This is a French strawberry tart recipe that tastes like the real thing, but is made with gluten-free ingredients. Ready to dig in? It’s strawberry season!
We picked a nice little harvest today – enough for a strawberry tarte and some to set aside for jam. This bunch is going to need sweetening since this season’s strawberries are not sweet at all.
The plants are the Gariguette variety, which is supposedly the best in France, so I’ve no idea why.
I’ve made such a hoopla about sorrel fish, but everyone knows desserts are more fun to blog about (and eat). Plus the fishmonger doesn’t come to the market until Friday, and not Tuesday as I had thought. And … if truth be told, I am awfully intimidated by those large snail-eaten sorrel leaves. But I will conquer this fear. I will.
Okay. Back to tart strawberries and strawberry tart.
Can’t you just picture yourself sitting on a park bench in Paris, swinging your legs and eating strawberry tart? Never been? Well it is time we bring this délice to you! And if you have been to France, you’ll think you never left.
I think that all the time.
I got the recipe from here but used the crust recipe from my lemon tarte instead. It’s a good gluten free recipe because the almond flour makes it easier to work with.
Here’s everything you need, which you will want to put in the cuisinart:
125 grams or ½ cup of unsalted butter (chopped into pieces), heaping ½ cup of confectioner’s sugar, 2 ½ cups of flour – regular or a gluten-free mix, 1/3 cup almond powder, an egg and a teaspoon of large grain sea salt.
Adding large grain sea salt gives an extra special surprise; every time you bite a salt crystal it contrasts the creamy sweetness of the tarte with its yummy saltiness. Trust me – it’s good. Don’t overdo it though – about this much: (And if you don’t have large grain, use only 1/2 teaspoon)
Blend the dough, taking care to scrape the insides of the cuisinart at least once, and then add up to 3 Tablespoons of ice cold water, one at a time, and allow the dough to form a mass.
Place two pieces of saran wrap in the shape of a cross and pour the crumbly mass of dough into the center. You can tie it up in a ball and sort of squeeze it together. You’ll need to refrigerate it for an hour so that it firms up.
Meanwhile, let’s make the crème patisserie. The pastry cream.
I don’t know about you, but sometimes a recipe with many steps feels daunting and I just want to take a cold cloth to my forehead. But these two major steps you can do the night before (the crust and the pastry cream).
Or you can make the dough in between the kids’ music lessons and the pastry cream before you teach English, roll out the dough and bake it before you pick the kids up from Centre, then assemble and glaze the tarte while they’re watching cartoons. (I mean – while they’re reading a book). It’s all about multi-tasking, neh?
So. The pastry cream.
Heat 2 1/8 cups of milk with a teaspoon of vanilla.
Then separate 4 eggs, putting the whites aside for the vegetable omlette you’re going to make for your light breakfast after having eaten strawberry tarte all evening.
3 Tablespoons and 1 teaspoon of corn starch
When the milk is hot, pour it in all at once and mix the entire thing together.
Put it back on the burner and stir it constantly over low heat for 2-4 minutes until it gets thick.
Then put it in a bowl and cover it with saran wrap to prevent a pudding crust from forming. After it cools a bit, put it in the refrigerator until it’s chilled.
Voila ta crème patisserie, you French chef you!
When you’re ready to roll out the dough, pre-heat the oven to 350°F (180°C). If the dough is too hard, put it in the microwave at 15 second intervals until you can work with it. Place a sheet of wax paper underneath the dough and a second one on top. This makes it easier to roll out and also gives you a smoother finish.
You’ll need a 30 cm quiche pan.
Bake the pie crust for 15 to 20 minutes until it’s light brown, not too dark.
Let it cool for about an hour after it’s baked.
When you’re ready to assemble, spread the pastry cream on the cool crust.
Then wash and slice in half (the long way) about 16 oz of strawberries. Place them on the pastry cream in a tight concentric circle.
Phew! We’re nearing the end here.
You know how french tartes have a sort of glossy shine on the fruit? You can melt gelatin with water to get that effect, but it’s much easier to just heat up 3-4 heaping spoons of jelly. (Not jam, there musn’t be any pieces of fruit). I used apple jelly because it was almost clear.
Brush it over the strawberries.
And, believe it or not, your French Strawberry Tart is finished! That’s all there is to it.
Oh! Except for just one thing.
Here my friend, what do you think? Say “Aaah”
- Crust:
- 125 grams or ½ cup of unsalted butter (chopped into pieces),
- heaping ½ cup of confectioner's sugar
- 2 ½ cups of flour - regular or a gluten-free mix
- ⅓ cup almond powder
- 1 egg
- 1 teaspoon of large grain sea salt.
- Up to 3 T cold water, added one at a time.
- Pastry cream:
- 2⅛ cup milk
- 1 teaspoon vanilla
- 4 egg yolks
- ½ cup sugar
- 3T plus 1t corn starch
- ⅛ t salt
- 16 oz strawberries
- 3-4 heaping tablespoons apple Jelly
- Pre-heat oven to 180°C or 350°F.
- Put the dough ingredients in the Cuisinart and add the cold water if necessary until dough forms.
- Wrap dough in saran wrap and let it chill so you can roll it out easily.
- Use wax paper under and above the dough for easy handling (plus flour) when you roll it out.
- Bake pie crust for 15 to 20 minutes - check on it and turn if it's baking unevenly.
- Heat the milk and vanilla.
- Whisk the yolks, sugar, corn starch & salt.
- When the milk is hot, pour it into the yolk mixture and mix it.
- Return mixture to pan and heat over low heat, stirring continuously until it thickens.
- Put the pastry cream in a bowl and cover with saran wrap.
- Let it cool, then put it in the refrigerator until chilled.
- Spread pastry cream on the cooled tarte, followed by the fresh strawberries.
- Warm up the apple jelly until it's liquidy, then spread that over the strawberries.
*
angela says
Oh my goodness! I don’t know if I have the patience, but I like the idea of breaking it down into steps. We’re going strawberry picking in a couple of weeks, and I might try this.
Brittany says
YUM!!!
Andi says
Only one word….YUM!
OpinionsToGo says
Martha Stewart, move over, @aladyinFrance is here! Not only do you create beautiful and delicious treats…YOU TAKE
PHOTOGRAPHS!…doesn’t get any better than that!
Jackie says
That looks amazing and pretty easy to make! I think that we’ll have to try this when the berries start ripening around here.
Alexandra says
What a lucky, lucky family you have.
xo
julie gardner says
You. Are. Delicious.
Stacia says
I’m exhausted just watching you make that! But I’m sure I would certainly enjoy a taste. Yumyumyumyumyum. =>
Alison@Mama Wants This says
Can I come over for tea?
Carole says
I have never thought of making a fruit tart, but you’ve made it look almost manageable. 🙂
Kimberly says
you just made my gummy bears taste like crap.
I want some tarte!
Mom says
I can’t believe hiow orange your egg yolks are!
SassyModernMom says
Le Sigh…since I think it will be years since I can get back to Paris, I may just have to try and whip this up and pretend I’m back in your gorgeous country!
Missy | The Literal Mom says
This looks soooo good! And I have to say – MAJOR congratulations on being selected as a VOTY! Yay, Jennie!
ladyjennie says
Oh Missy, thank you my dear but I wasn’t selected. Don’t worry – I made the same mistake for someone else. 🙂
Leanne says
Heaven. I’ve died and gone to heaven. All in this one post.
Wait. I can’t taste the tart. I must not have made it to heaven.
Darn.