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Not at all, Cathy. They're totally different.
Phyllo consists of flat sheets of paper-thin dough, without levening. In use you butter each sheet and create multi-layers of the pastry. Puff pastry, as the name implies, contained leavening and it rises---both as it stands (like bread dough) and while it bakes. |
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Hard to say. To me, phyllo takes it's flavor from whatever it's being used with. So you get a buttery crustiness tasting of filling.
Puff pastry has a flavor of it's own, but it's not easy to describe. More of a flaky, biscuity sort of thing. But because butter is what makes it puff, it has a similarity to phyllo in that regard. |
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Depends a lot on the recipe.
Most of the time the outcome will be different. Not better or worse, you understand, just a different texture and possibly a different flavor profile. Give it a whirl and see what happens. Whatever the outcome it will still be edible, so you won't be wasting it. |
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