Tuesday, January 30, 2024

Apple Pastry

Making Tarte Tatin 

Len tried two new recipes for French apple pastries this month. First: Tarte Tatin.
Puff Pastry recipe from Bruno's Cookbook. Tarte recipe from the New York Times.

Dough and apples. A Tarte Tatin is made by cooking apples in a skillet to caramelize the sugar,
and then putting a round of dough on top and baking it.





Just our of the oven. After cooling the tarte for a little while, it's turned over onto a plate.



This upside-down tart is conventionally attributed to two sisters named Caroline and StĂ©phanie Tatin, who ran a hotel in in Lamotte-Beavren, a town in the Sologne region of the Loire valley in France. There are several versions of the creation of the tart. The sisters retired in 1906. Their creation thus had to be earlier than that: presumably in the late 19th century. Some years later, in the 1920s, the tart appeared on the menu at the famous Maxim's restaurant, and was also promoted by the food writer Curnonsky. 

"One should note, however, that most accounts of the dish's history point out, and other scholars agree, that upside-down fruit tarts were an ancient specialty of the Sologne region long before the 'Tarte Tatin' became famous. And the sisters never called their tart 'Tarte Tatin,' but 'Tarte solognote,' after that ancient specialty. It said to have been food writer Curnonsky, who named it Tatin, and Maxim’s who referred to it on its menu as 'La Tarte des Demoiselles Tatin ..." in hommage to the sisters." (source)

A post card of the hotel owned by the Tatin sisters.

Pompe aux Pommes, a traditional pastry from Auvergne


A "pompe" is a large apple turnover that was made for harvest celebrations in Auvergne, a region of France.
Like the Tarte Tatin, it starts with puff pastry and cooked apples. One layer of pastry underneath, one on top.

Len's Pompe aux Pommes was beautiful!

This is an even more buttery pastry than the Tarte Tatin: a very rich dish indeed !


Photos © 2024 mae e. sander







7 comments:

  1. Hello,
    They are all delicious, I love anything with apples.
    Take care, have a great day!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Great.
    Many many thanks.
    I like them both - these French recipes.
    The first one, the Tarte Tartin, seems to me to be easier and also cheaper for the hips - i.e. it keeps you slim better -
    Thank you very much, I think I will try both :-)))
    A happy greeting to you from Viola
    I love baking and I love drinking coffee in the afternoon and eating a nice piece of cake - well maybe not every day - because of the hips :-)
    Hug

    ReplyDelete
  3. I have never made either of these (or any other Tarte Tatin recipe, for that matter) but these look beyond fabulous. They're so gorgeous I can practically taste them across the cyberverse!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Wow the second one looks really yummy and the first one good too ... I didn't realize you turn it over but you can get to the fruit better.

    ReplyDelete
  5. how delicious do they both look. and that glorious Tatin hotel! so beautiful.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Wow. Both of these look delicious.

    ReplyDelete

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