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Peach & Rosemary Almond Tarts

by Richard Bertinet from Pastry

A wonderfully sophisticated summer peach tart from French pastry chef Richard Bertinet's best-selling Pastry cookbook. The punch of rosemary marries perfectly with the heady sweetness of perfectly ripe peaches in this sweet French tart recipe. Ideal served with a glass of rosé wine.

From the book

Richard Bertinet

Introduction

Peach and rosemary might sound like an unusual combination, but the flavours of the fruit and herb work really well together – though you could substitute some sprigs of thyme or lavender if you prefer. Granulated sugar is much cheaper than caster sugar, and is fine for making things such as syrups. The syrup used to poach the peaches in this recipe can be stored in the fridge and simply boiled again when you want to use it for another recipe. Remember to skim off any impurities that come to the surface, and add a little water if the syrup needs to be thinner. It can also be used instead of apricot jam to glaze the tarts (see Variation).

If you wish, you can fill the pastry cases with almond cream, then freeze them, ready to bake. Alternatively, you can bake them, then freeze, defrost and warm them through before poaching the peaches.

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Ingredients

1 quantity Sweet or Almond Pastry (see ingredients below)
butter or baking spray, for greasing the tins
1 quantity almond cream (see ingredients below)
about 200g clear apricot jam, for the glaze (optional)
rosemary sprigs, for decoration
For the poached peaches:
500g granulated sugar
2 sprigs rosemary
10 peaches
For the sweet pastry:
350g flour
125g butter
125g sugar
2 eggs plus one yolk
pinch of salt
For the almond cream:
250g unsalted butter
250g caster sugar
250g ground almonds
50g flour
3 eggs
2 tbsp Poire William liqueur or rum, or equivalent

Essential kit

You will need four 16 cm loose-bottomed tart tins (2 cm deep) and a food processor.

Method

Make the pastry, then rest it in the fridge for at least 1 hour, preferably several, or, better still, overnight.

To make the dough by hand:

Measure out all your ingredients before you start, and break your 2 eggs into a small bowl– there is no need to beat them. Separate the remaining egg. Put the flour and salt into a mixing bowl.

Now for the cold butter. What I do is take it straight from the fridge and put it between two pieces of greaseproof paper or butter wrappers (I always keep butter wrappers to use for this, as well as for greasing tins and rings), then bash it firmly with a rolling pin.

The idea is to soften it while still keeping it cold. I end up with a thin, cold slab about a centimetre thick that bends like plasticine. Put the whole slab into the bowl of flour – there is no need to chop it up.

Cover the butter well with flour and tear it into large pieces.

Now it’s time to flake the flour and butter together – this is where you want a really light touch. With both hands, scoop up the flour-covered butter and flick your thumbs over the surface, pushing away from you, as if you are dealing a pack of cards.

You need just a soft, skimming motion – no pressing or squeezing – and the butter will quickly start to break into smaller pieces. Keep plunging your hands into the bowl, and continue with the light flicking action, making sure all the pieces of butter remain coated with flour so they don’t become sticky.

The important thing now is to stop mixing when the shards of butter are the size of your little fingernail. There is an idea that you have to keep rubbing in the butter until the mixture looks like breadcrumbs, but you don’t need to take it that far. When people come to my classes, I find they can’t resist putting their hands back into the bowl to rub it just a little bit more, but if you want a light pastry, it is really important not to overwork it. If the mixture starts to get sticky now, imagine how much worse it will be when you start to add the liquid at the next stage. Add the sugar at this point, mixing it in evenly.

Tip the eggs, and the extra yolk, into the flour mixture and mix everything together.

You can mix with a spoon, but I prefer to use one of the little plastic scrapers that I use for bread-making. Because it is bendy, it’s very easy to scrape around the sides of the bowl and pull the mixture into the centre until it forms a very rough dough that shouldn’t be at all sticky.

While it is still in the bowl, press down on the dough with both thumbs, then turn the dough clockwise a few degrees and press down and turn again. Repeat this a few times.

With the help of your spoon or scraper, turn the pastry onto a work surface.

