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Tart Pastry

December 22, 2012 Leave a Comment

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Tart Pastry

This recipe yields a buttery, crisp crust, and unlike a standard pate brisee, or pie crust, it will not get tough with handling. It can be sweetened by adding 1 ½ tablespoons of sugar to the flour – and can be mixed in a food processor! It works wonderfully with my gluten free flour recipe
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Ingredients
  

  • 1 cup flour all purpose or gluten free
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 6 tablespoons of very cold butter cut in small pieces
  • 1 egg yolk

Instructions
 

  • Mix the flour and salt (and sugar, if using) together in a bowl.
  • Cut the butter into the dry ingredients using a pastry blender, two knives, or your fingers, until the mixture resembles coarse meal or tiny peas.
  • In a separate bowl, whisk the egg yolk and 2 Tablespoons water together.
  • Add the liquid to the dry ingredients and blend until the pastry is smooth and holds together in a ball.
  • If you are using a food processor, process the flour, salt (sugar, if using) and butter pulsing quickly, until the mixture resembles coarse meal. Turn the processor on and add the egg yolk/water mixture thru the feed tube, processing until the dough balls up around the blade.
  • On a piece of plastic wrap, form the dough into a disk, wrap with plastic wrap and refrigerate for at least 20 minutes.
  • This dough can be rolled out with a rolling pin, but the dough must be chilled for at least 30 minutes before rolling.
  • I find the easiest way is to pat the dough into a pie, tart, quiche, or springform pan using my hands.
  • Pull pieces of dough from the chilled ball and press them over the bottom and sides of the pan, using your fingers and the heel of your hand. The dough should be thick enough to hold the filling, but be careful that it is not too thick around the bottom edge or the finished tart will seem gritty and coarse.
  • If time allows, cover the pastry-lined pan and refrigerate it before filling and/or baking.
  • Bake as directed in the filling recipe, or prick the bottom with a fork and bake it unfilled for 12 minutes in a preheated 425º F oven. If you are using a springform pan, do not remove the sides until you are ready to serve the tart.

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Here’s what’s Happening on the Homestead

Spring.  Just the word congers up images of blossoms and bunnies, eggs and chicks. . . . and catalogs filled with tableware, linens and all the fresh spring color imaginable. . . . so when my spring edition of the Pier1 catalog arrived – I was immediately drawn to devour every page.  The dinnerware, table settings, linens were, in typical Pier1 form, a wonderful feast for the eyes. pier1-catalog-page

But, there was one thing that especially drew my attention. . .their adorable folded napkins – especially the little bunnies in the upper right corner of the page. The catalog directed readers to log on to their website for instructions  – which I immediately did.

Upon arriving at the page, I  searched for the Bunny Fold pier-one-bunny-ears-directionsand found this.   I grabbed some cloth napkins (which happened to be from Pier1) and, following their directions, began folding.  It only took me to the 4th step to figure out that there was a real problem with the directions – they were rolling from the wrong side of the napkin. . . and by the final step – it was unmistakable.

wrong-way-bunny-napkinI had created this.  I took an unfolded napkin and the directions to my husband – who, as a builder, reads instructions for a living  . . . and his response was immediate – these are not right.  They have rolled from the long side and not the point – and used directions for a granny knot.  It needs to be an ‘overhand’ knot.  (50 plus years of scouting – he should know his knots!)

After making a few simple changes – rolling from the point and using an overhand knot – the finished product looked like the one in the Pier1 picture.  Success!    folded-bunny-napkin-perfection

 And so, as much as I LOVE Pier1, no one is infallible.  I have done my own set of instructions, including pictorials, for your use should you be wanting to try these little treasures.  Such a simple way to dress up a spring  or Easter table.

Just Click Here to go to the instructions.  Happy Spring!

Enjoy,

Kathy

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