Fresh Fig Tart

Fresh Fig Tart
Jessica Emily Marx for The New York Times
Total Time
2 hours, plus at least 5 hours' chilling
Rating
4(649)
Comments
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The photogenic tart will make you look like a pastry chef, though it's no more difficult than baking a pie. A sweet tart crust is layered with almond cream, fig jam (homemade is nice, but store-bought works well, too) and fresh figs. The key to success is superb figs. They can’t be so jammy that they collapse when you cut them into quarters or sixths. But they should be sweet and ripe. The dough recipe below makes two crusts, one for now and one for later (store extra dough, well-wrapped, in the freezer).

Featured in: The No-Muss, No-Fuss Beauty of a Fig Tart

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Ingredients

Yield:One 9-inch tart

    For the Crust

    • 6ounces/168 grams unsalted butter (1½ sticks), preferably French style with 82 percent fat, at room temperature, plus more for the pan
    • ¼teaspoon fine sea salt
    • 1cup/112 grams confectioners’ sugar, sifted
    • Rounded ⅓ cup/39 grams almond flour, sifted
    • teaspoons vanilla extract
    • 1extra-large egg, beaten
    • 2⅔cups/315 grams all-purpose flour or cake flour, sifted

    For the Tart

    • cup/70 grams almond flour
    • ¾cup/70 grams confectioners' sugar
    • ¾teaspoon cornstarch
    • 1teaspoon cake flour or all-purpose flour
    • 5tablespoons/2½ ounces/70 grams unsalted butter, preferably French style, at room temperature
    • Pinch of fine sea salt
    • ½teaspoon vanilla extract
    • ¼teaspoon almond extract
    • 1extra-large egg, beaten
    • 1tablespoon dark rum
    • ½cup/150 grams fig jam, either homemade or store-bought
    • 18ounces/500 grams fresh figs
    • Powdered sugar, for dusting
Ingredient Substitution Guide
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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Prepare the crust: In a stand mixer fitted with paddle attachment, cream butter and sea salt on medium speed for about 1 minute. Scrape down sides of bowl and paddle with a rubber spatula and add confectioners’ sugar. Combine with butter at low speed. Once incorporated, scrape down bowl and paddle. Add almond flour and vanilla extract and combine at low speed.

  2. Step 2

    Gradually add egg and a quarter of the flour (scant ½ cup or 55 grams). Beat at low speed until just incorporated. Scrape down bowl and paddle. Gradually add remaining flour and mix just until dough comes together, stopping from time to time to scrape in any mixture adhering to sides and bottom of bowl. Do not overbeat. Dough should be soft to the touch.

  3. Step 3

    Separate dough into two equal portions. Gently press each portion into a ½-inch-thick rectangle. Double-wrap airtight in plastic wrap. Refrigerate one dough portion for at least 4 hours, preferably overnight; chill or freeze the second portion for another use.

  4. Step 4

    Very lightly butter a 9-inch tart pan with a removable bottom. (You should not be able to see the butter.) On a lightly floured surface, roll out dough to a 10 ½-inch circle, ¼ inch thick. Dust work surface and dough often, and work quickly so dough remains cold. Gently roll dough over lightly dusted rolling pin and transfer to pan, gently easing it in and trimming the top edge. Chill uncovered for at least 1 hour, preferably longer.

  5. Step 5

    Prepare the tart: Heat oven to 325 degrees. Sift together almond flour, confectioners’ sugar, cornstarch and flour into a medium bowl.

  6. Step 6

    Place butter, salt and vanilla and almond extracts in a stand mixer fitted with the paddle and beat 1 minute at medium speed. Scrape down bowl and paddle, and add almond flour mixture. Beat at medium speed for 1 minute, until incorporated. Stop, scrape down bowl and paddle, then turn on machine and gradually add egg. Add rum and beat at medium speed until egg and rum are incorporated.

  7. Step 7

    Remove tart shell from refrigerator and place on a baking sheet. Using a fork, pierce rows across surface of crust, about 1 inch apart. Scrape almond cream onto crust and, using a small offset or rubber spatula, spread evenly over crust.

  8. Step 8

    Place in oven and bake 40 minutes, until crust and almond cream are golden brown and the tip of a knife comes out clean when inserted into cream. Remove from oven and let cool for 40 minutes on a rack.

  9. Step 9

    Using a small spatula, spread fig jam over surface of tart in an even layer.

  10. Step 10

    Remove stems from figs. Cut small and medium figs into quarters, large figs into sixths or eights. Arrange in concentric circles, starting with the rim, with the stem end down. Slices should angle upwards. If not serving right away, refrigerate. Dust with powdered sugar just before serving.

Ratings

4 out of 5
649 user ratings
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Comments

I can't be the only person who is driven bonkers by the use of a stand mixer here. The vast, vast majority of people do not have a stand mixer. Furthermore, pastry has been made for centuries, so simply and so quickly, without help from KitchenAid and their ilk. There's no reason to call for this bulky and expensive equipment to complete a straightforward task. Please provide alternative instructions, or you'll lose budding tart-makers in the first paragraph.

Dear Erin,
Don't go bonkers. Get out your hand mixer and celebrate. Either works just fine. If you have no mixer, a strong arm and a big spoon will get the job done. That's what our grandmothers used.
I have had all three, but I'm old, have arthritis, and have lost strength, so the stand mixer is a life saver. What mixer one uses is not the important thing. Cooking with love and fun is. So, buy some figs, some fig jam, some almond flour, and go to it. It will be yummy.

From the other side of the stand mixer divide: In 2013 we downsized. We sold nearly everything we owned. I've said many times the only thing I missed was my KitchenAid stand mixer. I bought another one and use it at least once a week. Just sayin'

For something in some ways so simple, this recipe can be fiddly, lots of ingredients to measure out and lots of steps (and waiting between) that at times I had trouble keeping track of - I was rereading most steps many times! However, the proof is in the pudding … after presenting it at a dinner party (with overwhelmingly positive reviews) my girlfriend declared it should be known as the ‘marry me fig tart’. Will definitely make again and hopefully each time the procedure will flow more smoothly!

We have a giant Brown Turkish fig tree in the backyard, so was able to pick and use the figs the same day. This recipe is amazing! I didn’t have fig jelly, as we’ve made it, but it’s not our favorite. Used home made, organic quince jelly from our own quince instead and it was fantastic with the figs. Going to try this recipe again today, but plan to hold off adding figs until tomorrow. I’m hoping that won’t change the tart. Was thinking I read that this was an option.

How far in advance can I make? This is four days too much

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