Husband-Tested
in Alice’s Kitchen
Makes one 7-inch
tart
Our local food co-op, Lost River Market & Deli, holds a
Talent Auction every year as a fundraiser.
I offered 4 homemade pies as my talent to be auctioned off. Our good friend, Phil, won the bid. As it happens, he has a little home orchard
that includes a Purple Heart Plum Tree.
So, for his fourth and last pie, he brought over some of these
jewel-like sweet plums and I put them in this fabulous tart. Other pies that I
made for Phil’s winning bid were: Sour Cream Apple Pie with Streusel Topping and Cinnamon, Lemon Luscious Pie, and
Tartan Rhubarb Pie.
4 to 5 medium-size plums (I used 6
or 7 small Purple Heart Plums, a European/Japanese hybrid.)
2
Tablespoons unsalted butter, room temperature
½ half of a
Perfect Pie Dough, partially baked**
1 large egg
1/3 cup
sugar
¼ cup
all-purpose flour
¾ cup heavy
cream
3-4
Tablespoons Cognac (4 Tablespoons makes
this quite boozy)
¼ cup Vanilla Sugar**
Preheat
oven to 375F.
**To partially bake the Perfect Pie Dough, prick the tart shell pastry with a fork and
carefully line the pastry with foil, pressing it into the corners. Add on top
of the foil, dried beans, uncooked rice or pie weights to cover the bottom of
the tart shell. Bake for 15 minutes.
Remove the foil and weights and continue to bake just until the pastry dried
out and turns a light golden color for a partially baked shell, about 5 minutes
or so. Let it cool completely on a wire
rack before proceeding.
Pit the
plums and either half or quarter the plums, Then, rub the outside of each plum
with approximately 1 teaspoon softened butter. Arrange the plums as desired in
the partially baked tart shell. Bake for 15 minutes to soften the fruit.
While the
tart is baking, prepare the custard.
Beat the egg and sugar until thick and pale yellow. Add the flour and mix until smooth. Beat in the cream and Cognac. Spoon the custard (It will be liquid.) around the bottom of the softened plums and
sprinkle the tart with the vanilla sugar.
Return the tart to the oven and bake for approximately 20 minutes, or
until the custard is puffed and golden.
Let the tart cool before serving.
(The custard will fall as it
cools.)
Vanilla Sugar:
This keeps indefinitely and adds a
wonderfully elusive flavor to many desserts.
1 vanilla
bean
3 cups sugar
Split the
vanilla bean in half lengthwise with a sharp knife and put it in a glass jar
with a tight fitting lid. Pour in the
sugar, put on the lid and set aside for a week before using. Shake the jar from time to time. Replenish the jar with more sugar as you use
it up.
Here are the plums just before I popped them into the oven for a quick roast before adding the custard. |
A slice of the European Plum Tart |
I used the recipe and made a pie (instead of a tart) and, as you can see, it turned out perfectly. |
I used the pastry scraps to make a tiny tasty tartlet. |
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I'd love to hear from you! Let me know if you try the recipes and how they turn out.