SAVOURY TARTLETS…Crisp & pretty appetizers.

“Food is for eating, and good food is to be enjoyed…I think food is, actually, very beautiful in itself.”
Delia Smith
SAVOURY MINI TARTS
TOPPED WITH SWEETCORN & MUSHROOMS…

I love the idea of using my spare time creating leftover sweet (or savoury) nothings! There is no ‘main dish pressure’, the leftovers are mine to use; no demands whatsoever. The end result is always full of suspense! These little tarts are the result of one such experiment…

A FRESH BASIL LEAF ADDS TO COLOUR & TASTE
I made these teeny savoury tartlets with the pastry dough left over from the quiche the other day. Once lunch was served & done with, everyone retired to whatever they wanted to; I took over the kitchen once again. The tartlets were lovely & crisp; vegetarian too.

I cut out circles with a fluted cookie cutter, placed the cut-out circles in a mini tart pan & baked them. Then topped the little bites with left-over corn & mushroom mix from the quiche. They turned out very enjoyable indeed & looked quite nice too. I loved the look of the crisp pastry, with the cheesy topping & finally the basil leaf. They got made real quick, went under the grill for 5 minutes & were tasty little bites. Perfect for finger-food & appetizers. These are vegetarian, but you can use any topping you like…just 1 tsp of topping is good for each tartet.

Here’s what I did…
  • The recipe for the pastry is the same as for the quiche, which you can find here.
  • The topping is also the same as the mushroom mix as in the quiche filling, just till the stir frying bit in the pan. The other tarts use just steamed sweetcorn which I made from a fresh ear of corn. You can use frozen sweet corn if you like.
  • Roll out the pastry as thin as you can. Cut out 2-3″circles with a fluted cookie cutter, or even a plain one will do. Place them in the tartlet pan & bake at 180 degrees C for 10 minutes/till light brown.
  • Cool on racks.
  • Place a tsp of the mushroom mix each on half the tartlets. Top with cheese spread, oregano & a basil leaf. sprinkle with a little grated cheese.
  • On the rest, add a tsp of sweetcorn (seasoned lightly with salt & pepper). Top with cheese spread, oregano & a basil leaf. Sprinkle with a little grated cheese.
  • You can also mix the sweetcorn & mushroom to get different flavours; I kept them separate because of the kids. Just make sure the topping isn’t watery/liquidy because that will ruin the crispness of the pastry.
  • Place under a medium grill (180degrees c) for 5 minutes.
  • That’s it…serve hot, warm or at room temperature.
  • Use toppings that you like…tuna & corn; chicken…whatever; this was just an experiment!
  • The pastry tarts can be baked a couple of days in advance. Store in an airtight tin in a cool place.

THEY WERE REALLY NICE…We loved them!

I found just the right platform to send these to…Leftover Tuesdays at Project Foodie. As foodie Pam writes,”Leftover Tuesdays #11 challenges you to transform your leftovers into tasty temptations and tell us all about it.” How apt…always amazed by how much sense some things make.

Am tempted to, & so, will send these for Mansi’s ‘Game Night Party’ at Fun and Food as well. These make for nice finger food which can be assembled in advance. Let the party go on!!

TO QUICHE OR NOT TO QUICHE…A mushroom quiche & wholesome lunchboxes!

” I asked the barmaid for a quickie. The man next to me said, ‘It’s pronounced ‘quiche’ “…
(on occasional perils of speaking a foreign language)
Luigi Amaduzzi, Italian Ambassador in Britain.
A MUSHROOM QUICHE…

At home, the lines are firmly drawn as far as the quiche story goes…or more suitably, the ‘quiche’ war. On one side, stand the son & me, who are not great egg fans at all; me far worse than him! The rest on the other side. It’s the quintessential question…to quiche or not to quiche? One wonder’s why I make it anyway. Well, firstly the die-hard baker in me overtakes the egg-disliker; & then, I actually like the idea of a savoury pie (which the son might enjoy in time). It’s only in the winter months when one can truly enjoy the rather filling slice of savoury pie…eggs + cream + butter! In summer, one would gladly settle for something much lighter!

