Baking | Dorie Greenspans PEAR VANILLA & ALMOND FRANGIPANE TART … Thanksgiving

“Gratitude is the inward feeling of kindness received. Thankfulness is the natural impulse to express that feeling. Thanksgiving is the following of that impulse.”
Henry Van Dyke

Pear, Vanilla and Almond Frangipane TartI really haven’t had time enough to despair that stone fruit disappeared so soon. Even before I could sit back and lament that a good season had passed us rather quickly, the market was flooded with pip fruit. Pip fruit? Yes indeed, fruit of fall or autumn – apples, pears – any fruit with a ‘pip’! We’ve had a bumper crop of apples in the Himalayan belt, and that means a virtual explosion of native fruit on the shelves in the bazaar!Pears, apples, naqs {small Chinese pear I think} are literally rolling off shelves, tempting you to buy them. I found some great looking pears the other day, bought 4 and rushed home. I had a tart in mind – A Pear Frangipane Tart from Dorie Greenspans book Baking From My Home to Yours. That book was a winner in it’s own right, and a few years ago, saw an online baking group Tuesdays with Dorie get formed. Dorie recently released book Around My French Table is currently creating waves in the culinary world, and is on my wishlist. It’s a pleasure to see blogs from across the world enthusiastically ‘cooking the book!’ The lady herself is a pleasure to meet as I have enviably heard from so many of my twitter friends who have attended her latest book signing tour across the Americas. She seems so down to Earth, large hearted and FUN! About this particular tart, when I tweeted about how much I loved it, she replied…

doriegreenspan: @vindee I learned to make the pear-almond tart more than 20 years ago and everytime I’ve made it since, it transports me to France. {Original Tweet: http://twitter.com/doriegreenspan/statuses/29275428767}

There is a childlike exuberance in what I read about her, and that reflects in her recipes. They are warm, they are doable, they are from the heart. I used a part of Dorie’s recipe in these Apple Cinnamon Walnut Parcels. Was a wonder that something so simple could taste so special! I have a hunch she loves fall, because her repertoire has some quintessential fall recipes … endearing, warming, comforting! The house smelt of a boulangerie as this tart baked … cinnamon wafted through the kitchen into the living room, carrying with it the rich aromas of the butter tart. I was immediately transported the the streets of Paris, a city I long to visit, to sit at a road side cafe, a rustic boulangerie, enjoy a pain chocolat or crosissant, a pie slice, an apple turnover … with espresso!There was everything good about the tart. I ♥ frangipane, though I am still egg-phobic to some extent, so I added a scraped vanilla bean to the tart base or the pâte sablée. In my hurry to get it into the oven, I misread the recipe and forgot to bake it blind! I just chilled the unbaked shell in the freezer after lining my tart pan, and then turned the frangipane into it, topped it with the sliced poached pears and baked it.  Was still as good a crust as could be. Maybe I discovered a short cut. Maybe? {The recipe might look a little long, but if you poach the fruit in advance, it’s quick!}

The tart has all the possible warm and comforting flavours about it. As we were virtually talking a short while ago, a group of my foodie friends on Yahoo food groups decided to do a linky post for Thanksgiving {Amanda’s brilliant idea}, and I wasn’t too sure I would fit in.

Thanksgiving Day is a harvest festival celebrated primarily in the United States and Canada. Thanksgiving was a holiday to express thankfulness, gratitude, and appreciation to God, family and friends for which all have been blessed of material possessions and relationships. Traditionally, it has been a time to give thanks for a bountiful harvest. This holiday has since moved away from its religious roots.

I thought this just might fit in; time to give thanks to our bountiful harvest of pip fruit this fall. More importantly to express thankfulness for being here, being able to enjoy food and blogging, for being able to get healthy and delicious food to our table. Appreciation for all the inspiration that food blogs and cookbooks offer every single day! I am truly grateful for all of this … and also to Dorie for this fantastic recipe! We LOVED it!

This tart is another entry for the Monthly Mingle that I am guest hosting for my spicy-sweet friend Meeta. If you are BAKING WITH FRUIT this month, do send it in to Monthly Mingle posted HERE. You have until the 22nd of November to get the entries in!

