Tomorrow is my hubby’s birthday and I wanted to bake him a
special apple tart for dinner tonight since he’ll be on the road tomorrow. He’s
not big on sweets in general and prefers traditional French treats he grew up with much more than the
American style birthday cakes and cupcakes that I hold near and dear. Since he doesn’t have to eat gluten free; I also wanted a gluten free apple tart that would taste every bit as good as its
gluten filled counterpart.
His parents owned a house in France called Le Gravier and one of their neighbors was a farmer who made
Calvados from the apples on their property. I wanted to
incorporate a splash of Calvados into the tart for sentimental reasons. Calvados is a very strong apple alcohol but
you can easily substitute a splash of apple cider instead.
Gluten free pie/tart crusts have seemed an overwhelming task. Although I started baking and cooking very
young and pie crusts were never my forte even with wheat based recipes. A gluten free crust, I was sure, would disappoint. But last week Elana posted a gluten free almond flour tart crust – an absolutely beautiful one at that. I used almond meal which made for a far more rustic look. While I plan to make this again just with
almond flour, this crust was great as is. The tart pan I picked up this weekend was
an inch larger than what was called for in her recipe so it didn’t make it all
the way up the side of the tart pan but that was no problem.
An old Le Cordon Bleu cookbook gave me the outline for the
tart and I tweaked it just a bit. The
original recipe called for cinnamon, but one of has reactions to it so I didn’t
use it and we certainly didn’t miss the flavor. Granny Smith apples, thinly sliced and
drizzled with lots of lemon were placed on the unbaked tart crust.
Eggs and an extra egg yolk mixed with heavy cream, sugar and
Calvados are poured over the top. The
cream mixture covered the tart completely but soaked into the apples as it
baked. I can’t tell you how wonderful the house smelled this
afternoon.
Marie came for dinner and brought the perfect wine. She also brought some amazing gluten free chocolates that we're saving for next week! =D
We enjoyed slices with
vanilla ice cream. The crust was
savory and crispy. The filling was sweet
but not overly so and I loved the creamy apple texture.
Chris
hasn’t enjoyed a dessert so much in a very long time and came up with a list of
several different fillings he’d like to try. I think we’ve found a new family
favorite.
Le Gravier Apple Tart
Pre heat oven to 325 degrees
Set tart pan with removable bottom on a baking sheet with
sides.
Tart Crust
(Adapted from Elana’s Pantry)
2 cups Almond Meal
1 Egg
2 Tablespoons Coconut Oil
½ teaspoon Salt
While Elana’s recipe uses a food processor to mix the crust,
I just put everything into my Kitchen Aid Stand mixer and let the paddle
attachment mix things up. Pat the dough
into a tart pan – either 9 or 10 inches across – mine was 10 inches. (I've made this many more times since the original post and either almond meal or almond flour work equally well. 11/17)
Tart Filling
4 medium Granny Smith apples, peeled, cored and sliced into
16ths.
1 Lemon, juiced
1 cup Heavy Whipping Cream
1/3 cup Sugar
2 Eggs
1 Egg Yolk
1 Tablespoon Calvados or Apple Cider
Prepare apples and pour lemon juice over them in a mixing bowl, continuing to mix the apple slices as you add more.
Arrange apple slices in tart crust.
In the same mixing bowl (with remaining lemon juice) combine whipping cream, sugar, eggs and Calvados well. Pour cream mixture over apple slices. I put the tart pan on a large baking sheet
with edges to contain any spillover. Then
I put the baking sheet on the oven rack and topped off the tart with the
remaining filling. (11/17)
Bake at 325 degrees for about an hour - depending on your oven and thickness of your tart, it could be closer to an hour and fifteen.
Enjoy!
Happy birthday to the very best husband and quite possibly the most patient man ever!
6 comments:
HOORAY!
i'm so glad it was just as tasty as it was beautiful.
and how much to i adore the pictures of your sweet family?!?! so beautiful you all are.
xoxoxo.
My dearest anonymous!
You are so sweet to check the blog in your sleep deprived state!
Thank you for your sweet words.
Normally I would tell you to come over and have a slice (especially since you could only smell it yesterday!) but it may be gone before you get home!
I will make another very soon to share. =D
xoxoxo
My poor tart had to be renamed! It didn't dawn on me until well after my morning coffee that I named it after the town an not the house. So it is now accurately named and nearly gone. =D
ha! i have to be anonymous here-- it refuses to believe that i have a blogger or google account. woe is me! but i knew you'd still KNOW me, even if you can't share the tart with me. ;) i forgive you! hee! xoxoxo.
I keep hearing from friends that they can't even post comments at all so I guess we should be happy you can post at all. =D
And thank you for your grace!
xoxoxo
This looks a like a wonderful tart!
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