Two weeks ago, I got to make dinner for Judy/Mass and Joe. THIS (Pear Tatin) was dessert. Yum.

Yep it's a beauty and looks delicious but I want to know what else

you made and where are the pics? You know how we are.

 
Joe, permission granted. (I'm just SO shy.) Tatin recipe inside.

Pear Tatin
Nobody said this would be easy so, before you begin, read these directions and make sure you understand ALL of ‘em!

1 sheet PUFF PASTRY, slightly defrosted (I mean, why make your own?)
4 Tbsp UNSALTED BUTTER, at room temperature
6½ Tbsp SUGAR
4-5 ripe BOSC PEARS, peeled, cored and quartered
¼ cup PEAR BRANDY
CRÈME FRAÎCHE

Roll puff pastry out to form a circle 1/8 inch thick. Trim dough to fit top of a 10” inch skillet. Moisten edges & use trimmings to form a rim around outside of circle. Cut a dime sized hole in middle of circle, place on a cookie sheet & freeze for at least an hour.

(NOTE: Once you’ve made the rim for the pastry circle, put the skillet BACK over it to make sure the edge will fit down snugly inside the pan. When this thing is frozen, you want to be sure rim doesn’t hang OUTSIDE of pan! It wouldn’t be pretty.)

Preheat oven to 375°F then prepare tart filling: Spread butter on inside of a heavy ovenproof 10”skillet. Sprinkle 4 Tbsp sugar over butter. Reserving one piece of the peeled, cored and quartered pear, arrange pears, cut-side down, in a tight-circle around edge of pan, points to center. Cram as much fruit in as possible and place the reserved piece, on top, in the center, round side down. Sprinkle 1½ Tbsp sugar over the top.

Cook pears over high heat (depending on your stove, obviously) swirling gently until sugar has caramelized. If you’ve never done this before, you’ll see the butter melt, and as the pears release some of their liquid, a pale yellow “sauce” develops. The sauce then starts to turn an increasingly darker shade of gold. You want the sauce to get to the color of Kraft caramels but I also use my nose as tip off. If it starts to SMELL burnt, it’s well on it’s way there! (Keep a close eye and/or nostril on this as you don’t want to let it go too far or everything will burn, you’re screwed and you’ll have to start all over again and we HATE it when that happens.)

When the pears are ready, remove pan from heat, take crust from freezer and place it snugly , rim-side down, over pears in skillet like a box top. Place skillet on a baking sheet in the oven (to catch any overflow) and bake on center rack until crust is browned, anywhere from 30-45 minutes.

Carefully remove skillet from oven, and place it briefly over high heat on the stove-top to loosen any caramel that may have stuck. Next, the trickiest and most critical step . . .

De-pan the tart by placing a PAMMED wire cake rack, top side down, on top of the skillet, then put a flat 12” plate, large enough to hold entire tart, on top of the rack, face down. Using a heavy towel or oven mitts, grasp plate, rack and skillet in both hands and upend so that tart is on rack over plate. (A video of this MAY be available but there's cursing). You should now have depanned tart on top of rack, over plate. Phew!

Cook pear brandy with remaining 1 Tbsp sugar for 2-3 minutes until sugar melts. Gently spoon this mixture over cooling tart. Some juice will escape through the hole in the bottom of pastry. Just pour it off and re-spoon over pears until it stops flowing. This needs to cool at least 45 minutes. Slide cooled tart off rack and serve from a platter or what-have-you.

As always, I strongly recommend crème fraîche as the topping of choice. Good luck, Jim.

 
OK, here's the menu from ever-so-shy Steve. It was a Southwestern theme,

but not so Southwestern that we didn't start with European cheeses. Then came oven-fried bean burritos with spicy salsa, and guacamole and chips with sangria. Steve was planning to prove he was not a food snob by also doing queso fundido made with Velveeta and salsa, but we were getting full and that got sidelined even though we all agreed that we secretly love it.

We sat down to thick-cut pork chops braised in green chile sauce, rice pilaf with roasted white corn and fresh cilantro, and a salad of jicama, mango and avocado. It was a delicious combination

Did I miss anything?

Finally the pear tart was served with creme fraiche and a wonderful myrtle dessert wine that Judy and her husband brought from Italy. Another delicious combination.

It was so nice to meet Judy and her DH, and Steve's lovely CB (child bride. She and I were born on the same day!) is so fun to talk to. Steve, of course, kept us in stitches.

I made out like a bandit--leaving with a container of Steve's signature gumbo from the previous night and the remains of Jacques' and my giant pork chops. I cooked some rice the next night and we ate for days.

 
Oh yum! Joe thank you for coming to the rescue of the meek little

wall flower and posting the menu. Sounds so good. I'm intrigued by the bean burritos. As an appetizer? Could you explain it a bit? Poor little Steve...he's lucky to have you. :eek:)

 
The burritos were fairly small, filled with beans, cheese and chiles, brushed with oil (I think)

and baked until crisp. (Steve would say "baked off," but I fail to see a difference between baking off and baking.) Then he cut them in half on the diagonal and served with salsa and guacamole as finger food.

 
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