Tumble-Jumble Strawberry Tart

- Total Time
- 45 minutes, plus chilling and cooling
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1½cups/200 grams all-purpose flour
- ⅓cup/40 grams confectioners’ sugar
- 2tablespoons granulated sugar
- ¼teaspoon fine sea salt
- Grated zest of 1 lemon (optional)
- 9tablespoons/130 grams very cold unsalted butter, cut into small pieces, plus additional for greasing
- 1large egg yolk
- ½teaspoon pure vanilla extract
- ½cup/120 milliliters strawberry jam
- 1quart/680 grams fresh strawberries, hulled
- Granulated sugar, as needed (optional)
- Whipped cream or crème fraîche, for serving (optional)
For the Crust
For the Topping
Preparation
- Step 1
Put the flour, both sugars, salt and lemon zest, if you’re using it, in the bowl of a food processor; pulse to blend. Scatter the butter on top; pulse the butter into the dry ingredients until you’ve got a bowlful of curds. At first the dough will look like cornmeal, but it will change as you go, so work in long pulses — you might need as many as 20 — and scrape the bottom and sides of the bowl often.
- Step 2
Whisk the yolk and vanilla together, and add in three additions, pulsing after each. Pulse just until the dough starts to come away from the sides of the bowl; it should form moist clumps and hold together when pinched. Turn it out onto a counter, knead it into a compact ball and flatten it into a disk between two sheets of parchment or wax paper.
- Step 3
Roll the dough into an 11-inch circle. If it’s cold enough, fit it into a 9- to 9½-inch tart pan with a removable bottom, prick the bottom with a fork and trim the top even with the pan’s rim; if it’s not cold, chill it until it’s workable. Refrigerate the crust in the pan for at least 1 hour (or cover and freeze up to 2 months; bake straight from the freezer).
- Step 4
Heat oven to 400. Place the dough in its pan on a baking sheet, cover with a piece of buttered foil or parchment and fill with rice.
- Step 5
Bake for 20 minutes, then carefully remove the foil or paper and rice. Bake, uncovered, until the crust is golden, another 8-10 minutes. Let cool, at least 30 minutes.
- Step 6
If you’re serving 6, cover the bottom of the crust with a layer of jam, and then cut the tart into wedges. (Otherwise, cut the number of wedges you need, and spread each portion with jam.) Halve or quarter as many berries as you’d like — be generous — and if you want, toss with a little granulated sugar. Place each wedge of crust on a plate, and spoon over berries, letting them tumble where they might. If you’d like, top each serving with whipped cream, or pass the cream at the table.
Private Notes
Comments
I've been baking successfully for 60 years, and I have not needed a food processor or fancy mixer. I wish these instructions would consider that not everyone owns these and provide instructions that don't make that assumption. Thanks.
Now, now kids! It IS rather clever to not add the fruit until the moment you are ready to serve -- keeps the crust from getting soggy. I believe that the word "genius" is being used here as it often is overseas, as a synonym for "swell". I don't think they were trying to suggest that the dough was worthy of a MacArthur grant.
Okay, maybe the construction is merely clever, but what’s genius is this sentence from the article: “With no pastry cream to tether them, the berries tumbled off the edges of the pastry and arranged themselves by whatever geometry berries choose when they’re not constrained.”
This is simply delicious!!!
The dough was difficult to get into pan but tasted great. For the filling, I used the technique of the other Strawberry Pie recipe on NYT that includes adding some cornstarch and jam to a portion of macerated berries. Delicious!
I decided to macerate too, but used a potato masher to crush a portion of the berries before adding the remainder of them. I also think that I may have tried that recipe!
I agree that 400 degrees for 28 minutes is too long. After 20 minutes the fluted edges were already very brown, and I still had to bake it longer to brown the center. Next time I will adjust the time. Still tasted very delicious.
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