Nectarine Tart

- Total Time
- 1 hour 30 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1½cups flour, plus more for rolling
- ½teaspoon salt
- 4tablespoons sugar
- 11tablespoons cold unsalted butter
- 1egg yolk, beaten
- 2½-3 pounds fruit like peaches, nectarines, figs, apricots, plums
- 6tablespoons red currant jelly, or other preserves, depending on fruit
- 1cup crème fraîche, for serving
Preparation
- Step 1
Blend flour, salt and 2 tablespoons sugar in a bowl or food processor. Dice 8 tablespoons of the butter. Use a pastry blender or two knives to blend flour mixture and butter, or pulse them together in a food processor to make a crumbly mixture. Beat the egg yolk with 3 tablespoons cold water. Dribble it over the flour mixture, then stir or pulse slowly until the mixture starts clumping together. A bit more water may be necessary. Gather dough in a loose ball and form into a disk on a lightly floured surface.
- Step 2
Heat oven to 375 degrees. Roll out dough and line a 10-inch loose-bottom tart pan. Line pastry with a sheet of foil and spread pastry weights or dry beans on top. Bake 12 minutes. Meanwhile, melt the remaining butter, cooking it on low until it turns a light nut brown. Pit fruit (except figs) and cut in eighths or, if fruit is small, fourths. After 12 minutes, remove foil and weights from pastry. Return pastry to oven and continue baking until it is lightly browned, another 8 to 10 minutes. Remove pastry from oven and increase temperature to 400 degrees.
- Step 3
Brush pastry with preserves. Arrange fruit in tight concentric circles, starting by placing it around the perimeter, skin side down, against the vertical sides of the pastry and standing it up as much as possible. Brush with melted butter. Dust with remaining sugar. Bake about 35 to 40 minutes, until edges have browned but fruit has not collapsed. Cool before serving with crème fraîche.
Private Notes
Comments
As these fabulous recipes really meet an International audience now, and as you are actively promoting this site worldwide, is it possible to use weights for measurements, please. Who an earth can be bothered scooping 11 tablespoons of butter....let alone "sticks", which are only used in America. So much quicker to know an exact amount which can be measured from a digital scale. Thanks.....
Sprinkling the crust before baking with a mixture of 2 tablespoons of flour and one of sugar ensures that the crust will not be soggy. I skip the blind baking stage, add the fruit and bake. Instead of sugar, I melt red currant jelly and glaze the cooled tart. Found this in Pierre Franey's recipe in the times years ago. Works every time.
usually i toss stone fruit with a little lemon juice (and sugar) and I think it would have really helped here. filling was too sweet and one note without acid.
Can I make this with super market bought crust?
Directions say to place cut fruit skin side down, but photo shows slices on their sides. Which works best?
I love tarts
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