Author Notes: This is a tart with an agenda. Its roots are old fashioned and small town but don’t let that fool you. It is as luscious and silky as Scarlet Johansson sauntering the red carpet. It is as lascivious as True Blood and as beaten-up as Mickey Rourke on a bad day. There are tarts and then there are tarts. The best are the kind that even your mama would like. Never suspecting or questioning what makes up its character but just enjoying it for what it is because it is so good. All the while, later, you know you are going to lick your fork like…well, lets just say it is a tart that likes to please and it will. Truly, it is like fine champagne on a Sunday afternoon. The basis of this tart has been around for a long time, the old fashioned egg custard pie, you know the one with nutmeg that has shown up at every family reunion since people started having reunions. Well, take that base and an idea from Alice Waters and her Madeira cream pots, add in the videos from Shuna Lydon about cooling your custard and then use duck eggs (again Waters’ idea) which make for an even silkier tart and what you come up with is nothing less than sexy. Never fear, I have written the recipe to use chicken eggs but if you ever come across fresh duck eggs, by all means use them to make a custard. – thirschfeld —thirschfeld
Food52 Review: Thirschfeld takes a seemingly simple custard tart and layers on the charm. After you slip through the heady, Madeira-laced flan center, you’ll hit the soft sandy crunch of the semolina crust and, before you know it, you’ll be reaching for another slice. With just 8 ingredients and a press-in crust, the process is simple but do take care. Chill your custard thoroughly (overnight if possible) to deepen the Madeira flavor and allow it to warm through gently in the oven. And if your oven runs hot or if you’re baking in a dark tart pan, start it at 350. It may take longer to bake, but just watch for that Jell-O jiggle. But even if it does heat up too quickly and bubble on top like ours did the day we shot the photo, have no fear — it’s still delicious, its charms just a bit more rustic (more Mickey Rourke than Scarlett Johansson, in thirschfeld’s terms). Amanda loved it served warm; Merrill dug it cooled to room temperature. – A&M —The Editors
Serves: 8
Ingredients
For the crust:
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1
cup all purpose flour
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1/4
cup semolina flour
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1/4
cup sugar
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1/2
cup unsalted butter, softened
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2
finger pinch of salt
For the custard:
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1 1/2
cups whole milk
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1/2
cup sugar
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1/2
teaspoon salt
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2
tablespoons madeira
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4
large eggs, or three duck eggs
Directions
- For the custard: Place the milk into a sauce pan and scald it over medium high heat. Remove the pan from the burner. In a mixing bowl whisk together the eggs, sugar, madeira and salt. Temper the eggs by whisking in a 1/2 cup of warm milk and then add the rest while whisking. Cover the bowl and place the custard base into the fridge. You want it to be cold. It can sit in the fridge overnight, which is probably best, but at least let it get to 35 or so degrees F. You could do this in an ice bath if you are in a hurry.
- Heat the oven to 350 degrees. In a large mixing bowl and using a large wooden spoon mix all the crust ingredients smashing the butter into the mixture with the back of the spoon until you have a cornmeal and couscous-looking crumble. You can use your hands rubbing them together with the mixture between them to make some of the bigger chunks smaller.
- Place an 8-inch tart pan onto a sheet tray. This will make it easier to move around and get out of the oven. Dump the crumbles into the tart pan. Press the dough up the sides, packing it tightly as you go, and then work toward the center until you have a crust. Prick the bottom a few times with a fork. Bake the crust for 20 minutes. Remove it from the oven.
- Turn the oven up to 400 degrees (350 if you’re using a dark pan or your oven runs hot). Strain the chilled custard through a fine mesh strainer to remove and albumen pieces. Pour the custard into the tart till it is half full. Place the tart into the oven and then finish filling the tart. You will probably have about a 1/2 cup of base left. I made a little extra so you wouldn’t come up short in case your tart pan was a little bigger.
- Bake the tart for 15 minutes and then reduce the heat to 350 degrees and bake it for another 20 to 30 minutes or until set. Depending on how cold your custard is, it will lengthen or shorten the baking time. If you give the sheet tray a gentle but sharp shake, the tart should jiggle like jello if it is done. If it creates waves that look like you dropped a pebble into still water continue cooking.
- When the tart is done, remove it from the oven and let it cool completely. Cut and serve.
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Simple ingredients with a couple smart twists: semolina, butter, whole milk, all-purpose flour, sugar, egg, Madeira (we used Rainwater and it was lovely).
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First thing (preferably the night before) get your custard going. Scald your milk, just till bubbles appear at the edges. Don't let it boil!
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Beat yourself some eggs, with sugar and salt. Thirschfeld is a fan of duck eggs, but chicken works too.
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The magic ingredient: Madeira, which gets added in with beaten egg, sugar and salt. You could substitute a dry port or sherry.
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Grab a buddy to whisk furiously while you drizzle in some scalded milk. Don't rush this — you don't want scrambled eggs, do you?
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Amanda dips and sweeps the flour — our standard measurement technique — while Merrill prepares thirschfeld's "two-finger pinch" of salt.
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One of thirschfeld's thoughtful details: adding semolina to the crust gives it a delicious, subtle crunch.
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The semolina's toothy texture, so helpful in pasta-making, also plays nicely off of the all-purpose flour and sugar.
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Unlike a pate brisee, the butter doesn't need to be ice cold here. Thirschfeld makes it easy on us by calling for softened butter…
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… which you get to just mash in with a wooden spoon (fun!).
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(Smash, smash.)
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… or your hands (even more fun!). You're going for an evenly incorporated, couscous-like texture.
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It should hold together when you scrunch it in your hand.
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Then you just press it into the tart pan — no rolling or delicate transferring.
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First use the surface of your whole hand to jump-start the process.
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Then pinch it up the sides.
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And nudge it into the corners.
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Then toss it into the oven to par-bake for 20 minutes. You may want to stab the bottom a few times with a fork so it doesn't puff, but no need to fill with baking beans — the semolina helps…
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Voila! Lightly browned and (once it cools) ready for some custard.
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Pouring your well-chilled custard through a strainer is the ultimate test of how well you've made your custard — it'll catch any scrambled bits.
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Good on us! No bits. To the oven!
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Dive in!
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