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Aliya LeeKong
  • Home
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Summer Fruit Tart Addiction

SUMMER FRUIT TART ADDICTION

Honestly, summer is my favorite time of year...I love when the weather turns warm and days (and daylight!) so long; attitudes feel more carefree and New York City comes alive.  The farmer's markets are always flush with fruits and vegetables, and, this weekend, it was overflowing with all sorts of berries (raspberries, blueberries, gooseberries, cherries, currants & strawberries). To me, this just signifies the official start of summer, and, if you follow my IG you'll know this to be true, I invariably have some form of a fruit tart on my counter throughout this time.  I wanted to share with you some go-to's - easy options so you can freestyle your own tarts this summer.

 

CRUSTS

I have 3 go-to crusts that I use depending on my mood, if I plan to bake the filling and who I’m hosting! 

(1) I love a classic, homemade tart dough (recipe: here).  I keep mine a bit low on the sugar, so I can use it for sweet and savoury crusts.  Doubling the recipe is key and allows you to freeze some to have for later.   This is a great dough to use for both a filling you have to cook or one you don't have to cook.

(2) Of course, already-made and frozen puff pastry is another way to go.  Who doesn’t love that flakey, buttery crust? Mixed with a layer of pastry cream and fresh fruit....This is what I use for my South African Milk Tart (pictured below).  I like to do an initial blind-bake and then fill - this weights it down so it doesn't puff too much.

(3) My third is for my gluten-free friends - a super easy, gluten-free pecan crust. 

You take 1 ½ cups raw pecans and pulse in a food processor until chopped.  Throw in 2 tablespoons unsalted, melted butter, 1 tablespoon honey,  ¼ teaspoon salt, ½ teaspoon ground cinnamon, and 1 egg white and pulse until a fine meal.  It will be a bit wet.  Press into a tart shell and bake at 375° F for 15 minutes.  Done.

 

 

CUSTARD FILLING

(1) Baked custard - One of my favorite tarts is this South African Milk Tart.  The creaminess of the cooked custard filling with the berries on top……sooo good.  It's not too egg-y and has a hint of cinnamon.  I love that the beaten egg whites also lighten the custard.

(2) Stovetop custard - I also love to make a quick stovetop custard (or pastry cream) instead of the baked custard in the milk tart recipe.  All you need is some sugar, eggs yolks, corn starch, vanilla bean and milk!  Ok, so sometimes I substitute the milk for Champagne or a nice Prosecco….  The process is simple:

In a medium pot, simmer 2 cups milk with a vanilla bean cut in half and seeds scraped out in to milk and remove from the heat. 

Separately, bring a pot of water to boil for your double boiler. In a metal bowl, whisk 4 egg yolks with 1/3 cup sugar until the mixture is a nice pale yellow.  Add ¼ cup cornstarch and whisk away any lumps.  Slowly stir in the warmed milk mixture and fit the bowl over the boiling water (without letting it touch the water) and constantly stir until the consistency starts to thicken. 

Remove from heat and cover the top directly with plastic wrap and let come to room temp before using.  You can also whip some cream and fold into this pastry cream to make it lighter.

(3) No-cook cream filling - A final option is to make a no cook cream filling and keep the tart refrigerated.  This is a bit like a lightened panna cotta.  Bloom 1 teaspoon gelatin in 2 tablespoons cold water.  Whip 1 cup heavy cream to soft peaks with 2 tablespoons regular or coconut sugar (you can make this sweeter if you like. taste and adjust).  Add in 1 teaspoon vanilla and fold in 4 ounces of mascarpone cheese.  Quickly blast the gelatin-water mixture in the microwave for 5 seconds or so until it's melted and fold that into the cream mixture as well.  It sets up very quickly in the fridge - just make sure to use it in a completely cooled tart or it will melt away!

 

 

FILL AND ASSEMBLY

Unless you are baking your custard, the tart shells should be blind-baked and cooled before you assemble.

Now, in terms of what goes on top, this is the time for you to experiment and be creative.  Seriously, whatever is the sweetest and in season works, and experiment to see how you like to arrange your fruits.  I looove cape gooseberries, but apricots and strawberries pair so well together.  It will all go!

If you want some extra sheen, microwave a bit of apricot preserves and paint the fruit with it.  You can also just simply sift a bit of powdered sugar too - up to you....

Enjoy!

