Menú

Tarte Tatin of Nectarines and Almonds

Desserts

This is in fact a very yummy Tarte to prepare and enjoy with family and friends. According to Wikipedia, The tarte Tatin is an upside-down pastry in which the fruit (usually apples) are caramelized in butter and sugar before the tart is baked. It originated in France but has spread to other countries over the years. The tarte Tatin was created accidentally at the Hotel Tatin in Lamotte-Beuvron, France, about 100 miles (160 km) south of Paris, in the 1880s. The hotel was run by two sisters, Stéphanie and Caroline Tatin. There are conflicting stories concerning the tart's origin, but the most common is that Stéphanie Tatin, who did most of the cooking, was overworked one day. She started to make a traditional apple pie but left the apples cooking in butter and sugar for too long. Smelling the burning, she tried to rescue the dish by putting the pastry base on top of the pan of apples, quickly finishing the cooking by putting the whole pan in the oven. After turning out the upside down tart, she was surprised to find how much the hotel guests appreciated the dessert. In an alternative version of the tart's origin, Stéphanie baked a caramelized apple tart upside-down by mistake, regardless she served her guests the unusual dish. However, whatever the veracity of this story, the concept of the "upside down tarts" was not a new one. For instance, patissier M. A. Carême already mentions glazed gâteaux renversés adorned with apples from Rouen or other fruit in his "Pâtissier Royal Parisien" (1841). The tarte became a signature dish of the Hôtel Tatin. Historians and gourmets have argued, whether it is a genuine creation of the Demoiselles (sisters) Tatin, or the branding of an improved version of the "tarte solognote", a traditional dish named after the Sologne region which surrounds Lamotte-Beuvron. Research suggests that, while the tarte became a specialty of the Hôtel Tatin, the sisters did not set out to create a "signature dish"; they never wrote a cookbook or published their recipe; they never even called it tarte Tatin. That recognition was bestowed upon them by Curnonsky, famous French author and epicure, as well as the Parisian restaurant Maxim's after the sisters' deaths. Cruious right ? This is the recipe and we really hope you enjoy it as much as we did:


Ingredients

  • 6 nectarines
  • 3 tablespoons of brown sugar
  • 50 g butter
  • 80 ml rum
  • Ice cream caramel (to taste)
  • 1 vanilla pod
  • (20x20cm) puff pastry
  • Cream of almonds:
  • 200 g sugar
  • 200 g almond powder
  • 6 egg whites

Preparation

HOW TO PREPARE:


⦿ We peel nectarines and cut them in half. Remove the red part of the interior.


⦿ We heat and let the brown sugar, butter and rum in a frying pan.


⦿ Cut the vanilla stick in half and remove the seeds from the inside. Add the seeds to the skillet and let them cook with the other ingredients.


⦿ Gilded nectarines in the frying pan over low heat.


⦿ Mix together sugar, almond powder and egg whites in a bowl.


⦿ Cut the puff pastry in the same size as the pan. Click the mass of puff pastry with a fork to prevent that it swells in the oven.


⦿ Remove the pan from the heat and cover the nectarines with almond cream.


⦿ We put the mass of the puff pastry on the pan. We introduce the pan into the oven and bake for 30 minutes at 170 degrees. 


⦿ We put a plate over the pot and turn it over. Place the pie on the plate.


Cut a piece of the cake and serve on a flat plate. Add a ball of ice cream (to taste) and decorate with mint leaves.


A delicious dessert and besides very healthy :-)