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Tomato tarte Tatin

Updated: Tue, 30 July, 2024

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Tomato Tatin is the best made with skinned plum tomatoes and shortcrust pastry from scratch. Yes, it’s a bit of work but you won’t regret a single second of the effort.

tomato tarte tatin cuisinefiend.com

Is it dinner or dessert?

It’s true what everyone says about a plum tomato Tatin: it looks like a dessert. Only a dollop of whipped cream seems to be missing. Are these small apricots? Or very firm plums? Should I dust it with icing sugar or grab the tub of vanilla ice from the freezer?

When you look closer, the garlic gives the game away.

tomato tatin cuisinefiend.com

Shortcrust or puff pastry?

You can of course cut corners and use puff pastry; I’ve done the easy version myself. But it’s so much more rewarding when the tarte is a proper tarte.

Slicing into shortcrust base rather than squishy puff which goes soggy much too soon is worth the effort of making the pastry from scratch.

And the texture of crunchy crust work better with sweet slippery tomatoes.

upside down tomato tart cuisinefiend.com

Worth the effort

Tomatoes are also a bit of a chore to prepare: blanching, peeling, deseeding, salting. And shortcrust pastry needs to be chilled, then rolled out and chilled again. Plus the caramel glaze burns far too easily when prepared.

It’s all worth it. Medium sized plum tomatoes, Santini or mini San Marzano are the best for this recipe, at least as far as British tomato supply is concerned. They keep their shape fantastically well after peeling and they don’t turn mushy like some other varieties, when blanched.

savoury tarte tatin cuisinefiend.com

The pastry

This is the rich version of savoury shortcrust, with added cheese. The combination of cornmeal and plain flour makes it wonderfully crisp and the thyme adds fragrance. I recommend making twice the amount and freezing half for another exquisite tarte occasion.

But the method is simple: blitz all the ingredients in a food processor or rub the butter into the flours mix with your fingers, then stir in water and knead briefly into a ball. It needs to chill so it’s not excessively crumbly when rolled out.

shortcrust pastry cuisinefiend.com

How to skin tomatoes for the Tatin

I’ve admitted it’s a bit of a palaver since the tomatoes should be skinned. You can skip that, but then you’ll be inelegantly picking skins from the elegant tarte later.

And it’s easier than it seems: score the tomato tops, then plunge them into boiling water for half a minute. Then transfer them into icy water and the skins will start peeling off by themselves.

peeling tomatoes cuisinefiend.com

Deseeding, next: with a small spoon or knife scrape the seedy innards. To make sure they are not too watery, sprinkle cut halves with salt and turn onto paper towels for half an hour.

deseeding tomatoes cuisinefiend.com

How to prepare the tarte

The pastry will come on top, obviously, but you’d better roll it out before assembling the tarte. Make it slightly larger than your dish or tin which should be 23cm/9 inch in diameter.

rolling out pastry cuisinefiend.com

The caramel glaze is best made straight in the dish, in the oven – just make sure you don’t burn it.

Garlic, thinly sliced, goes into the caramel with thyme sprigs, then the tomatoes, patted dry off the salt, cut side up.

The pastry disc should cover them and be tucked in around the sides. Cut a couple of vents in it for steam and off it goes into the oven for half an hour or so, until burnished brown and bubbling with caramelised tomato juices around the sides.

assembling tarte cuisinefiend.com

It's crucial to let it rest, settle and absorb juices before turning it out. It’s tastier warm than hot anyway – and probably also divine cold except I can’t vouch for it: it never lasted long enough to be tested.

baked tarte tatin cuisinefiend.com

More tomato recipes

Baked tomatoes stuffed with herby cheese and breadcrumb filling. For the vegetarian option skip the anchovies and use vegetarian cheese.

Baked zucchini gratin, a vegetarian bake if you use vegetarian Parmesan. This is an easy recipe for courgette alla parmigiana, or au gratin in tomato sauce.

Tomato and chickpea tray bake with chunks of feta roasting upon the vegetables, spiced and sweet with honey and chilli dressing. An easy vegetarian meal.

More savoury tart recipes

Swiss cheese tart, käsewähe, can be served hot or cold and is equally delicious. Swiss street and marketplace food, a savoury cheesecake, has a shortcrust base and cheesy but light filling. Cut it into slices – who needs pizza?

Fig and prosciutto tart with ready-rolled puff pastry takes about five minutes to prepare and twenty to bake. A divine, seasonal lunch or starter dish, best made with gorgeous Bursa figs.

Caramelised leek and Cheddar tart on shortcrust pastry, homemade or shop bought, is a fabulous, easy dish, as good to serve warm as it is cold.

tarte tatin with tomatoes cuisinefiend.com



Tomato tarte Tatin

Servings: 2Time: 1 hour 30 minutes plus chilling pastry

INGREDIENTS

  • For the pastry:
  • 125g (1 cup) plain flour
  • 75g (½ cup) fine cornmeal
  • ¼ tsp fine sea salt
  • 140g (1 stick plus 2 tbsp) cold unsalted butter, diced
  • 35g (½ cup) grated mature Cheddar or Gruyere
  • a few sprigs of thyme, leaves stripped
  • 6 tbsp iced water
  • For the tomato layer:
  • 600g (1½ pound) ripe plum tomatoes (San Marzano or similar)
  • salt
  • 1 tbsp brown sugar
  • 1 tbsp unsalted butter
  • 1 tbsp balsamic vinegar
  • 1 garlic clove, peeled
  • 3-4 thyme sprigs


METHOD

1. To make the pastry, pulse the flours, salt, butter, cheese and the thyme leaves in a food processor until they resemble coarse breadcrumbs. Add the water and pulse until the pastry comes together. Shape it into a ball, wrap it in foil and flatten to a disc. Chill for 2 hours.

2. Score the top of each tomato. Bring a large pan of water to the boil and prepare a bowl of iced water. Drop the tomatoes into the boiling water, leave them in for 30 seconds or until the skins start to peel, then drop them into the iced water. Peel the skins and cut each tomato in half vertically.

3. Scrape out the seeds with a teaspoon, place them on a plate lined with paper towels, sprinkle the cut sides with salt and turn them cut side down onto the towels. Leave for 30 minutes or so, then lightly pat dry with paper towels.

4. Preheat the oven to 220C/425F/gas 7. Prepare a shallow gratin, flan or other ovenproof dish about 23cm/9 inch in diameter. Place the brown sugar, butter and balsamic vinegar in the dish and transfer to the oven for 10 minutes or until it starts bubbling; stir it halfway through.

5. In the meantime roll out the chilled pastry on a lightly floured surface to a round a little bigger than the dish so you can tuck the edges in around the tomatoes. Return the rolled out pastry to the fridge.

6. Remove the dish with the bubbling caramel from the oven. Slice the garlic thinly into the dish, place a couple of sprigs of thyme around the slices and then arrange the tomatoes tightly in the dish, cut side up. Lay the pastry disc over tomatoes and tuck in the edges.

7. Pierce holes in the pastry with a sharp knife to let the steam escape. Transfer to the oven and bake for 30 minutes, until golden and crusty. Let it stand for 10 minutes to let the juices get absorbed.

8. Run a knife around the dish to release the pastry if it stuck in places. Place a large platter over the dish and invert the tarte swiftly onto the platter. Serve warm or at room temperature with green salad.

Originally published: Mon, 17 September, 2018


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Hello! I'm Anna Gaze, the Cuisine Fiend. Welcome to my recipe collection.

I have lots of recipes for you to choose from: healthy or indulgent, easy or more challenging, quick or involved - but always tasty.


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