Pear, Vanilla and Almond Frangipane Tart
adapted from Dorie Greenspan’s Baking: From My Home to Yours
Makes one 9-inch tart {I made a 10″ tart}
Pâte Sablée
1 1/2 cups flour
1/2 cup powdered vanilla sugar / confectioner’s sugar
1/2 teaspoon salt
9 tablespoon butter, very cold, cut into small pieces
1 egg yolkPoached Pears
4 ripe medium pears
3 cups water
1 cup sugar
Juice of 1 lime
1 cinnamon stick
5-6 cloves
1 vanilla bean scraped
1/8 teaspoon salt
6 tablespoons butter, at room temperature
2/3 cup vanilla sugar
1 cup ground almonds
2 teaspoons flour
1 teaspoon cornstarch
1 large egg plus 1 egg white
1 vanilla bean scraped {or 1 tsp vanilla extract}
1 teaspoons almond extract
For the pears :
Combine the water, sugar, lime juice, cinnamon stick, cloves, vanilla bean including scraped portion, and salt in a saucepan large enough to hold all the pears and bring to a simmer over medium-high heat. Meanwhile, cut the pears in half, remove the seed core and fibrous cores at either end, then peel the pears.
Add the pear halves to the simmering syrup and reduce heat to low. Cover, and let pears poach for about 10 minutes, turning them halfway. The pears will become slightly translucent, very tender, and easily pierced with a knife or skewer. {Make sure they don’t get overstewed}
Let the pears cool in the liquid until room temperature before using; or, you can store them in their liquid in the refrigerator for up to 3 days.
For the tart shell
Put the flour, vanilla sugar and salt in a food processor and pulse a few times to combine. Add the pieces of cold butter and pulse until the butter is cut into pea-sized pieces. Add the egg yolk and combine in several pulses until the dough starts to turn from dry to clumpy. Do not let the dough form one giant ball or it will be be overworked – just keep checking after every pulse and when the dough pieces looks like they will stick when you press them together, stop.
Tart shell:
Butter a 9-in tart tin with removable bottom. Turn the dough out into the tin and press into the bottom and up the sides with your fingers. You probably will not need all the dough – save the extra for patching the shell after you bake it. Do not press the dough too hard or it will become tough – just enough for it to form to the tin.
Freeze the tart shell for at least 30 minutes. When you are ready to bake it, preheat the oven to 190C.
To partially bake the tart shell, take a piece of foil and butter the shiny side, then press the buttered side tightly to the shell. You do not need pie weights. Place the tart shell on a baking sheet and bake for about 25 minutes, until the shell is dry and lightly colored. If any places have cracked, repair with the extra dough. Let cool on a rack until room temperature.
For the frangipane:
Combine the butter and sugar in the food processor and combine until smooth. Add the ground almonds and blend together. Add the flour and cornstarch, and then the scraped innards of the vanilla bean, almond extract, egg and egg white. Process the mixture until it is very smooth.The frangipane can be used immediately or you can store it in the refrigerator for up to 2 days. If it becomes too firm in the fridge, let it sit at room temperature for a while to soften before using.
To finish the tart:
Preheat the oven to 180C. Spread the frangipane evenly into the cooled tart shell {It should be liquid enough to smooth out on its own so you don’t need to work to much on it}.
Take the poached pears out of their liquid and drain them on paper towels. You don’t want too much excess liquid or they will make the frangipane soggy. Cut each pear half crosswise into 3/8 in thick slices. Do not separate the pear half yet.
Slide a spatula or other flat utensil underneath the pear so you can transfer the entire half onto the tart. Press on the pear to fan the slices toward the top narrow end of the pear.
Slide the pear half onto the frangipane carefully – you can move the pear after you place it, but not much.
Repeat with the other pear halves until they are evenly spaced.
Place the tart on a baking sheet and bake in the oven for about 45-50 minutes, until the frangipane is puffed, golden brown, and firm to the touch. Cool the tart on a wire rack.

Before serving, you can brush the pears with some warmed apple jelly to glaze, or dust confectioner’s sugar over the tart. {As you can see, I didn’t have time to do that. I set the timer for the tart to bake, and rushed off on ‘driver’ duty!}

♥ Thank you for stopping by ♥

~
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The Rabid Baker, The Times of India

Apple Pear Open Pie … come mingle with ‘Fruit in Baking’

“It is, in my view, the duty of an apple to be crisp and crunchable, but a pear should have such a texture as leads to silent consumption.”
Edward Bunyard

They’re rolling off shelves this year; apples are ruling the bazaar. Rosy, red and delicious like in Snow White & the Seven Dwarfs, my heart leaps with joy when I see local varieties tempting us with almost a forbidden promise! No more guilt ridden shopping for imported fruit this year. The past few years saw a drastic fall in local apple production. Tempting, shiny rosy apples bore the Washington stamp, with Chinese Red Fuji and Australian Granny Smith jostling for space alongside – priced high and positively jet-lagged. This year has been wonderful with record breaking local production in the  Kullu valley, which is nestled in the foothills of the Himalayas. A snowfall in the higher climbs  of the mountains 2 days ago brought more relief to the native population of the region as prospects for an record high output shine! Good for them, and good for us too!

With local produce  flooding the market, and the family reeling from an overdose of apple crumble, the next best option was apple pie, a first for me. I have loads of ‘apple to bake somethings‘ bookmarked, but had an open apple pie in my head! My father came by and dropped kilos of apples and small pears a few days ago. Some HAD to be baked, and the idea of a pie had me enchanted. The lad had seen me dig into cookbooks, turning pages, screeching to a halt at a delicious looking  American Apple Pie. He had been on my case since, but I was in no mood to do a double pastry one. Calories had to be cut, and I decided that my next best bet was an open pie, and the tiny pears would go in too.

