Thursday, July 11, 2019

Plum Crumble Tart with Super Natural Organic Plum


We have a big old plum tree in our small backyard. Every year the tree gets a lot of sweet dark red plums (called Santa Rosa), with no tending/any work required, either given water. That is why I call it our “super natural organic plum tree.” (perhaps it is only California) 


This year is exceptionally great year that I have seen it only once every few years since I moved to this place 18 years ago, but probably the best one ever I had. I harvested almost three 5-gallon buckets in last 10 days, plus a lot of plums have fallen to the ground and  need to be discarded. This is a very sad story but my garden enemy, squirrels and I have been a bit overwhelming this year's abundance. I have learned that my backyard birds don’t care about it, either racoons (but the truth is I haven’t seen them eating.).  






I have given plums to my neighbors, friends, and made a lot of jam but plums are still all over my kitchen table, inside refrigerator and yet quite few plums on the tree.  So my backyard and kitchen are filled smell of plums at moments. I am now worried that they are rall ready tofall off very soon. Only last thing I can think about it is making “plum wine” which I have never tried it but I have a bit of temptation to do it.



I normally enjoy my plums just eating fresh fruit, baking simple tart or pie with using almond cream or paste as the base (the are very juicy). However I found this recipe online  and looks very nice  (Bruno Ablouz, at his great baking recipe collection site (www.blunoskitchen.net . He also has good instruction video for each recipe which is very professional and fun.). So I made it and it came out perfect for my great Super natural organic plums. 






Plum Crumble Tart
Recipe adapted by brunoskitchen.net by Bruno Ablouze

Makes one 7.5x 2-inch or 10x 1 -inch Tart Pan with removable bottom
Yield 6-8 servings
The plum crumble tart can be refrigerated for a couple of days. This pie should be eaten at room temperature.

For the Tart:
One 10 ounces (300g) Sweet Pastry Crust/ Pate Sucée*
A few slices brioche, challah or bread crumbs
2 cups Almond Crumbles**
A few slices brioche, challah or bread crumbs (optional)
2 pounds (900g) pitted red plum (also nectarine and peach as well)
2 ounces (60g) brown or granulated sugar ( lower the amount of sugar by half if using nectarine or peach)Garnish (optional)

Powdered sugar and fresh currents (optional)

*Sweet Pastry Shells (Yields 2 tart shells):
5 ounces (150g) unsalted butter, soft at room temperature
3 ounces (90g) powdered sugar or ¼ cup (50g) granulated sugar
¼ teaspoon salt
1 large egg, at room temperature
½ teaspoon vanilla extract
2 cups (280g)  all-purpose flour

Place the SOFTENED butter and salt in the bowl of your electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, or in a large bowl if whisking by hand and cream until completely smooth. Add sugar and beat until light and fluffy. Add the egg, vanilla and continue beating until homogenized. Mix in half of the the flour until just incorporated and add remaining flour and mix just until it forms a ball. 
Flatten the pastry into a square, cover with plastic wrap, and refrigerate for an hour or until firm (can be placed in freezer for about 30 minutes). The dough must be completely chilled before being used. The dough can be stored in the refrigerator for 5 days or freeze for a month.

**Almond Crumble:
2 ounces (60g) whole almond
5 ounces (150g) almond paste***
½ cup (60g) all-purpose flour
2 ounces (56g) butter, cubed, chilled
Zest of one whole lemon

Almond paste is made from 50% equal proportion of almonds and sugar.
Marzipan has a higher ratio of sugar (up to 75% sugar) plus other ingredients. The larger proportion of sugar makes the marzipan cheaper, smoother and easier to roll out. Marzipan is only used for covering cakes and making edible models.

***Almond Paste: 
 Makes about 1¼ cup (about 250 grams)

1 cup (100g) blanched almonds
1 ½ cup (100g) confectioners’ sugar
1 egg white
1 teaspoon almond extract
A pinch of salt

In the bowl of food processor, process the almonds to fine ground about 1  minutes.
Add the sugar, egg white, almond extract and salt, process until smooth paste about 2 minutes.

Remove the paste onto a surface of board dusted with confectiones’s sugar and form into a log shape. Wrap the log in a plastic and refrigerate it until firm. It can be stored in the refrigerator for about a week.

To assemble the tart
Placet the rack in the center and preheat the over to 375°F (200°C).

The original recipe does not state prebaked the tart shell however I recommend it to do so lightly to be dried the shell (about 15 minute with pie weight and another 5 minutes without weight.)

