RECIPE: Just got this in an email: REC: Cranberry, Caramel and ALmond Tart

RECIPE:

meryl

Well-known member
CRANBERRY, CARAMEL AND ALMOND TART

Note: You can use your hands to mix the dough instead of a mixer. You will need a 9-inch tart ring or fluted tart pan. Chef Maury Rubin recommends using frozen cranberries as they keep their shape and color better than fresh ones.

INGREDIENTS:

Standard tart dough:

13 Tbsps. (1 stick plus 5 Tbsps.) unsalted butter, cut into 1-inch pieces

1/3 cup powdered sugar

1 egg yolk

1 1/2 cups unbleached flour

1 Tbsp. heavy cream

Filling:

1 1/4 cups heavy cream

1/2 cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, cut into eight pieces

1 cup granulated sugar

1 3/4 cup frozen cranberries

2 cups unblanched sliced almonds

DIRECTIONS:

TART DOUGH:

1. Heat the oven to 350 degrees. Let the butter sit at room temperature for 15 minutes, until malleable.

2. Place the powdered sugar in the bowl of a standing mixer or a large free-standing bowl. Add the pieces of butter and toss to coat. Using a paddle attachment with a standing mixer, combine the sugar and butter at medium speed, until the sugar is no longer visible.

3. Add the egg yolk and combine until no longer visible.

4. Scrape down the butter off the sides of the bowl. Add half of the flour, then begin mixing again until the dough is crumbly. Add the remaining flour and then the cream and mix until the dough forms a somewhat sticky mass.

5. Flatten the dough into a thick pancake, wrap it in plastic and refrigerate at least 2 hours before preparing to roll out the dough.

6. Lightly butter a 9-inch pastry ring or fluted tart pan and place it on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper or a nonstick Silpat pad.

7. Once the dough has thoroughly chilled, cut it in half, then cut each piece in half lengthwise. Rotate the dough 90 degrees and repeat, until you have 16 equal pieces. Sprinkle your work surface with a thin layer of flour. Knead the pieces of dough together until it forms one new mass and shape it into a flattened ball. Flour a rolling pin and sprinkle flour again on the work surface underneath the dough. Roll out the dough into a circle one-eighth-inch thick.

8. Dock the dough with a pastry docker or prick the dough all over with a fork. Transfer the dough into the ring or tart pan by rolling about a third of it around your rolling pin, lifting it and placing it into the ring. Gently pat the dough onto the bottom and up the sides of the ring. Trim the edges so that they are flush with the top. Put the baking sheet with the ring into the freezer for one hour. Bake 15 to 20 minutes or until lightly browned. Remove from the oven and let cool to room temperature before filling.

FILLING AND ASSEMBLY:

1. Measure the cream and butter into a saucepan and heat it over low heat. When the butter has melted completely, turn off the heat.

2. To make the caramel, spread the sugar evenly in a perfectly dry 10-inch deep nonstick skillet and place it over medium-low heat.

3. The sugar should turn straw-colored, then gold and then a nutty-brown caramel after about 10 minutes. Slowly whisk the cream and butter into the sugar. Be extremely careful about the sugar, which can splatter as the cream is added (long sleeves are a good precaution). Strain the caramel into a bowl and cool it for 30 minutes.

4. Stir the frozen cranberries and the almonds into the caramel and mix until all the fruit and nuts are coated. Spoon the filling into the partially baked tart dough mounding toward the center.

5. Bake for 20 to 25 minutes, until juices and the caramel are bubbling slowly around the edges. Remove from the oven and let stand for one hour, then gently lift the tart ring off the pastry.

6. Carefully transfer the tart to a serving platter. Serve warm or at room temperature.

Servings: 10 to 12

-- Recipe from Los Angeles chef Maury Rubin

The Los Angeles Times

 
This addendum to the recipe was printed in yesterday's LA Times. Check it out.

FOR THE RECORD
November 29, 2006


Cranberry, caramel and almond tart: In a recipe that ran in the Nov. 15 Food section, the total time to prepare the tart should be 1 hour, plus 3 1/2 hours chilling and cooling time. Also, to make the caramel, use a deep 10-inch skillet (it shouldn't be nonstick). If the caramel cooks unevenly, gently tilt or swirl the pan so that the sugar is evenly distributed. Remove it from the heat before whisking in the cream and butter; if the caramel seizes, return it to the heat and continue to stir until it is smooth and creamy. The nutritional breakdown was for each of 10 servings. An updated recipe can be found at latimes.com/pies.

 
Sorry...I bought Maury Rubin's Tube of Temptation at Whole Foods....it's a ready-to-bake

6" tube of dark, dark chocolate dough studded with white chocolate chunks (and maybe nuts?) that you simply slice and bake.

It tastes exactly like truffles...which based on the ingredient listing, it is. I ate MORE THAN HALF of it raw, slicing off unbaked slivers, which of course everyone knows nullies the physical properties if done standing upright.

Dark chocolate and butter were the key ingredients. Flour was way down on the list. I checked the last time I was at WF and didn't see it (cold case, near the eggs), although his regular Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough was still there.

The precise name escapes me..."Reverse...something"

 
Ah well. smileys/smile.gif I found Michael Romano's rec this morning, though - rec: Reverse Chocolate Chunk Cookies

** Michael Romano's Reverse Chocolate Chunk Cookies **

These rich brown cookies studded with chunks of white chocolate are a delicious, inside-out version of chocolate chip cookies. Since the cookie batter is brown to begin with, you won't be able to use their toasty color as a visual indication of doneness. To avoid overcooking, remove the cookies from the oven as soon as they puff up and are still slightly soft to the touch. The cookies will set as they cool, but should remain pliable rather than hard or crunchy.

1 1/4 cup sweet butter at room temperature
1 Tbs. sweet butter for buttering cookie sheets.
3/4 cup brown sugar
1 1/4 cups sugar
2 eggs
1 3/4 cup all purpose flour
1 1/4 cup cocoa powder
2 tsp. baking soda
10 oz. solid white chocolate,
broken into 1/4 inch chunks
(or 8 ounces white chocolate chips)

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Lightly butter a cookie sheet, or alternatively, line the sheet with a strip of parchment paper. Set aside.

In a mixing bowl, mix together the flour, cocoa powder and baking soda. Set aside.

Using an electric mixer or a hand-held beater, cream the butter and sugars until the mixture is light and fluffy. Add the eggs and continue to beat until they are well-combined, about 1 minute. Mix in the flour, cocoa powder and baking soda mixture until well incorporated. Fold in the white chocolate chunks with a rubber spatula.

Filling a tablespoon, scoop out individual cookies from the batter and place in even rows on the cookie sheet, leaving 2 inches of space between each cookie.

Transfer the cookie sheet to the middle shelf of the oven, and bake for 8-10 minutes until the cookies are puffed and still to the touch. Remove the cookie sheet from the oven and allow cookies to cool and set for 5-7 minutes before carefully removing them with a spatula. If you have used a sheet of parchment paper, slide the entire sheet off the tray, and allow the cookies to cool for 5-7 minutes. Meanwhile, you may re-use the cookie sheet immediately for baking the next batch.

Makes 60 cookies

Recipe from The Union Square Cafe Cookbook.

 
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