This was my first ever Apple Pie … and was it good! I added the pears to keep the apples company. The pie is baked for about an hour, loosely covered with foil. This way the apples get cooked but retain a bit of bite, the pears silently accompanying them {somewhat like the quote above says}! The walnuts and currants add to deep warm flavours, tying in nicely with the cinnamon and nutmeg. I let the pie cool for a bit to let the juices thicken. The hub liked it served warm with some low fat unsweetened cream, and the rest of us enjoyed it cold, with the cream of course!

Pears are an excellent source of dietary fiber and a good source of Vitamin C. An apple, on average, contains more antioxidants than a large vitamin C dose of 1,500 mg. Apples are also full of phytochemicals that help with antioxidant activity, as well as in preventing cancer. Antioxidants combat particles in the body called free radicals, which can significantly damage the cells and may contribute to the development of certain cancer types. Apples can help turn all this around … read more here

Which brings me to the mingle. I am happy to host Monthly Mingle this month, the brain child of lovely Meeta of What’s For Lunch Honey. Being a HUGE fan of  ‘fruit in baking‘,  it was my my natural choice for the theme. Trying to include fruit in bakes, keeping it seasonal as far as possible, continues to be a passion with me. I enjoy following fruits in season, and discovering what more I can do with them. I loved doing the Chocolate Plum Clafoutis that Meeta beautifully wove into the MM badge below, and also recently, a Quark Mousse with Roasted Balsamic Strawberries.If you bake with fruit this month, do send it to the Monthly Mingle. I will set the table up at the end of November, where we can meet over tea & coffee, fun, food, stories and laughter … and of course fruity bakes! Would love to see what you did with fruit this Oct/Nov, and yes, pumpkin is very much a fruit {Er, as is a tomato, well technically!!}. Also, If you don’t have a blog, but still have a picture, do drop me a mail at vindee{at}airtelmail{dot}in, and I will be happy to include you in the round-up.

  1. Create a dish that fits the Fruit in Baking theme as described above, and post it on your blog from now till 22 Nov 2010 {Entries must be in English, please}.
  2. Your creation should be prepared for the current Monthly Mingle theme and only shared with a maximum of 2 other blog events. Let’s try and keep the creations as fresh as the ingredients you use.
  3. You must provide a link to this post and/or the official Monthly Mingle page.
  4. Once you’ve posted your dish, please send your entries to vindee{at}airtelmail{dot}in with your name, location, post link and a 300px wide picture {not bigger than 1 MB}

I am kicking the event off with this ‘Open Apple & Pear Pie’, and hope you’ll join me with ‘FRUIT in BAKING’.

Apple & Pear Open Pie
Pastry recipe and inspiration from Baking Course, Isabel Moore
Shortcrust Pastry
1 1/2 cup flour
1/2 tsp salt
6 tbsp/80gm butter, chilled, cut into pieces
2-4tbsp iced water
Method:
Run the flour and salt in the bowl of your food processor for a few seconds. Add butter and run until you get fine breadcrumb like mix.
Drizzle in 2 tbsp of water. The dough should begin to come together. Take out flour mix into a large bowl. Add another tbsp of chilled water, and knead the dough till it is smooth and silky. Add more chilled water if required, but make sure the dough is silky and pliable {This is important, else it won’t roll out}
Once it leaves the sides of the bowl cleanly, make into a ball, flatten, wrap in cling-wrap and chill for 30minutes.
Filling:
4-5 medium apples, cored, peeled, diced
8-10 small baby pears, cored,peeled, diced
Juice of one large lime
1/2 cup walnuts, chopped
1/4 cup raisins
1/4 cup black currants
2 tbsp cornflour
3/4 cup sugar
1 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
1/4 tsp freshly grated nutmeg
Method:
Toss the ingredients together in a large bowl as soon as the fruit is cut, mixing well.
Assemble pie…
Preheat the oven to 180C.
Roll out the pastry to line a 9″ pie dish {greased if you like}, and line the dish. {I used a 10″ loose bottomed dish, so the dough fell slightly short}. Add the filling to the pie base, dot over with 2 tbsp of unsalted butter, and bake at 180C for 20 minutes. Then cover cover loosely with foil and bake for a further 40 minutes. Cool on rack. Allow to sit for a while so that the juices thicken.
Note: Serve warm, at room temperature or chilled with unsweetened whipped cream, or a dollop of slightly sweetened cinnamon cream. Vanilla ice cream would certainly offer luxury on a warm slice!
♥ Thank you for stopping by ♥

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Also find me on The Rabid Baker, The Times of India

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