Showing posts with label puff pastry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label puff pastry. Show all posts

Sunday, 2 February 2014

instant apple tart




It is very easy to make an impressive tart quite quickly - in this case a visit to a family member who is recovering after a hip replacement. When you are in hospital, or on a journey, it is especially nice to have the time punctuated by a mouthful of delicious food. In this case apple tart.

INGREDIENTS

  • 1 packet ready rolled puff pastry
  • 3 or 4 apples - I used 4 small Cox apples - cored and quartered
  • lemon juice (3 tbsp or juice of 1 lemon)
  • caster sugar

optional: butter, custard

METHOD

Set the oven to 200C or equivalent

prepare two baking trays with baking parchment

  • finely slice the apples and sprinkle with lemon juice 
  • cut the pastry into two pieces - put onto lined trays
  • score around the edge of pastry with a knife
  • if you are using custard, spread a thin layer of custard inside the scored lines
  • spread the apple evenly over the pastry, inside the scored lines
  • fold up the edges, pinching the corners of the pastry
  • sprinkle a couple of tablespoons of caster sugar over the sliced apples
  • if you are using butter, dot pinches of butter over the apples

bake for 20 minutes

Monday, 3 December 2012

Ricotta citrus tart, crostata to some


I have just made this tart twice, adapting Carluccio’s recipe a bit. It is really easy, and the result is a very light cheesecake, with a flavour reminiscent of pannetone. The difference between this recipe and a more usual cheesecake is that the eggs are separated and the beaten egg whites give it a lift. I’ve seen it made with short crust elsewhere too, which would make it richer. Also, Carluccio adds the lemon zest after cooking, which gives an extra tang.

I used half a packet of puff pastry and rolled it very thin, and leaving about a one inch overlap, which gets folded over the mixture. Then I put little straps of pastry across, which I think looks good, but a rather acerbic relative (while eating it) said makes it looks like a hot cross bun, clearly meaning not in a good way. Sob.

In the mixture I added a spoonful of marmalade, reducing the sugar a little.

Carluccio says this tart is delicious served on its own or with roasted pears, which I haven’t tried yet.

Ingredients
For the pastry
·         1 x 400g/14oz ready-made puff pastry
·         Plain flour for dusting
·         1 lemon finely grated zest only

For the filling
·         300g/10½oz ricotta cheese
·         200g/7oz mascarpone cheese
·         200g/7oz candied peel roughly chopped
·         125g/4½oz caster sugar
·         6 free-range eggs, separated

Preparation method
1.     Preheat the oven to 180C/350F/Gas 4.
2.     Roll the pastry out on a lightly floured work surface to a 3mm/⅛in thickness. Use the pastry to line a 25cm/10in pastry case. Cover with a damp cloth while you make the filling.
3.     In a bowl, mix the ricotta, mascarpone and candied peel with 100g/3½oz of the sugar and five of the egg yolks until smooth and well combined.
4.     Whisk the egg whites in another large, clean bowl until fluffy. Whisk in the remaining sugar and continue whisking until stiff peaks form when the whisk is removed.
5.     Using a large metal spoon, fold the whites into the ricotta mixture, then pour into the pastry-lined tart tin.
6.     Beat the reserved egg yolk in a bowl. Fold in the overhanging pastry and brush with the egg yolk. Bake in the oven for 30 minutes, until the pastry is cooked through and the filling has a slight wobble in the centre.
7.     Set aside to cool for two hours, then sprinkle with lemon zest.

Wednesday, 15 August 2012

Beet leaf tart - and kitten finding own amusement













Friday, 21 October 2011

Little tasty turnovers

Inspired by a visit to an Afghan restaurant, these little turnovers are deliciously fresh. If I say so myself. I'm not a great fan of fiddly cooking, still, I reserve the right to say this isn't fiddly. It just involves lots of chopping. And a bit of boiling. And rolling out pastry (shop bought in my case). OK, it's fiddly, and the pay-off makes it worth it. Little parcels of loveliness. I served these up with a tarator, a bit lumpy, because it was my first time making it. Tarator is a nut sauce, a bit like maionnaise (apart from my first attempt). The combination is perfect for vegetarians, vegans and anyone with tastebuds. If you are wheat intolerant the whole thing would work with rice pastry. 

Oh, what's in it? Leeks, carrots, potato, coriander, teeny bit of dill, pepper and salt. The shop bought pastry is made just with oil. 

RECIPE
Two large leeks (or a bunch of spring onions)
Two potatoes (cooked in their skins, peeled when cool enough)
Generous handful of finely chopped coriander (cilantro to some) including stems
Pinch of dill
One large carrot, cooked
Ground black pepper
Salt
Tablespoonful of oil
½ block of ready-made puff pastry

Set the oven to Gas Mark 7/425F/220C
  • Cut the leeks (or spring onions) into fine slices
  • Cook gently over low heat in the oil – careful not to burn, you don’t want that caramel taste
  • Peel the cooked potatoes and cut into very small cubes, chop up the carrots in the same way
  • Take the softened leeks off the heat, season with pepper and salt and stir through all the other ingredients



You can make this mixture the day before if you want to
Roll the pastry out very thin, keeping the rectangular shape
Cut into nine square of approximately equal size
Put two heaped teaspoons of the mixture in each, moisten the edges of the pastry, fold over, and crimp together with a fork
Snick a little hole into the top of the turnover (pasty)

Brush with egg if you like, to give golden colour

Cook in oven for 20 minutes or until golden.


Thursday, 24 March 2011

Veg and nut wellington

I'm still developing this one. I've made it twice so far, once with puff pastry and once with shortcrust. The heart of the dish is made with a recipe from Cranks for nut roast. This mixture is balanced be a moist layer of mashed veg, which is surrounded by a single leaf layer of cabbage or spinach, followed by pastry. The whole is then baked in a hot oven, to be eaten with  a tangy green salad.

The first effort (shortcrust) was very good. The mashed veg was swede and butternut squash, with nutmeg, sitting on spinach.

The second effort is in the freezer. Puff pastry, gently fried onion with steamed sweet potato and some fried nutmeg, with a divider of savoy cabbage.

The main thing is that the puff and short crust pastry are both shop bought and are vegan, hurray.

I think this one is a winner. I've eaten it twice, both with cabbage. It was nothing but yum. And packed with protein. In the tradition of cooks everywhere I do want to brag, and in order to disguise that I'll say, if I say so myself, this is very good.