Rachael from pizzarossa was our lovely June 2013 Daring Bakers’ host and she had us whipping up delicious pies in our kitchens! Cream pies, fruit pies, chocolate pies, even crack pies! There’s nothing like pie! :)
This is my favorite! It is decadent and a little piece goes a long way!
Chocolate and Caramel Tart
Servings: 8
Active time: 1 hour
Baking time: 35 minutes
Cooling time: approx. 2 hours
https://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/al8pHSlvicjOVGrMsEdsxsbNz9dB8bBT2rpcE8TMZ3o?feat=directlink
Ingredients
Pâte sablée
1 large egg yolk
5 tablespoons (75 ml) (70 gm) (2½ oz) granulated or powdered
sugar, as you prefer
1¾ cups (420 ml) (250 gm) (8¾ oz) all-purpose flour
pinch salt
9 tablespoons (1 stick + 1 tablespoon) (125 gm) (4 ½ oz)
cold butter, diced
3 tablespoons plus 1 teaspoon (50 ml) cold water
Filling
For the caramel
7 tablespoons (105 ml) (100 gm) (3½ oz) granulated sugar
7 tablespoons (100ml) whole cream, hot
For the chocolate mousse
2 large eggs
7 tablespoons (100ml) whole milk
1/3 cup (80 ml) (75 gm) (2½ oz) powdered sugar
(optional)
13 tablespoons (200ml) whole cream
1 cup plus 3 tablespoons (280 ml) (200 gm) (7 oz) dark
chocolate, broken into pieces 8
Instructions
Pâte sablée
- Preheat oven to moderate
350°F/180°C/gas mark 4. Lightly grease a 9"/24cm or 10"/26cm
tart pan, ideally a fluted metal one with a removable bottom.
- In a small bowl, whisk the
egg yolk and sugar together with a teaspoon of the water until pale and
fluffy. Set aside.
- Sift the flour and salt
together into a mound on a work surface.
- Scatter the diced butter
over the top of the flour. Quickly toss the butter in the flour so it's
all coated, then, using your fingers, rub it in until it resembles
breadcrumbs. Keep repeating the operation until it has the consistency of
sand.
- Gather the flour mixture
into a mound and make a well in the center.
- Pour the egg mixture and
the rest of the water into the well. Working quickly, incorporate the wet
ingredients into the flour, first with your fingertips then with a bench
scraper until just mixed but not brought together.
- Gently gather dough
together into a rough ball between your palms. If it stays together, it is
sufficiently moist. If it doesn't stay together, add a touch more water
and repeat the process.
- Using the palm of your
hand, push away from you to smear the dough across the work surface,
gather it up and repeat until it comes together into a smooth, soft ball.
You aren't kneading, you are using the smearing action to bind the
elements of the dough without developing the gluten in the flour. The
dough ball shouldn't spring back when pressed.
- Lightly flour your work
surface and lightly roll the dough out to about 3mm thick in a circle to fit
your pan. Press the dough gently into the pan, prick all over the bottom
with a fork.
- Line the tart pan with
baking paper and fill with dry beans or pie weights and bake until set, around
9 minutes. Remove pie weights and paper and bake another 6 minutes, until
dry.
- Remove the pastry from the
oven and allow to cool in the pan. Leave the oven on.
Filling
For the caramel
- Spread the sugar evenly
across the bottom of a small, heavy-based, noncoated saucepan (it needs to
be metallic so you can see the color). Heat over a medium-low heat without
stirring until the sugar starts to melt and becomes liquid around the
edges. Once about a quarter of it has melted, gently stir continuously
with a wooden spoon or heat-proof spatula until it turns a deep amber color,
a few minutes depending on how high the heat is.
- Remove from heat and very
slowly and carefully pour all (100ml) of the hot cream into the caramel, stirring
continuously - it will splutter and steam so be very careful as it is
extremely hot. The cream needs to hot and poured very slowly, otherwise
the caramel will seize. Keep stirring until it stops bubbling and is well combined
then set aside to cool.
- For the chocolate mousse
- In a medium bowl, whisk
the eggs together with the milk (and powdered sugar, if using).
- In a small heavy-based saucepan,
bring all (200ml) of the cream to a boil.
- Remove cream from heat and
add the broken chocolate. Stir until the chocolate has melted completely
and the mixture is smooth. Let cool a few minutes.
- Pour the chocolate mixture
into the egg and milk mixture and stir gently with a spatula to obtain a
smooth cream.
- Spread the cooled caramel
in the bottom of the cooked tart shell.
- Gently pour the chocolate
cream over the caramel so you don't disturb it.
- Place the tart into the
hot oven and bake for 30 minutes, until the filling has set but is still wobbly
in the center.