I’ve made a quiche after almost 4 years. Leafing through a baking book the other day, I chanced upon a picture of a quiche, which was enough to set me off. I had a slice as well…it was quite nice actually. The son had a slice too, though he didn’t look like he was enjoying himself too much. The rest of the quiche disappeared into a sumptuous lunch for the eggy side of the family. Even the daughter, who was running a 102 viral fever, devoured it happily! PHEW…another meal completed & another day gone!

Quiche is a rich unsweetened custard pie, often containing ingredients such as vegetables, cheese, or seafood. Although quiche is now a classic dish of French cuisine, quiche actually originated in Germany, in the medieval kingdom of Lothringen, under German rule, and which the French later renamed Lorraine. The word ‘quiche’ is from the German ‘Kuchen’, meaning cake. Quiche can be served as an entrée, for lunch, breakfast or an evening snack.

Ingredients:
Crust:
Flour – 1 cup
Butter – 1/2 cup / chilled & cut into pieces
Chilled water as required
Method:
  • Preheat the oven to 190 degrees C.
  • Sift the flour into a bowl.
  • Cut the butter in with either your finger tips or a pastry cutter till it becomes a breadcrumb like mixture.
  • Add chilled water & gently pull together to a firm dough. DO NOT OVERWORK or KNEAD dough, or you will get a tough crust.
  • Wrap in clingfilm & chill for about 30 mins.
  • Roll out to a diameter 2 inches larger than size of pie dish. Carefully place in dish, trim edges as required, leaving a 1/2″ overhang. REMEMBER that the crust always shrinks while baking, so don’t be tempted to stretch it to fit the dish. ( I’m always tempted!)
  • Cover with foil, then top with pie weights or beans, & bake blind for 15 minutes. Remove weights & foil & bake for a further 10-15 minutes till light golden brown.
  • Leave on rack.

Filling:

Mushrooms – 200gms/ finely sliced
Juice of 1 lime
Basil, parsley or coriander – 1 tbsp / finely chopped (optional)
Sweetcorn kernels – 1/2 cup
Garlic – 3-4 cloves / finely chopped
Cheese – 100-150gms / grated
Cream – 200ml (I use light cream 25% fat) (original recipe has 300ml)
Salt, pepper etc
Eggs – 3
Tomato – 1-2 / sliced for topping

Method:

  • Preheat the oven to 190 degrees C.
  • Heat 1-2 tbsps of olive oil in a frying pan. Stir in the mushrooms, garlic & lime juice.
  • Season with salt & pepper. Cook until the mushrooms give out their liquid.
  • Increase heat & cook until dry. Stir in herbs; adjust seasoning.
  • Whisk the eggs, cream & half the grated cheese.
  • Stir in the mushrooms.
  • Sprinkle the remaining cheese over the bottom of the pie shell & pour the mushroom filling over the top.
  • Bake for 15 minutes till it starts setting. take out of oven gently & place overlapping slices of tomatoes on top.(I put them on half & left the other half plain)
  • Return to oven & bake further for 20 minutes, till puffed up & brown.
  • Serve warm or at room temperature.

Read about an interesting foodblogging event at Coffee & Vanlla , Margot’s blog, the other day…a ‘Wholesome Lunchbox’ event – looking for some lunchbox ideas for kids. Margot has worked out a nice balanced lunchbox & I’m trying to fill it up as best as I can. The tummy-filler comes from this post, which is a slice of quiche.

The rest are from below…recipes/posts that I have done previously. The five-a-day options & dairy products are covered by the raisins & nuts, steamed brocolli & the fruit kabobs which have fruit & cheese too. There’s plenty of taste & ease of eating. The sweet something is a slice of Chocolate, Chocolate-chip & Walnut cake (my own recipe, a delicious moist cake, which has some wholewheat flour & yogurt in it too). Would finish it off with a drink of water or lime juice. My daughter would be over the moon if I could get all these into a box for her on the same day.

Novel idea Margot…got me thinking ‘lunchboxes’!

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