Basic Flaky Crumbly Tart Crust - Pate a Sucre
- 75 grams Unsalted cultured butter (or regular unsalted butter)
- 1 pinch Salt
- 45 grams Powdered sugar
- 10 grams Trehalose
- 1 Egg yolk
- 110 grams Cake flour
- 25 grams Almond flour
- Return the butter and egg to room temperature.
- Sift the floury ingredients.
- The butter should be soft enough that your finger sinks right into it.
- Put the butter and salt in a bowl and cream together.
- Hold the whisk vertically and turn it slowly so that you don't incorporate too much air.
- Sift in the powdered sugar and trehalose in two batches.
- Cream it into the butter in the same way as in Step 2.
- Sift in the almond flour and mix in the same way until the combination is pale colored.
- Add the egg yolk and mix it in slowly, until the combination is the consistency of cream.
- If it looks like this photo, it's good.
- Change to a rubber spatula, and sift 1/2 the cake flour into the bowl.
- Mix up from the bottom in a cut-and-fold motion.
- While the mixture is still floury, add the rest of the cake flour and fold it in in the same way.
- When the flouriness is gone, fold the dough into one mass.
- Be sure not to over-knead the dough.
- You just need to fold it over 2 to 3 times after it's no longer floury.
- Cover tightly in plastic wrap or in a plastic bag.
- Form into a round flat ball.
- Let it rest in the refrigerator overnight.
- Roll the dough out between two sheets of plastic wrap.
- If the dough is too cold and hard and you try to forcibly roll it out it may break.
- Leave it to soften up a bit before rolling out in that case.
- If the dough is too soft though it is hard to form properly.
- Roll the dough out so it's rather larger than the tart pan.
- If the dough gets too soft while you are working with it, chill it again in the refrigerator before proceeding.
- Peel off the upper plastic wrap, and invert the dough onto the tart pan.
- Peel off the other plastic wrap.
- Push the dough into the pan while the edges hang over the sides.
- Make sure the dough is stuck securely to the bottom.
- Press it gently into the sides too.
- Make sure the dough is pushed well into the corners too.
- Roll the rolling pin over the pan to cut off the excess dough, and press in the sides again.
- Use a thick-tined fork to make lots of holes in the bottom of the crust.
- To prevent the crust from shrinking while it bakes, chill it at this point in the refrigerator for 1 hour.
- If you are using a filling with a lot of moisture, don't make the holes.
- To blind bake the crust, press in a piece of kitchen parchment paper and fill with pie weights.
- Preheat the oven to 180C, lower to 170C and bake the crust for 30 to 40 minutes.
- Please adjust the baking time depending on your own.
- Start checking after 30 minutes, and if it's still pale, bake some more.
- If it's already golden brown around the edges, it's done.
- When you check the crust for doneness, if it's still too pale, try taking the paper and weights out to finish baking.
- When the crust is baked, cool it on a rack for a little while before taking the weights out.
- Leave to cool in the tart pan.
- I forgot to put any weights in this time and added them in a hurry later, but it was too late...the bottom of the crust had already risen up a bit.
- Here I baked the crust with the weights in.
- It didn't puff up and the shape is nice and sharp.
- The edges are higher than the sides of the pan too!
- For fresh fruit tarts and other high-moisture fillings, brush the inside of the tart evenly with some beaten egg.
- You can use the leftover egg white for this!
- Bake the crust after brushing with egg for about 5 minutes in a 140C oven to dry it out.
- The egg forms a film that prevents moisture from seeping into the crust!
- For half-baked tarts or tarts that are baked without pre-baking the crust, refer to the recipe you are using for the precise temperatures and times.
- The dough is subtly sweet and delicious as cookies too, so if you are going to fill the tart with a very sweet filling, you may want to reduce the powdered sugar.
- I make cookies with the leftover dough.
- When I tried cutting it out with a 3 cm small heart shaped cutter I was able to make quite a lot.
- You could give them as a gift with the tart as a bonus.
- This recipe works for 18 cm to 20 cm diameter tart crusts.
- When I baked a 20 cm diameter crust, I had just enough left over to make 5 cookies like this.
- Here's an example of a recipe that uses this tart crust: Raspberry Berry Berry No-bake Cheesecake Tart.
- In small tart tins.
- Three-berry Cheesecake Petit Tarts.
- Blind-bake halfway and use it for this.
- Cherry Almond Crumble Tart.
- Peach Custard Tarts, made in five 9 cm diameter tart tins.
butter, salt, powdered sugar, trehalose, egg yolk, flour, flour
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/169446-basic-flaky-crumbly-tart-crust-pate-a-sucre (may not work)