- Remove the tart from the
oven and allow to cool to room temperature. If using a tart pan with
- removable bottom, unmold
before serving.
Crack pie
Crack pie is a lot like a Canadian butter tart so, of course, it is amazing! Warning: it is super sweet!
Servings:12
Preparation time: 40 minutes
Baking time: 18 + 50 minutes
Cooling time: 1 hour + 2 hours, approx.
Chilling time: overnight
Ingredients
Oat Cookie Crust
9 tablespoons (1 stick + 1 tbsp) (135 ml) (4½ oz) (125g) unsalted butter, room temperature, divided (6
& 3 tbsp; 85gm & 40gm)
5 1/2 tablespoons (85 ml)(2½ oz) (70 gm) (packed) light brown sugar, divided (4 & 1½ tbsp; 50 gm & 20 gm)
2 tablespoons (30 ml) (30 gm) (1 oz) white sugar
1 large egg
3/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons (210 ml) (80 gm) (2¾ oz) old-fashioned oats
1/2 cup (120 ml) (2½ oz) (70 gm) all-purpose flour
1/8 teaspoon (2/3 gm) baking powder
1/8 teaspoon (2/3 gm) baking soda
1/4 teaspoon (1½ gm) salt
Filling
3/4 cup (160 ml) (170 gm) (6 oz) white sugar
1/2 cup (packed) (120 ml) (100 gm) (3½ oz) light brown sugar
1 tablespoon (15 ml) (8 gm) (¼ oz) dry milk powder
1/4 teaspoon (1½ gm) salt
1/2 cup (1 stick) (120mlk) (4 oz) (115gm) unsalted butter, melted, cooled slightly
6 1/2 tablespoons (100ml) heavy whipping cream
4 large egg yolks
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Powdered sugar for dusting 5
Instructions
Oat Cookie Crust
- Position rack in center of oven and preheat to moderate 350°F/180°C/gas mark 4. Line a 13x9x2 inch/33x22x5cm metal baking pan with parchment (baking) paper. Lightly spray or butter a 9 inch/22cm diameter glass or ceramic pie dish.
- Combine 6 tablespoons (85 gm) of the softened butter, 4 tablespoons (50 gm) of the brown sugar and the white sugar in medium bowl. Using an electric mixer, beat until light and fluffy, about 2 minutes.
- Add egg and beat until pale and fluffy, about 1 minute.
- Add oats, flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt and beat until well blended, about 1 minute.
- Dump oat mixture into prepared baking pan and press out evenly to edges of pan.
- Bake until light golden, 18 minutes. Transfer baking pan to wire rack and cool cookie completely, about an hour.
- Using your fingertips, crumble the cookie a into large bowl - there should be no identifiable pieces of cookie remaining. Add the remaining 3 tablespoons (45 gm) butter and 1-1/2 tablespoons (20 gm) brown sugar. Rub in with your fingertips until the mixture is moist and sticks together when pressed between your fingers.
- Transfer cookie crust mixture to pie dish. Using your fingers, press mixture evenly onto bottom and up sides of pie dish (about 1 inch/2.5cm up the sides if your pie dish is deep). If your pie dish is shallow, place it on a baking sheet in case of overflow.
Filling
- Position rack in center of oven and preheat to moderate 350°F/180°C/gas mark 4. If possible, use bottom-only heat, or the filling may brown too quickly.
- Whisk both sugars, milk powder, and salt together in a medium bowl.
- Add melted butter and whisk until blended.
- Add cream, then egg yolks and vanilla and whisk until well blended.
- Pour filling into crust.
- Bake 30 minutes (filling may begin to bubble up). Reduce oven temperature to 325°F/160°C/gas mark 3. Continue to bake until filling is brown on top and set around edges but center still jiggles slightly, about 20 minutes longer.
- Cool pie completely in pie dish on wire rack. Chill uncovered overnight.
- Sift powdered sugar lightly over top of pie. Cut pie into thin wedges and serve cold.
Crack pie: Bon Appetit http://www.bonappetit.com/recipes/2010/09/crack_pie
Chocolate and caramel tart: Pastry from chefsimon http://chefsimon.com/pate-sablee.html, filling
from Valéry Drouet's "Chocolat"
Those look incredible! Thanks for sharing :)
ReplyDeleteHappy Blogging!
Happy Valley Chow
Strawberries and chocolate and caramel - oh my! Both pies look so good. I can't wait to try the crack pie :)
ReplyDeleteYour Chocolate and Caramel tart looks delicious and your Crack Pie is fantastic!
ReplyDeleteLove your photos :)
They both look so beautiful! Thanks so much for baking with me this month :)
ReplyDelete