Work the dough as you did when it was in the bowl: holding the dough with both hands, press down gently with your thumbs, then turn the dough clockwise a few degrees, press down with your thumbs again and turn. Repeat this about four or five times in all.

Now fold the pastry over itself and press down with your fingertips. Provided the dough isn’t sticky, you shouldn’t need to flour the surface, but if you do, make sure you give it only a really light dusting, not handfuls, as this extra flour will all go into your pastry and make it heavier.

When you flour your work surface, you need to do this as if you are skimming a stone over water, just paying out a light spray of flour. (Funny as it seems, people in my classes actually practise this, like a new sport.) You need just enough to create a filmy barrier so that you can glide the pastry around the work surface without it sticking.

Repeat the folding and pressing down with your fingertips a couple of times until the dough is like plasticine, and looks homogeneous.

Finally, pick up the piece of pastry and tap each side on the work surface to square it off so that when you come to roll it, you are starting off with a good shape rather than raggedy edges.

To make the dough with a food mixer:

Put the flour and salt into the bowl of the machine. Bash the butter as described in the hand-mixing method, then break it into four or five pieces and add it to the flour. Using a paddle attachment rather than a hook or whisk, mix the ingredients at a slow speed until the pieces of butter are about the size of your little fingernail. You will need to scrape the butter from the paddle a few times as it will stick. Add the sugar at this point and mix in well. Add the eggs, and yolk, and mix very briefly, until a dough forms. As soon as it does, turn it out onto your work surface with the help of your scraper and follow the hand-mixing method.

To make the dough with a food processor:

It is very easy to overwork pastry in a food processor, so be very careful. Put the flour and salt into the bowl of the machine. Cut the cold butter into small dice and add to the bowl. Use the pulse button in short bursts so that the flour just lifts and mixes, lifts and mixes. You don’t want to blitz everything into a greasy ball as that will result in hard, dense pastry. Add the sugar at this point and mix in well. Add the eggs, and yolk, then pulse briefly until the pastry dough comes together. Turn it out with the help of your scraper and follow the hand-mixing method.

To make the almond cream, beat the butter until very soft, preferably in a mixer. With the motor running, add the sugar and ground almonds and mix some more. Now mix in the flour, then the eggs, and finally the alcohol. Transfer to a small bowl and put in the fridge for 15 minutes.

To make the poaching syrup, put the sugar and 2 rosemary sprigs in a pan with 1 litre water and bring to the boil. Lower the heat and simmer until you have a colourless syrup.

Put the whole peaches into the syrup, bring to just below a simmer, then cook very gently for 20 minutes. Take off the heat and leave to cool.

Lightly grease four 16 cm loose-bottomed tart tins (2 cm deep).

Skim a fine film of flour over your work surface, roll out the pastry 5 mm thick and use to line the tins. Place in the fridge to rest for at least 30 minutes.

Preheat the oven to 180ºC/Gas 4. 

Using a spoon or piping bag, fill the pastry cases with the almond cream, then place on baking trays and bake for about 30 minutes, until golden. Leave in the tins for about 15 minutes, then lift out and cool on a rack.

Remove the peaches from the syrup (keep this to one side), peel the fruit, then cut in half carefully, as they can be a bit fragile. Remove and discard the stone.

With a skewer, make small holes in the baked almond cream and gently pour about 1–2 tablespoons of the syrup over each tart so it soaks in.

If making the apricot glaze, put the jam into a pan with a tablespoon or two of water and bring to just under a simmer – don’t let it boil or the jam will become too gooey to spread properly. Alternatively, make the syrup glaze below. Using a pastry brush,lightly glaze the top of the tarts: this will give the fruit something to stick to. Place 5 peach halves on top of each tart, cut side downwards, then glaze a bit more. Push small sprigs of rosemary into the fruit to decorate.

Variation

Poaching syrup glaze: Put 200 ml syrup into a small pan, bubble it up to reduce a bit, then take off the heat. Soak 2 gelatine leaves in cold water for a few minutes, then squeeze them out and put into a cup or bowl. Add a little of the hot syrup and stir until the gelatine has dissolved, then mix into the rest of the syrup. Leave to cool, then brush over the tarts.

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From the book: Pastry

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