Tag: Pear

  • Rustic Peach Tart

    Rustic Peach Tart

    Peach Tart

    So what could my mom do with her canned peaches? Everything or nothing, they were always great.  This tart is equally good with tart apples, pears, plums, or berries, apricots or yes – peaches.  Even combining fruits would be great.   The crust has an appealing cookie-like texture.  The almond cream  was amazingly smooth and flavorful.  Almond flavor is always good with fruit.  They combine well, and enhance each other.  I did add both rum and vanilla to flavor it.  I like food to look beautiful, but not fussed over, so rustic always is more appealing to me.  Adapted from Baking: From My Home to Yours Dorie Greenspan, but I am sure my Mother had a similar recipe.

    For the almond cream:

    6 tablespoons unsalted butter, at room temperature
    2/3 cup sugar
    3/4 cup ground blanched almonds
    2 teaspoons all-purpose flour
    1 teaspoon cornstarch
    1 large egg
    2 teaspoons dark rum
    1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract

    1 partially-baked 9-inch tart shell, made with Sweet Tart Dough (see below), at room temperature
    1 can of canned peach halves

    Confectioners’ sugar for dusting, or apple jelly for glazing

    To make the almond cream:  Put the butter and sugar in the workbowl of a food processor and process until the mixture is smooth and satiny.  Add the ground almonds and continue to process until well blended.  Add the flour and cornstarch, process, and then add the egg.  Process for about 15 seconds more, or until the almond cream is homogeneous.  Add the rum or vanilla and process just to blend.  If you prefer, you can make the cream in a mixer fitted with the whisk attachment or in a bowl with a rubber spatula.  In either case, the ingredients are added in the same order.  Scrape the almond cream into a container and either use it immediately or refrigerate it until firm, about 2 hours.

    Getting ready to bake:  Center a rack in the oven and preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.  Have a lined baking sheet at the ready.  Cut the peaches in half from blossom to stem (or pieces). Whatever fruit you have, make sure to pat them dry – really dry – so that their liquid won’t keep the almond cream from baking.

    Fill the baked crust with the almond cream, spreading it even with an offset metal icing spatula.  Thinly slice each pear half crosswise, lift each half on a spatula, press down on the pear to fan it slightly and place it, wide-end toward the edge of the crust, over the almond cream.  The halves will form spokes.

    Put the crust on the lined baking sheet, slide the sheet into the oven and bake the tart 50 to 60 minutes, or until the almond cream puffs up around the pears and browns.  Transfer the tart to a rack to cool to just warm or to room temperature before unmolding.

    Right before serving, dust the tart with confectioners’ sugar.  If you prefer, prepare a glaze by bringing about 1/4 cup apple jelly and1/2 teaspoon water to the boil.  Brush the glaze over the surface of the tart.

    Serving:  This tart goes very well with aromatic tea.

    Storing:  If it’s convenient for you, you can make the almond cream up to 2 days ahead and keep it closely covered in the refrigerator, or you can wrap it airtight and freeze it for up to 2 months; defrost before using.  You can also poach the pears up to 1 day ahead.  However, once you’ve baked the tart, you should be prepared to enjoy it that same day.

    Playing around:  The almond cream is a great companion for a variety of fruits.  It’s as good with summer fruits, like apricots or peaches, as it is with autumn’s apples.

    Sweet Tart Dough

    Adapted from Baking: From My Home to Yours

    1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
    1/2 cup confectioners’ sugar
    1/4 teaspoon salt
    1 stick plus 1 tablespoon (4 1/2 ounces) very cold (or frozen) unsalted butter, cut into small pieces
    1 large egg yolk

    To make the dough:  Put the flour, confectioners’ sugar and salt in the workbowl of a food processor and pulse a couple of times to combine.  Scatter the pieces of butter over the dry ingredients and pulse until the butter is cut in coarsely – you’ll have pieces the size of oatmeal flakes and pea-size pieces and that’s just fine.  Stir the egg, just to break it up, and add it a little at a time, pulsing after each addition.  When the egg is in, process in long pulses – about 10 seconds each – until the dough, which will look granular soon after the egg is added, forms clumps and curds.  Just before your reaches this clumpy stage, the sound of the machine working the dough will change – heads up.  Turn the dough out onto a work surface.

    Very lightly and sparingly – make that very, very lightly and sparingly – knead the dough just to incorporate any dry ingredients that might have escaped mixing.

    If you want to press the dough into a tart pan, now is the time to do it.

    If you want to chill the dough and roll it out later (doable, but fussier than pressing), gather the dough into a ball (you might have to use a little more pressure than you used to mix in dry bits, because you do want the ball to be just this side of cohesive), flatten it into a disk, wrap it well and chill it for at least 2 hours or for up to 1 day.

