Tart Recipes GBC
Tart Recipes GBC
Tart Recipes GBC
1 additional egg
Lightly sprinkle the bench with flour, and roll the pastry out to an even circle,
about the thickness of a pound coin. There will be some excess dough, which
can be trimmed after cooling. Roll the pastry back onto the rolling pin, and
onto the tart tin. Coerce the pastry into the tin, pressing gently into the edges.
Leave the pastry overhang. Chill for an hour.
Preheat the oven to 150 °C, no fan. Trim the excess pastry to about 1cm
hanging over the edge, keep the excess pastry for later. Use aluminium foil to
line the tart case for blind baking. I use caster sugar as a weight for blind
baking, then reuse the lightly toasted sugar in the fillings, but you can use
baking beans or whatever you prefer. Bake the tart shell for 1 hour at 150 °C.
Rhubarb
600g rhubarb
60g sugar
2 star anise, crushed slightly
Trim the rhubarb leaves and stems, keeping any offcuts, then toss in a baking
tray with the sugar and star anise.
Allow to disgorge for 20 minutes.
Meanwhile, preheat the oven to 150 °C.
Cover the rhubarb with foil, then bake for 10-15 minutes until tender.
Allow to cool completely.
Rhubarb jelly
Bring the sugars, water and rhubarb to the boil and cook for 10 minutes to
release some flavour and colour from the rhubarb.
Add bloomed gelatine leaves to the mixture, bring back to the boil for a
second then strain and allow to cool.
Assembly
Slice the cooked rhubarb into thin, even slices. Arrange carefully in concentric
circles, or the pattern of your choosing, then brush with jelly and allow to set.
Chocolate orange tart
Bring the water and sugars to the boil, then add the bloomed gelatine. Bring
back to the boil for a second. Take off the heat, add the blood orange juice,
sieve and allow to cool.
Assembly
Prepared chocolate tart
Blood orange jelly
6 blood oranges
Cut the skin from the blood oranges, cut in half, then slice thinly with a sharp
knife. Arrange in circles, or the pattern you like, brush with jelly, and allow to
set before slicing.
Lemon meringue pie
Swiss meringue
Mix the ingredients in the bowl of a stand mixer, then heat over a bain marie,
stirring constantly until the mixture reaches 79 °C.
Using a whisk attachment, whisk on high speed until the meringue becomes
thick and glossy, and starts to ball up in the whisk. Use the meringue
immediately. Place meringue into a piping bag with a fluted nozzle. I used a
French star piping tip. Pipe the meringue onto the lemon tart, then blowtorch
the meringue. The meringue can stay stable at room temperature for a few
hours, but it is best to enjoy it immediately.