Fruit Galette

Fruit Galette
David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews.
Total Time
2 hours, plus at least 2 hours’ chilling
Rating
5(1,869)
Comments
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This basic galette recipe can be tailored to fit whatever fruit you have on hand. The key is to scale the amount of sugar and cornstarch. Generally speaking, tart stone fruits (apricots, peaches, nectarines, plums, sour cherries) need a greater amount of both sugar and cornstarch while figs, grapes, berries and Bing cherries tend to need less. If you’re unsure, add the sugar gradually, tasting as you go. Spreading a thin layer of jam over the rolled out dough before adding the filling bumps up the fruit flavor. You can match the jam flavors to your fruit or mix it up for a contrast. And if you don’t want to add lemon zest to the fruit, consider the seeds from a vanilla bean, ground spices, or some minced candied ginger instead. You can make the dough up to three days ahead, but this galette is at its best served the same day it was baked.

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Ingredients

Yield:8 servings

    For the Dough

    • 1⅓cups/165 grams all-purpose flour
    • 1tablespoon/15 grams sugar
    • ½teaspoon/3 grams fine sea salt
    • 1large egg
    • Heavy cream, as needed
    • 1stick/113 grams unsalted butter, cut into big pieces
    • 2teaspoons/10 milliliters lemon juice
    • ½teaspoon/4 grams grated lemon zest (optional)

    For the Filling

    • 3cups summer fruit of your choice (berries, stone fruit, figs), sliced or cubed if necessary
    • ½cup to ¾ cup/100 to 150 grams sugar, to taste
    • Pinch of salt
    • Juice and grated zest of ½ lemon (optional)
    • 3 to 4tablespoons/25 to 35 grams cornstarch
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (8 servings)

323 calories; 14 grams fat; 8 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 4 grams monounsaturated fat; 1 gram polyunsaturated fat; 48 grams carbohydrates; 2 grams dietary fiber; 27 grams sugars; 4 grams protein; 177 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. Make the Crust

    1. Step 1

      In a food processor fitted with a steel blade, or in a large bowl, pulse or mix together flour, sugar and salt. In a measuring cup, lightly beat the egg, then add just enough cream to get to ⅓ cup. Lightly whisk the egg and cream together.

    2. Step 2

      Add butter to flour mixture and pulse or use a pastry cutter or your fingers to break up the butter. If using a food processor, do not over-process; you need chickpea-size chunks of butter. Drizzle the egg mixture (up to ¼ cup) over the dough and pulse or stir until it just starts to come together but is still mostly large crumbs. Mix in lemon juice and zest if using.

    3. Step 3

      Put dough on lightly floured counter and pat it together to make one uniform piece. Flatten into a disk, wrap in plastic and chill for 2 hours, or up to 3 days.

    4. Step 4

      Heat the oven to 400 degrees. Roll the dough out to a 12-inch round (it can be ragged). Transfer to a rimmed baking sheet lined with parchment paper and chill while preparing the filling.

  2. Make the Filling

    1. Step 5

      Toss together fruit, all but a tablespoon of sugar, the salt, the lemon juice and zest, and the cornstarch. Use more cornstarch for juicy stone fruit and less for blueberries, raspberries and figs. Pile fruit on the dough circle, leaving a 1½-inch border. Gently fold the pastry over the fruit, pleating to hold it in (sloppy is fine). Brush pastry generously with leftover egg and cream mixture. Sprinkle remaining sugar on the crust.

    2. Step 6

      Bake for 35 to 45 minutes, until the filling bubbles up vigorously and the crust is golden. Cool for at least 20 minutes on wire rack. Serve warm or at room temperature.

Ratings

5 out of 5
1,869 user ratings
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Comments

This is a great recipe, but very messy. The liquid leaked out and burned on the sheet pan. I took the recommendation for the NYT blueberry pie and drained the liquid that exuded from the fruit (peaches) after adding the sugar, cornstarch and lemon juice and cooked it briefly to let it thicken. Then poured the thickened sauce back over the fruit after piling it in the dough. Much less leakage and better flavor than just leaving the juice out.

I love this recipe. Beware, don't pour in all of the egg/heavy cream mixture into the crust. The recipe is not clear about that until it's too late.

There a quite a few useful tips in the video that accompanies this recipe. I made it with peaches from the farmers' market last summer and added a bit of cardamom.

Used extremely juicy and sweet strawberries so ~1/3 cp sugar and 4 tbl cornstarch. Drained off the "juice" and cooked it down (took 5 minutes or so) (turned quite gelatinous) and spread that on the bottom of crust. It was delicious-- and the leftover piece made a fine breakfast! There was smidge of leakage around edge and thought I was in trouble but still came off the parchment easily and the bottom was crisp and not soggy at all-- just leaked at the "bend"!

I've used this recipe dozens of times. I soften the butter in the microwave to make the crust pliable before shaping it around the fruit. By using soft crust, the crust does not crack, and the galette is less likely to leak. Although leaks still sometimes occur, the galette will still taste good. After I paint the egg wash on the crust, I sprinkle sugar on the crust. When I use Apples or pears, I add cinnamon, cloves, and ginger. My husband loves these galettes.

Not my favorite galette recipe. While I definitely didn’t read the recipe closely enough and added all the cream mixture at the beginning, the flavor of the crust was just weird. Maybe that’s all on bakers error but the flavor in general was just not great. Also, please remember to bake it on a rimmed sheet, don’t be like me and make a mess of the floor of the oven and set off the smoke alarms.

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