    To make a press-in crust:  Butter the tart pan and press the dough evenly along the bottom and up the sides of the pan.  Don’t be stingy – you want a crust with a little heft because you want to be able to both taste and feel it.  Also, don’t be too heavy-handed – you want to press the crust in so that the pieces cling to one another and knit together when baked, but you don’t want to press so hard that the crust loses its crumbly shortbreadish texture.  Freeze the crust for at least 30 minutes, preferably longer, before baking.

    To make a rolled-out crust:  This dough is very soft – a combination of a substantial amount of butter and the use of confectioners’ sugar – so I find it is easier to roll it between wax paper or plastic wrap or, easiest of all, in a roll-out-your-dough slipcover.  If you use the slipcover, flour it lightly.  Roll the dough out evenly, turning the dough over frequently and lifting the wax paper or plastic wrap often, so that it doesn’t roll into the dough and form creases.  If you’ve got time, slide the rolled out dough into the fridge to rest and firm for about 20 minutes before fitting the dough into the buttered tart pan.  Trim the excess dough even with the edge of the pan.  Freeze the crust for at least 30 minutes, preferably longer, before baking.

    To partially bake the crust:  Center a rack in the oven and preheat the oven to 375 degrees F.  Butter the shiny side of a piece of aluminum foil and fit the foil tightly against the crust.  Bake the crust 25 minutes, then carefully remove the foil.  If the crust has puffed, press it down gently with the back of a spoon.  Bake for another 3 to 5 minutes, then transfer the crust to a cooling rack; keep it in its pan.

  • Ham, Parmesan and Pear Salad

    Simple and Delicious. 

    Thinly sliced ham

    Thinly sliced parmesan

    Thinly sliced pears

    Garnish  with Arugula leaves

    Top with toasted pine nuts

    Drizzle with extra Virgin Olive Oil

    Garnish with cracked pepper

  • Pork Chops with Cardamon Pear Sauce

    Pork Chops with Cardamon Pear Sauce

    Pan fry pork chops and to brown and finish baking in the oven for 10 minutes at 350 degrees.

    Mix Cardamon Pear Butter with Pork Gravy and serve with mashed potatoes.

    So, so good.

    If you are out of Cardamom Pear Butter,

    Heat oven to 350 degrees
    3 pears, cut in half, peel and core
    1 T olive oil (you could use walnut oil)
    1 T butter
    1 cup chardonnay
    1 tsp cardamom
    1 tsp salt
    Fry the pears, round side down until nicely browned, turn and add wine, cardamom and salt.
    Cover, put in oven for 20 minutes until fork tender.

    While your pears are poaching, fry your pork chops until brown on 4 minutes on both sides, then place them in the oven to finish cooking.
    Serve pear and chop on a plate. Drizzle the plate with the pear juice. Garnish with a sprinkle of toasted pine nuts.

  • Pear Crostata with Figs and Honey

    Pears.  Pears and cardamom.  Have you discovered this amazing taste mixture?   I make a Pear Cardamom Butter and it flies off the pantry shelf. Never any left after a week.  Dennis will eat it on his pork, pour some on his pancakes, I saw him use it as salad dressing the other day with balsalmic vinegar.  (I’ll have to create a new recipe around that.) 

    I recently saw this Pear Crostata in a Bon Appetit magazine.  It uses the same rustic crust as my Apple Pie.  I love the unfussy look of these pies.  I couldn’t resist making this! 

    Filling:

    1/4 Cup golden brown sugar

    1/4 Cup granulated sugar

    2 T cornstarch

    1 tsp ground Cardamom

    1/4 tsp Cloves

    1/4 tsp Salt

    2 1/4 pounds firm but ripe unpeeled Anjou Pears (About 4 Cups), cut into eighths

    10 dried by moist Calimyrna Figs, stemmed and quartered (About 4 ounces)

    Heavy Whipping Cream (For brushing crust)

    Raw Sugar

    2 T Honey, I got mine from this Honey for Sale online

    Preheat oven 400 degrees.

    Mix together sugars, spices, cornstarch and salt.  Mix in figs and pears.  Let stand while you make pie crust.

    Roll out pie crust on parchment to help you move the Crostata to the baking dish. Crust should be at least 14 inches diameter or make two smaller pies.  Move parchment with pie crust to rimless baking dish (cookie sheet or pizza pan), or large round baking dish.  Mound the pear fig filling mixture on top of the crust, leaving a 3 inch border around the edges.  Using parchment paper fold over the dough up over the pear filling, pleating the edges, pinching to seal any cracks that form. 

    Brush crust  edges with cream and sprinkle generously with raw sugar. 

    Bake Crostata for 50-60 minutes until pears are tender and juices are bubbling thickly, cover crust with foil to prevent over browning. 

    Remove Crustata from oven, and drizzle filling with honey over hot filling.  Run knife along the edges of the baking pan to loosen.  Allow to cool on parchment on baking pan for 1 hour. Transfer to platter. Serve warm or room temperature.