Other than using demerara sugar instead of white sugar to sprinkle on the fruit, and the substitution of the kaffir lime chili jam for the red currant preserves, I stuck to the Times recipe. The crust is a straightforward pate sucree, a crust that is pretty much foolproof. As the fruit is front and center, it's important that you use the best that you can find. I wouldn't attempt to make this tart with any fruit that you wouldn't be as happy eating fresh.
Friday, August 16, 2013
Peach and Nectarine Tart
After a month in Indonesia visiting family, Tjing and I returned to summer here in Northern California. It's the towards the tail-end of the season for stone fruits, and peaches and their clean shaven cousins, nectarines, are at peak sweetness. Going to the farmers market the morning after we got back, I picked up several pounds of perfectly ripe yellow peaches and white nectarines. Although they were fine eaten fresh without any adornment, I decided to use some to make this tart which I came across while surfing the web in Java. I liked the simple directness of the tart, its focus on the fruit, but I thought I'd give it an Indonesian tweak by using some lemongrass kaffir lime pepper jam instead of the red currant preserves it calls for. I thought a touch of heat with the fruit would be a nice touch.
Other than using demerara sugar instead of white sugar to sprinkle on the fruit, and the substitution of the kaffir lime chili jam for the red currant preserves, I stuck to the Times recipe. The crust is a straightforward pate sucree, a crust that is pretty much foolproof. As the fruit is front and center, it's important that you use the best that you can find. I wouldn't attempt to make this tart with any fruit that you wouldn't be as happy eating fresh.
I served this with some crème fraìche, as suggested in the original recipe, but a good vanilla ice cream would also go well with it. It is also fine just on its own.
Other than using demerara sugar instead of white sugar to sprinkle on the fruit, and the substitution of the kaffir lime chili jam for the red currant preserves, I stuck to the Times recipe. The crust is a straightforward pate sucree, a crust that is pretty much foolproof. As the fruit is front and center, it's important that you use the best that you can find. I wouldn't attempt to make this tart with any fruit that you wouldn't be as happy eating fresh.