Category : desserts

Pear Tart

This recipe is adapted from “The Way to Cook” by Julia Child (Knopf, 1989).  You can use any number of fruits for the tart, including pear, apple, peach, etc.  The recipe calls for an apricot glaze, but any jam or jelly will work.

Serves 4

Ingredients

  • 1/2 recipe of pie pastry dough, enough to make a 10″ diameter disk of pastry dough
  • several apples or pears, cored and sliced.  I do not peel the fruits.
  • apricot glaze or a jam or jelly
  • 1 1/2 tsp sugar

Roll out the pastry dough into a 10″ diameter disk (larger is ok).  Line a baking sheet with parchment paper, then put disk on the paper.  Leaving a 1″ border of the disk free, prick the bottom of the dough all over at 1/4-inch intervals with the tines of a fork.  Paint the fork-marked bottom with apricot glaze, and arrange the slices of fruit attractively on top (it’s nice to have a circle of overlapping slices).  Then crimp the edges of the disk to hold in the fruit and glaze, and sprinkle the fruit with the sugar.  Bake 30-40 minutes in the middle level of a preheated 450 degree oven, until the bottom of the pastry is crisp and brown.  Paint the finished tart with apricot glaze.

Apricot Glaze:

Apricot glaze is what makes tarts shimmer.  It is nothing but sieved apricot jam boiled wotn to the thread stage with a little sugar.  If you make a double or triple amount, it will keep for months in the refrigerator.

For 1 cup:

1 cup apricot jam
3 TBS sugar
3 TBS dark rum (optional)

Push the jam through a sieve to remove pulp and skin.  Blend it in a small saucepan with the sugar and optional rum, them bring it to a boil, stirring.  Boil several minutes until the last drops to fall from the tip of a spoon are thick and sticky – 228 degrees on a candy thermometer.  Use while still warm, or re-warm it; apply it with a pastry brush, with a table knife, or with the back of a spoon.

Big Woods Farm Pumpkin Pie

What Thanksgiving dinner would be complete without pumpkin pie?  This is the recipe for the pies we make for the farm Harvest Festival, using one small pie pumpkin per pie.  You can actually use a pie pumpkin or any dark-fleshed squash, such as butternut or buttercup.  This delicious recipe is adapted from “The Silver Palate Cookbook” by Julee Rosso and Sheila Lukins.  You can reduce the fat by substituting milk for some or all of the cream and half-and-half.

3 eggs
1/3 cup granulated sugar
1/3 cup brown sugar
2 cups mashed cooked pumpkin or squash
1 tsp ground ginger
1½ tsp ground cinnamon
½ tsp ground cloves
½ tsp ground allspice
1/8 tsp ground cardamom
Pinch of salt
¾ cup heavy cream
¾ cup half-and-half
Unbaked piecrust (see recipe below)

To cook the pumpkin(s), cut them in half, scoop out seeds and place cut side down on a greased cookie sheet.  Put about 1/4” water in the cookie sheet and bake in a 350ºF oven for about one hour, until the pumpkins are soft.  Remove from oven and let cool.  Scoop out the flesh with a large spoon.  If the flesh is slightly uncooked or stringy, puree in a food processor with a small amount of the half-and-half.

Preheat oven to 450ºF.  Beat eggs and both sugars together until light.  Stir in pumpkin, spices, and salt and mix thoroughly.  Stir in the cream and half-and-half.  Pour filling into the pie crust.

Bake at 450ºF for 8 minutes, then reduce heat to 325ºF and bake for another 45 to 60 minutes, until filling is set (a knife inserted in the center will come out clean).  Cool before serving.

Pie Crust

This crust recipe is from the cookbook “The Way To Cook” by Julia Child (Knopf, 1989).  I always receive compliments when I use it and it is not really all that difficult.  The recipe calls for a mix of all-purpose and cake flours, but I often use only all-purpose flour and still get a good crust.

For about 1 9-inch pie shell (with a little left-over dough)
1 ½ cups unbleached all-purpose flour (scooped and leveled)
½ cup cake flour
1 tsp salt
6 oz (1½ sticks) chilled, unsalted butter, quartered lengthwise and diced
¼ cup (2 oz) chilled vegetable shortening
½ cup ice water, plus a couple teaspoons more, if needed

Have all ingredients measured and ready to use.  Put the flour, salt, and diced butter in a food processor and pulse (on-off half-second clicks) 5 or 6 times to break up the butter roughly.  Add the shortening, turn on the machine, and immediately pour in the ½ cup of ice water, then pulse 2 or 3 times.  Remove the cover and feel the dough – it should look like a bunch of small lumps, and will just hold together in a mass when you press a handful together.  (It’s important not to overmix; it should not mass on the blade of the machine).  If too dry, pulse in a couple of teaspoons more water.  From now on work rapidly to keep the dough cold and mangeable.

Turn the dough out onto your work surface; press it into a rough mass.  For the final blending, rapidly and roughly, with the heel (not the palm) of your hand, push egg-size clumps of dough out in front of you in a 6-inch smear. Again, it is important not to overmix – what you want is layers of flattened butter lumps that barely hold together – this gives the crust the flakiness.

Form the dough into a cake – it should be fairly smooth and pliable.  Put into a resealable plastic bag (e.g a Ziploc bag) and refrigerate.  Freshly-made dough should chill 2 hours at least, allowing the flour particles to absorb the liquid, as well as to firm the butter and relax the gluten.

When ready to assemble the pie, put the dough on a work surface and roll out the dough about ¼-inch thick and about 1½ inches larger than the circumference of the pie plate.  Because the dough has such a high butter content, it is important to work quickly so the butter does not soften.  If the dough loses its chill and becomes difficult to handle (i.e., soft and sticky), return to the refrigerator for 20 to 30 minutes.

When pie crust has been rolled out, roll up the dough a rolling pin and transfer to the pie dish.  Cut edge and crimp with fingers or a fork.

Beet Chocolate Cake

Beet Chocolate Cake

From Asparagus to Zucchini cookbook, by the  Madison Area Community Supported Agriculture Coalition

2 cups sugar
2 cups white flour
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
3 – 4 oz. unsweetened chocolate
4 eggs
1/4 cup oil
3 cups shredded beets

Heat oven to 325 degrees F.  Grease two 9-inch cake pans.  Whisk dry ingredients together.  Melt chocolate.  Cool chocolate; blend thoroughly with eggs and oil.  Combine flour mixture with chocolate mixture, alternating with the beets.  Pour into pans.  Bake until fork can be removed from center cleanly, 40 – 50 minutes.