinde" which is very hawt in its simplicity and brevity.
There was some
chanson by La Rue Ketanou that spoke of the wind (
vents) that I particularly enjoyed listening to while making those, if the following is not it; it was quite similar:
You should bust out your accordion and listen to some of the accordion heavy Ketanou songs (of which there are many) and see if you can reproduce their sound. They do some really cool Nautical Shanties (
Chantes) stuff with a modern twist that you might enjoy.
I don't think any of the professional Baking stuff I did was anything difficult, it just sounded that way because it was listed on the Menu,
en Francais which always makes things sound fancy.
For instance were I to make a Dog Turd Pie we might list it on the Menu as "
Tarte crotte Toutou" which sounds quite innocent and cute, as a plus you are able to charge a lot more for it because it has a pretty name! You could serve it to unsuspecting guest with a look on your visage as impeccant as the the puppy's below:

If you are skilled enough, you could even score it as a Triple
Entente when revisiting the story among fellow French fiends later, which would be most amusing indeed...