Spread 1½ cups almond crumbles  on the tart. Lay slice breads if using. Sprit the plums and and remove the pits. Arrange plums nicely over the bread.
Sprinkle brown sugar and then the rest of almond crumble ot the top of fruit.
Place the tart in the oven and bake about 45 minutes.





Tuesday, July 2, 2019

FRENCH STRAWBERRY TART





























We have passed the summer solstices last week and it is now officially summer season’’ on our calendar but here in Bay Area, we already had record high of scorching hot days weeks before. It is now that the air is hot, the sun is high, but smell of varieties of fresh summer fruits and scent of summer flower, such like Jasmin are fantastic.

We are having perfect California weather this week (hot days and cool night). Summer means no doubt for the great fruit season. Strawberries are all over the market, cherries and plums are ripe, apricot, peach and nectarine started available, and other fresh berries and watermelon are coming soon. It is truly the season for fresh fruit lovers. Their vibrant colors, rich sweet smells and juice flavor, all are more than irresistible and make us very happy.

We have a long season of cultivated local strawberries in California but its prime is perhaps to its peak now (April to June), and I am now waiting for to tasting those wild berries like small organic strawberries that are coming to our farmers’ market soon. 

Popularity of strawberry is so huge today and Commercial strawberries on the market are so massive in all seasons, but nothing look bright, vibrant red color and luscious sweet flavor of strawberries in its historical season, spring to early summer are exceptional (magic of nature). 

Strawberry is very easy to grow in your backyard even on the terrace of sunny apartment. I started experiment with only on large pot with few plants a few years ago and I have few pots and dozen plants this year. You are not going to get a pint of strawberries every few days but you may enjoy few of them in every couple days.  It takes about 3-4 weeks to harvest ripe strawberries after their blossom of white flowers, but having fun to watch them growing and ripping day by day. For me it’s a big joy tasting real thing.






French Strawberry Tart

For one 9 to 10-inch tart, serves 6.

Ingredients
2 pints of ripe strawberries about 23 ounces (700g) try to get similar size of berries
One baked tart shell, bout 9 to 11-inch
1½ cups pastry cream
2 tablespoons raspberry, strawberry or apricot glaze or powder sugar on the top of strawberries.

For Tart Shell (PÂTE SUCRÉE /Flaky Sweet Pastry):
For one 9 to 10-inch tart

4 ounces (120g) unsalted butter, softened at “room temperature”
A pinch of salt
½ cup (100g) granulated sugar
1 large egg (50g)
½ teaspoon pure vanilla extract
1/¼ cups (180g) unbleached all-purpose flour, sifted

Place the SOFTENED butter and salt in the bowl of your electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, or in a large bowl if mixing by hand and cream until completely smooth. Add sugar and beat until light and fluffy. Add the egg, vanilla and continue beating until homogenized. Mix in half of the flour until just incorporated and add remaining flour and mix just until it forms a ball. 
Flatten the pastry into about 6-inch disc, cover with plastic wrap, and refrigerate for at least one hour or until firm (can be placed in freezer for about 30 minutes). The dough must be completely chilled before being used. The dough can be stored in the refrigerator for 5 days or freeze for a month.

For Pastry Cream (Crème Pâtissière):
1 cup (250 ml) whole milk
1 vanilla beans or ½ teaspoon vanilla extract
3 large egg yolks
1/4 cup (50g) granulated sugar
2tablespoons flour or corn or potato starch

In a saucepan heat up the milk with a half portion of the sugar.
In a small mixing bowl, mix with the rest of the sugar, flour (or starch) and egg yolks. Pour ½ of the hot milk in the bowl and quickly whisk mixture well. And then return to the saucepan and stir constantly the cream over low heat until thickened, about 2 minutes. Immediately plunge the sauce pan into the large bowl of ice water to cool. If sauce is a bit too lumpy, strain through a sieve. 

Assembling the tart:
Spread the pastry cream onto the bottom of prebaked pastry shell. Slice the strawberries way you like, also way would like to decorate. Glaze, brush the warm jam on the top of berries and decorate with small mint leaves.

Note.  You can bake the tart shell and pastry cream a day or two in advance. So you need clean and slice the strawberries on the day you serve. (Recommended)

For chocolate fan, melt 3 ounces (90g) of dark chocolate and spread over the bottom of the tart before spreading chilled pastry cream. It is also preventing tart shell become soggy quickly (good idea for two reasons!)