I'm exploring the world of cooking from my home in Melbourne, Australia. I know I've become fanatical because I now keep cookbooks by my bed! Define esurientes? The hungry! This word pops up in my singing regularly and, for me, the term perfectly combines my passions for good food & good music. Email: esurientes2(at)yahoo.com.au
Saturday, June 18, 2005
SHF: Tarte Tatin of 1001 Arabian Nights
This month's Sugar High Friday, with the theme of tarts filled me with possibilities. I had all but decided to make a rhubarb tart when we found ourselves at a winery and cidery just outside Bendigo over the long weekend (Bress Winery & Cidery, Harcourt. Website not yet launched). After buying some excellent cider, which tasted like champagne with an appley aftertaste, the winemaker (cideron?) pointed us to a big crate of aples from the orchard and told us to help ourselves. 'Make a tart!' he suggested.
'Ah ha!' we thought. Not only do we have free ingredients for our SHF tart, but we have ingredients with a story! Why the Arabian Nights? We decided to go with a Middle-Eastern feel for this standard recipe.
So, we collected about 1.5 kilos of Pink Lady apples, small enough to fit in your hand; unwaxed and full of real apple flavour. Not too sweet, but not too sour either, as it is the end of the apple season down here. These weren't cider apples though; apparently nobody could eat one of those; "far too bitter!' we were told.
We managed to hold off eating the whole lot, and saved enough for the tart. A few days earlier I decided to make the Processor Danish Pastry in Nigella's Domestic Goddess - post to come, but it was really easy, and I plan to make Almond Danishes with it soon - which I used as my base.
I started making this tart at 10.30 Friday night, after we'd come home from a long Bach Cantata rehearsal after a long day at work. Apart from the tedious peeling of the apples (my most HATED kitchen chore. Being left-handed poses so many problems sometimes!), this was really easy to do. We were eating tart by 11.30 while watching The Sound of Music, for the thousandth time, on tv.
As I have a few Middle-Eastern ingredients in the pantry at the moment, I decided to jazz up this standard tart a little, to make it stand out amongst the thousands of SHF entries. Plain Tarte Tatin - meh. But Tarte Tatin with some pomegranate molasses cooked with the apples, and splashed with orange blossom water and rosewater then sprinkled with chopped pistachios - now, that makes it more interesting!
Interestingly, I couldn't taste the rose or orange blossom water when it was cooked. The pomegranate came through, and made me think I should have reduced the sugar a litte; I found it a bit too sweet. I've reduced the amount in the recipe below. But I just had some cold for lunch, and I much preferred it today, at room temperature, when it tasted not so sweet. A. loved it last night, however, and thought it tasted 'just like stewed apples on pastry. Yummy!'.
Tasty and very easy. And if you can get somebody else to peel the apples, even better!
Read on for the recipe:
Tarte Tatin of 1001 Arabian Nights
Adapted from Nigella's Tarte Tatin in Domestic Goddess.
100 g butter
100g caster sugar
1kg apples, peeled, quartered and cored
2 tbl pomegranate molasses
1 tbl orange-blossom water
1tbl rosewater
Handful chopped pistachios
half-measure Danish pastry, rolled out and ready to use (or use frozen puff pastry or whatever you have)
Preheat the oven to 200C and put in a baking sheet.
Put the butter in the a cast-iron frying pan and heat. Let the butter melt and add the sugar. When it foams, add the prepared apples, arranging them in a circular pattern (as best you can), hump side down. Add the pomegranate molasses. Cook on high heat until the buttery, sugary juices turn a caramel colour and the fruit has softened a little. Now splash in your orange blossom and rosewater and chopped pistachios.
Take the pan off the heat, and leave it to stand for 10 minutes.
Roll the pastry thinly into a circle to fit the top of the dish, plus a bit of overhang. Lay it on top of the apples in the dish, tucking the edges in. Transfer the dish to the baking sheet in the oven and cook for 15-25 minutes, until the pastry is golden and the caramel syrup is bubbling.
Take the cooked tart out of the oven, place a large plate on top of the dish and, wearing oven gloves and with great care!, turn the whole thing upside down. Remove the dish and you should be presented with your tarte tatin, Patch together any dodgy looking bits, and serve with yoghurt or creme fraiche. Or cream!
Serves 6.
Oh yummy! An how inventive Niki, I'd never have thought of combining apples with the flower waters - sounds like it works a charm!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful tart Niki. I'll have to try it when it gets to be apple time again. Our McIntosh apples are somewhat sour. Loved the picture too.
ReplyDeleteNiki, this looks delicious! Sounds like a wonderful combination of flavors, too.
ReplyDeleteNiki, that is fantastic! We buy Pink Ladies all the time (out of context, one might think we're hiring high school girl gang members...), so I know they're available.
ReplyDeleteYou should invest in an apple/pototo peeler. We bought one a couple of years ago (I love mashed potatoes), and for less than twenty US dollars, we have found a gem. It attaches to your countertop by suction; you put the apple or potato on a spike, turn a handle...and the peel just comes right off! It's amazingingly simple, but a real time-saver.
I think your additions of the middle-eastern ingredients are brilliant; if Matt would eat fruit (naughty boy), he would just love this. As is, I'm grabbing your recipe, so I can make it for the in-laws. I know they'll enjoy it.
Wonderful job!
(And I've watched The Sound of Music at least as many times...)
Hello there!
ReplyDeleteI have been reading your blog for some time! I particularly love when you make Nigella's recipes. I have noticed that you haven't made her honey chocolate cake from 'Feast', which I thought was just divine. I would really recommend it.
Would you believe it? Matt says apple pie (tart, whatever...) is the one one variation he'll eat! I'll be making this soon...he's very interested in it.
ReplyDeleteZarah Maria - yes, it worked really well, but next time I'd use more of the flower waters to really bring out the taste.
ReplyDeleteAna - I think sour apples would work well with this tart. Maybe increase the sugar a little, but I think it'd be good.
Cathy - thank you!
Stephanie - I was actually thinking as I was sweating it out peeling these, that I'd love Dazey Peeler to do all the work for me. Realistically, I just wouldn't make nearly enough use of it, as we so rarely peel things. Ah well.
And I hope that Matt does enjoy this tart. It really is a yummy one.
Be-zen8 - Yes, I've thought about the honey chocolate cake, but I've heard a few reports that it's a bit too sweet. I'm not an overly sweet girl myself. I love my sweets, but I don't like things too much so, so that kind of warned me off. But if you recommend it, perhaps I should reconsider. I do enjoy good honey....
Jennifer & AG - thanks so much!
Mmmm.. looks delicious. The pistachios seem like such a wonderful addition. I will have to keep that in mind.
ReplyDeleteomg...your apples are so perfectly plump and they look so gorgeous on the tarte tatin!
ReplyDeleteNiki, your tart is so adorable! The apples look like apricots. It must be so yummy!
ReplyDelete