Basic Sweet Tart Crust (Pate a Sucre)
- 100 grams Cake flour
- 20 grams Almond flour (if you don't have any you can substitute cake flour. The texture and taste will be different.)
- 60 grams Butter (room temperature)
- 40 grams Granulated sugar
- 1 pinch Salt
- 1 Egg yolk
- Cream the butter.
- Put in the salt, and add the sugar in 2 to 3 batches, mixing well between additions.
- When the mixture becomes light and pale it's good.
- Add the egg yolk to the butter mixture, and mix in well.
- Sift the almond flour and cake flour in, and mix with a spatula.
- When the dough is no longer floury, bring together with your hands.
- Wrap with plastic film, and leave to rest in the refrigerator for at least an hour in the refrigerator.
- (I always make double the amount, and freeze half.)
- Butter a tart mold lightly and dust with bread flour (or if you don't have any, use cake flour instead).
- Shake out any excess flour.
- Sandwich the rested dough between 2 sheets of plastic film and roll out 3 mm thick.
- Line the tart mold with the dough, and cut off any excess dough by rolling a rolling pin over the mold or with a palette knife.
- Pierce the bottom with a fork.
- (If you have some time, cover with plastic wrap and rest for more than an hour in the refrigerator.
- This prevents the crust from shrinking while baking.)
- Line the crust with a piece of foil or kitchen parchment paper and put in some pie weights.
- (You can use adzuki beans or raw rice instead).
- Bake in a pre-heated 170C oven for 15 minutes.
- Take the weights out paper and all, and bake for another 15 to 18 minutes until golden brown.
- Take the crust out of the oven and leave to cool completely.
- Remove from the mold.
- You can also bake the crust without weights, but the shape will crumble a little bit.
- After Step 7 above, bake in a preheated 170C oven for 20 to 30 minutes.
- When it is a nice golden brown it's done.
- Point 1: In Step 9, if you cover the edges of the crust with foil too, you can prevent them from getting burned.
- Point 2: Be sure to mix the floury ingredients in well.
- If you don't mix them in well the crust may break apart easily.
- If you loosen up the dough before rolling it out, it will become firmer and stronger.
- If you are using the crust for a cheese tart or any filling that requires a partially baked crust, the baking time will vary depending on the recipe.
- If you will be filling the crust with custard or similar, take the crust out of the oven 5 minutes before it's done, and brush the bottom thinly with beaten egg (or beaten egg white), and return to the oven.
- Use the tart crust for fresh fruit tarts, chocolate tarts, no-bake cheese tarts and more.
- I made cookies with leftover dough.
- Crispy and delicious!
- I tried baking a not-so-sweet sweet potato filling in this crust.
- you can even bake a Rilakkuma by adapting this crust.
flour, flour, butter, sugar, salt, egg yolk
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/169511-basic-sweet-tart-crust-pate-a-sucre (may not work)