Pear Tatin
- Total Time
- 1 hour 25 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- ¼cup sugar
- 3tablespoons water
- 3Bosc pears (about 1½ pounds)
- 2tablespoons unsalted butter
- 2tablespoons sliced almonds
- 2tablespoons golden raisins
- ⅔cup of water
- ½cup all-purpose flour
- 2tablespoons unsalted butter
- 2teaspoons sugar
- 1½tablespoons milk
The Caramel
The Pears
The Dough
Preparation
- Step 1
For the caramel: Place the sugar and 3 tablespoons water in a heavy 10-inch skillet. Cook over medium-to-high heat for about 5 minutes, until the mixture turns a light caramel color. Remove from the heat and swirl the caramel in the skillet to cool and harden it. (If the caramel darkens too much as it continues to cook in the pan's residual heat, place the base of the skillet in cool water to stop the cooking.)
- Step 2
For the pears: Peel the pears, cut them in half lengthwise and core them. Arrange the pear halves, cut side up, on the caramel so that the pointed ends of the pears meet in the center. Add the butter and ⅔ cup water. Bring to a boil (the caramel will melt). Cover the skillet with a lid, reduce the heat to low and cook gently for about 20 minutes, checking occasionally, until all the water has evaporated and the mixture in the pan has caramelized again. (By then, the pears should be partly cooked.)
- Step 3
While the pears are cooking, make the dough: place the flour, butter and sugar in the bowl of a food processor. Process for about 10 seconds. Add the milk and process for another 10 seconds. Transfer the unformed dough onto a sheet of plastic wrap and press on it until it forms a cohesive ball. Place another piece of plastic wrap on top of the dough and roll it with a rolling pin between the two plastic sheets to create a circle about the diameter of your skillet. Refrigerate the dough (still encased in plastic) to firm it slightly.
- Step 4
After the pears have cooked for 20 minutes fill their hollow centers with the almonds and raisins. Remove the dough from the refrigerator, peel off the top sheet of plastic wrap and invert the dough on top of the pears. Peel off the remaining plastic sheet. Place the skillet in a preheated 400-degree oven for about 30 minutes. (By then, the dough should be nicely browned on top, and when you tilt the pan, there should be a rich layer of caramel in the bottom.) Set the skillet aside until serving time.
- Step 5
If the pear Tatin has cooled beyond lukewarm at serving time, rewarm it on top of the stove until the caramel is soft again (the whole mixture will move in the pan when you shake it). Not more than 30 minutes before serving, invert a serving plate on top of the dough and turn the warm tart out onto the plate. Slice into portions, serving half a pear per person.
Private Notes
Comments
Every part of this recipe failed for me, and I wonder whether the 10-inch skillet might have been a misprint for 10-centimeter one. The caramel didn't begin to darken in 5 or even in 10 mintes, the dough seemed about half enough to cover, etc, etc.
I just made this and it is in the oven. Yes, there is a lot of liquid but I have always found there is a lot of liquid when making a tatin because the fruit are cooking and giving off their own liquid. The color of the liquid is key. You want it to be dark but not too much since you don’t want it to turn black in the oven. The issue I had was the pastry. The amount was no where close. Double the recipe and you will be fine.
Looking for feedback from others who've done this recipe.
I used a 9" heavy skillet so I reduced liquid to a half cup (mix of poire William and water). After 20 minutes covered, it seemed like there was more liquid than when I started. It took another half hour to reduce the liquid to a syrup. Is this a technique issue on my part or too much liquid called for in the recipe?
The dessert was quite tasty and my family gobbled it up.
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