banner
alive logo
FoodFamilyLifestyleBeautySustainabilityHealthImmunity

Apple, Pear, and Quince Tarte Tatin

    Share

    This dessert is so easy that once you’ve tried the recipe, you’ll be using it to make your own caramel sauce in no time. Just watch carefully so the sugar doesn’t burn. Quinces from Australia will be available beginning in late February. Leave them out if you can’t find them now.

    Advertisement

    1/4 lb (100 g) butter
    4 small apples, peeled, cored, and sliced
    1/2 quince, peeled, cored, and sliced (optional)
    2 pears, peeled, cored, and sliced
    2/3 cup (150 mL) sugar
    1 cinnamon stick
    5 cloves
    1 Tbsp (15 mL) sultana raisins
    1/2 tsp (2 mL) vanilla extract
    4 disks prepared puff pastry
    Ice cream or whipped cream (optional)

    Preheat oven to 400 F (200 C). In small fry pan, melt 2 Tbsp (30 mL) of the butter and add all fruit, cinnamon, vanilla, and cloves. Sauté 8 minutes.

    In separate cast-iron skillet, melt remaining butter over medium heat. When it begins to bubble, add sugar and turn heat to low. Stir over low heat until sugar is dissolved. Increase heat to medium and cook until sugar begins to darken, but not boil (about 10 to 12 minutes). Keep an eye on the stove whenever sugar is cooking. Do not walk away.

    Pour caramel into bottom of 4 individual baking dishes, place fruit on top, and cover each with a puff pastry disk. Bake 10 to 15 minutes.

    Serve with ice cream or whipped cream flavoured with vanilla. Serves 4.

    source: "This February, Go West", alive #380, 2006

    Advertisement

    Apple, Pear, and Quince Tarte Tatin

    Advertisement
    Advertisement
    Advertisement

    READ THIS NEXT

    SEE MORE »
    Leek, Charred Spring Onion, and Garlic Scape Soup
    Food

    Leek, Charred Spring Onion, and Garlic Scape Soup

    Leek and potato soup is a spring classic and really shines with new-season leeks. This soup takes the classic recipe a step further in a celebration of spring alliums by adding charred spring onions and garlic scapes, the immature flowering part of the garlic plant. Unlike the garlic bulb, scapes impart a gentler, fresher garlic flavour. Garlic—two for one Hardneck varieties of garlic, such as Russian Red, develop a flowering stock called a scape, which extends from the plant in a green coil. Growing your own garlic will give you two crops—a crop of bulbs in late July and, prior to that, in late May or early June, tender garlic scapes. Harvesting garlic scapes, before they flower, not only provides a delicious crop you can use in myriad ways but also essentially helps the plant divert its energy to producing the garlic bulbs—the part we use most often. Scapes are ready to harvest when they curl downward and begin to coil.

    Roasted Artichokes with Serrano Ham and Marcona Almonds

    Roasted Artichokes with Serrano Ham and Marcona Almonds

    Artichokes can be somewhat intimidating. But once you’ve made your way past its spiky exterior and removed the thistlelike choke, there lies a tender heart with a sweet flavour. The meaty bases of artichoke leaves are also edible and make perfect dipping vehicles to scoop up sauce or, in this case, a stuffing with just a touch of Spanish serrano ham and Marcona almonds. Artichokes take a bit of care to prepare—and to eat—but they present a wonderful opportunity to slow down and savour flavourful ingredients. Don’t be afraid to use your hands! How to clean an artichoke Fill a bowl large enough to accommodate artichokes with water. Cut a lemon in half, squeeze the juice into water, and drop lemon halves into water. Cut a second lemon in half and set it aside. You’ll use this to brush the artichoke as you trim it to prevent the blackening that occurs as the artichoke is exposed to oxygen. You can also rub your hands with lemon, which will stop your hands from blackening. Wash and dry your artichoke. Remove tough leaves around the base of the stem by pulling them away from the body of the artichoke, rubbing artichoke with lemon as you do so. With serrated knife, cut through artichoke crosswise, about 1 in (2.5 cm) from the top. Rub exposed part with lemon. With kitchen shears, remove spiky tips of remaining outer leaves. Use peeler to remove small leaves near the stem and the tough outer layer of the stem. Rub peeled stem with lemon. Using serrated knife once more, cut through artichoke lengthwise, severing the bulb and stem. Again, rub all exposed parts with lemon. Use small paring knife to cut around the spiky, hairlike choke and then use spoon to scoop it out. Rinse artichoke quickly under water and then place in bowl of lemon water while you prepare the remaining artichoke.