Raspberry Hazelnut Tart

- Total Time
- 1 hour 15 minutes, plus 24 to 48 hours’ chilling
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 290grams all-purpose flour (about 2⅓ cups), plus more for dusting
- 35grams hazelnut flour (about ⅓ rounded cup)
- 110grams confectioners’ sugar (about 1 cup)
- 175grams French-style 82 percent fat butter, such as Plugrà (6 ounces), plus more for greasing pan, at room temperature
- 3grams fine sea salt (about rounded ½ teaspoon)
- 3grams vanilla extract (about ½ teaspoon)
- 80grams egg yolk (about 5 yolks)
- 30grams whole hazelnuts, toasted and skinned (about ¼ cup)
- 70grams hazelnut flour (about ¾ cup)
- 70grams confectioners’ sugar (about ¾ cup)
- 2grams cornstarch (about ¾ teaspoon)
- 2grams cake flour (about 1 teaspoon)
- 70grams French-style 82 percent fat butter, such as Plugrà (2½ ounces), at room temperature
- Pinch of sea salt
- 2grams vanilla extract or paste (about ½ teaspoon)
- 1egg, beaten
- 12grams dark rum (about 1 tablespoon), optional
- 150grams good quality raspberry jam (about ½ cup)
- 250grams raspberries (9 ounces or about 2 cups)
- Powdered sugar, for dusting
For the Pâte Sablée
For the Tart
Preparation
- Step 1
Make the pâte sablée: Sift flour, 35 grams hazelnut flour and 110 grams confectioners’ sugar into separate bowls. Place 175 grams butter, 3 grams salt and sifted all-purpose flour in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment. Mix on low speed until flour and butter just come together. Add sifted hazelnut flour and confectioners’ sugar and mix on low until ingredients are just incorporated. Add vanilla extract and egg yolks and mix on medium just until ingredients come together. Scrape dough out of bowl and press into a ½-inch-thick rectangular block. Wrap airtight in plastic wrap and refrigerate overnight.
- Step 2
Unwrap dough and cut into two equal pieces. Wrap one piece and refrigerate or freeze for use in another tart.
- Step 3
Butter a 9-inch metal tart pan with a removable bottom very lightly and evenly. (If you can see the butter you have used too much.) Place parchment paper or a Silpat on a work surface and dust lightly with flour. Tap on the dough with a rolling pin to make it pliable. Roll dough out gently to about ¼-inch thickness, frequently rotating it a quarter turn clockwise. Work quickly so dough doesn’t warm up and become sticky.
- Step 4
Cut a circle that is 1½ inches larger in diameter than tart pan. (An easy way to do this is to use a larger pan or ring as a guide; set it on top of the dough and cut around it.) Very lightly dust dough with flour; use a pastry brush to remove any excess flour. Wrap dough loosely around rolling pin to lift it up from work surface, then immediately unroll it onto tart pan. Gently guide dough down the sides of the pan, making sure that dough leaves no gap between the bottom edge of the sides of the pan and the bottom. Using a paring knife, trim away excess dough hanging over edges. Refrigerate tart shell, uncovered, for at least 1 hour and preferably overnight.
- Step 5
Assemble the tart: Heat oven to 325 degrees. Place hazelnuts on a sheet pan lined with parchment and roast for 15 minutes. Remove from oven, cool for 15 minutes and place in a bag. Seal bag and gently roll over nuts with a rolling pin, just to crush them into halves. Set aside.
- Step 6
Sift together 70 grams hazelnut flour, 70 grams confectioners’ sugar, the cornstarch and the cake flour.
- Step 7
Place 70 grams butter, pinch of salt and the vanilla in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment and mix at medium speed for 1 minute. Turn off machine, scrape down sides of bowl and add hazelnut flour mixture. Mix at medium speed for 1 minute. Gradually add egg and mix at medium speed until incorporated, no more than 2 minutes. Add rum, if using, and mix until incorporated.
- Step 8
Remove tart shell from refrigerator. With a fork, poke holes in the dough, 1 inch apart. Spoon or pipe hazelnut cream into bottom of shell. Using a small offset spatula, spread in a smooth, even layer.
- Step 9
Bake tart for 40 minutes, until cream and crust are golden brown and the tip of a paring knife comes out clean when inserted. Remove from oven and cool on a wire rack for 30 minutes.
- Step 10
Remove tart from the ring and, with a small offset spatula, spread raspberry jam over surface in an even layer. (If jam is too stiff to spread easily, place it in a small saucepan and warm it slightly first on top of the stove.) Arrange fresh raspberries on jam. Just before serving, distribute roasted hazelnuts among the raspberries and dust with powdered sugar. The tart is best when eaten the day it is made, but can be refrigerated for a day.
- There should be enough dough left over for a second tart shell.
Private Notes
Comments
This is a really delicious tart--you could buy this in a bakery and pay $25 for it. It is time-consuming and we just used regular butter and it turned out fine. We made our own hazelnut flour by processing a few hazelnuts. Love it!
For all you perfectionists out there!! Having made this tart at least seven times, and after arriving to take this magnificent tart to its absolute peak of perfection: I heartily endorse using Bob’s Red Mill Super-Fine Almond Flour from blanched whole almonds!!
Okay, I am super critical of my own cooking. I like to take a recipe down to the floor (I.e., make jam from scratch, homemade broth, etc) and build up. I followed the instructions explicitly, and let the tart rest in the frig for 48 hours total. This tart - BAR NONE— was the best dessert I have ever made. Thanks for another home run, NYT! You are truly carrying me and my family through this pandemic!
New go-to dessert recipe! I’m cheap so I used regular flour instead of hazelnut flour and it was still great! I made my own orange jam (tons of easy and quick recipes online) as a substitute for the raspberry jam. The slight bitterness of the orange jam with the sourness of the fresh raspberries was an unstoppable flavor combination. This recipe is super easy and makes you seem like you just won Great British Bakeoff— make sure to practice your humble and nonchalant “oh I just whipped this up” and “are you sure it’s not too sweet?”
This dessert should have so many more 5 star ratings than it does. It’s amazing and impressive! For the crust, I sometimes use Dorie G.’s tart dough recipe instead, which is delicious and a bit quicker to put together. You make the dough, immediately press it into the tart pan, and chill for 4 hours. Then add the filling and cook. Turns out wonderful!
Delicious and beautiful! I made it with pistachios instead of hazelnuts, which complemented the raspberries very well (and the pale green with the bright red was visually lovely). Pulsing the pistachios with the flour (or with the confectioners sugar) made it much easier to grind them into nut flour, despite the oils. I used a magic bullet with the grinder blade. I’ve never made anything like this before. It’s a stunning and complex dessert that is amazingly easy to make! Tastes very French.
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