 

 

tags: summer fruits, how to make a fruit tart, summer fruit tart recipe
categories: all 4, blog, desserts, holiday, lifestyle-1, recipes
Wednesday 06.22.16
Posted by Aliya LeeKong
 

Tristar Strawberries and a Broken Finger

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Tristar Strawberries and a Broken Finger

I’m going to start with the good news.  Recently, a little European-style market called All Good Things opened up in the heart of Tribeca – think little cheese stand, my fave meat purveyor, incredibly fresh seafood and farmstand produce along with a little bar to eat your freshly opened oysters with a glass of wine.

Amongst the produce this weekend were some gorgeous Tristar Strawberries, and I hadn’t seen them before so I wanted to share with you guys too.  They are miniature, super sweet with an intense strawberry flavor, and they fruit throughout the summer and even into the fall.  Anyway, if you can get your hands on them, grab ‘em.  These little guys are going into one of my recipes for the cookbook, an end of summer berry bread pudding of sorts….

As for the bad news, it’s all right in this photo. And, no that’s not an oversized bandaid (what most people think and then don’t give me the just sympathy!).  It’s a cast on a broken finger…done, not during some dire cooking incident, but actually when I was playing football and trying to impress a little girl and teach her how to throw and catch.  Yep.

Needless to say, trying to cook, not get the cast wet or completely coated in chocolate (which happened day 2 of having it on), and type when half of my manuscript for my cookbook is due in 2 weeks (ahhh!!) is turning out to be a tall order.  The silver lining is I narrowly missed having to get surgery, which would have totally set me back – now, it’s just a lot of right hand compensation and some serious typos!  Wish me luck as I cook (and write) on!

tags: Tristar Strawberries, broken finger, summer fruits
categories: spices, all
Monday 09.17.12
Posted by Aliya LeeKong
 

Peaches w/ Cardamom Streusel & Honey-Vanilla Cream

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Peaches w/ Cardamom Streusel & Honey-Vanilla Cream

I headed up to Ellsworth Hill Orchard in Litchfield, Connecticut this last week to do some summer fruit picking and came across these beautiful, juicy Flaming Fury peaches.

The farm was scenic and serene and loaded with peaches, blueberries and several plum varieties.  I got completely carried away out in the orchard and was a bit obsessed with finding the perfect peach (to my husband’s dismay in the insanely sweaty heat).  All I could think about was pairing sweet peaches with cardamom for a super easy summer dessert.

Cardamom is a really aromatic spice from the ginger family with camphorous notes and the ability to translate equally well in both sweet and savoury dishes.  It’s used in everything from Danish pastries to Indian curries to Middle Eastern coffee.  Like ginger, it can be pretty overpowering, so I tend to use it sparingly in cooking.  My mom and I actually throw the bruised pods into our mugs of green tea to bump up the flavor.

There are green, white and brown varieties of the spice, and, here, I use the green ones.  I remove the seeds from the pods and manually grind them with a mortar and pestle.  But ground cardamom is fine to use as well.

Baking the peaches really brings out the sweetness, and cardamom, in place of traditional cinnamon, creates a delicious, crunchy streusel to layer on top.  It does not get any easier than mixing a few ingredients in a bowl, spooning the crumbly mixture on top of halved peaches, and throwing it all in the oven.   I serve this dish with whipped honey-vanilla cream, which balances out the residual tartness in the peaches.  A lovely way to indulge in summer’s fruit.  Enjoy!

Ingredients

Yields 4 to 6 servings

Baked Peaches:

½ cup packed light brown sugar

1/3 cup flour

3/4 tsp ground cardamom

½ tsp salt

3 tbsps butter, room temperature (but not completely soft) and cut into pieces

4 peaches

Cream:

1 cup heavy cream

3 tbsps honey

½ vanilla bean, scraped OR 1 ½ tsps of vanilla extract

Procedure

Preheat oven to 400° F.

In a bowl, mix together brown sugar, flour, cardamom and salt.  Cut in butter using your fingers or a pastry scraper until the mixture resembles coarse crumbs.

Halve peaches on the vertical, remove pits, and scrape off any rough bits.  I do this at the last second, so that the peaches don’t turn brown.  Also, I leave the skin on as a preference – you can remove the skin if you like.

Arrange peaches in a buttered baking dish.  Top with streusel topping and bake for 25 minutes.  Remove and let cool briefly.

Whip the heavy cream by hand or by using a hand or stand mixture.  Before it is fully whipped, add in the vanilla and honey, so that it becomes evenly distributed (but not over whipped!).

Serve peaches warm with a side of the honey-vanilla cream.

tags: peach desserts, streusel, cardamom streusel, recipes for summer, summer fruits, summer desserts
categories: all-7, desserts-1, recipes
Monday 08.02.10
Posted by Aliya LeeKong