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Short Pastry 1 (Pate Brisée)
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Short Pastry 1 (Pate Brisée)
560 gr. or 1lb 3oz. of dough good for 1-23 to 30 centimeter tart pan or 1-9 or 12 inch tart or pie pan.
Gather all your ingredients together before beginning.
Rolled short pastry

 

This is a great recipe for all open face tarts and custards. Leave out the sugar and it works well for quiche and open savory tarts as well.

See: Short Pastry by Hand for detailed instructions on making and rolling out short pastry. Lots of photos!


310 gr. or 2 1/2 cups flour
1 tsk or 1 teas. sugar
1/2 tsk or 1/2 teas. salt
175 gr. or 1/2cup + 3 tbls. butter cut into small cubes about 1 cm. or 1/2 inch square
1 beaten egg
2 msk. or 2 tbls. milk
   

Assembling the recipe:

I normally make this in my food processor (because I am super lazy and my dishwasher works really well). Of course the enemy of a good pie crust is over working the dough, so use a light hand on the pulse button. Regardless I never fail to get way too many compliments on my tarts.

Have all your ingredients ready - the butter, egg and milk need to be cold. So cut the butter up and first then put it back in the fridge while you get the other ingredients together.

Sift the flour and place in the bowl of the food processor with the sugar, salt. Then take the cold butter that you have cut up and add it to the processors bowl.

Pulse a with a few short bursts until the butter and flour look crumbly but not completely incorporated, then add the egg and the milk and pulse a little more. Just enough that it all comes together. As I said use a light hand if it does not all go together you can lightly knead it using the heal of you hand on the counter when you remove it from the processor. Use a light dusting of flour on the counter, the dough and your hands as you gather up the dough. Shape it into a disk and wrap tightly in cling film or place in a plastic bag and put it into the fridge to rest for at least one hour.

Tip: You really only want to have just enough liquid in the mix to bring it all together. I think that this is where most people have problems. 3/4 of an egg and a whole tablespoon of milk in this recipe will just be too much liquid so measure your ingredients well. If the dough is too wet it will be difficult to roll out later. If it's to dry it will just crumble and break up as you are rolling it out, if its too warm it will stick to everything.

See: Short Pastry by Hand for detailed instructions on making and rolling out short pastry. Lots of photos!

Rolling out the dough: Your tart pan should be buttered and lightly floured before you begin rolling out the dough. On a cool work surface (wood will only make your life miserable at this moment) take the dough and dust it lightly including your rolling pin and work surface.

It will be hard and you might have to put your shoulders into it but it will roll out. You can at this point wait for a few minutes but as soon as the dough begins to roll out more easily you will find that unless you are fast it will get too warm to easily handle as it gets thinner.

The technique for rolling is to roll it out a bit in one direction then give it a quarter turn and roll again. Continue this method, roll then a quarter turn until the dough is the size and thickness you desire. This method insures that you get a circle instead of an oval or who knows what! Start small and as the dough gets warmer it will be more easy to roll. Flip the dough over from time to time, this will also help with the rolling. At least I find it does.

Roll the dough to a thickness of 3 millimeters or 3/16 if an inch. I admit that this can take a bit of practice but after you have done this recipe 3 or 4 times it will be completely natural to you.

Dust off any excess flour with a pastry brush and line your tart pan with the dough.

Some people find it a bit easier to do this by rolling the dough around the rolling pin then positioning the the rolling pin over the tart pan and letting the dough fall back into the pan. Avoid any stretching of the dough while you do this.

Push the edges of the dough into the corners of the tart pan, pushing the edges down to thicken the sides of it slightly and making a nice fit. This thickening up of the sides slightly will help later after the tart is baked when trying to slice it. Trim off the excess dough by pushing down with your finger in an outward direction. If your using this dough in another type of baking pan you may crimp the edges of it. In a tart pan it isn't necessary.

If the dough splits or cracks while you are putting it into your tart pan don't worry. Wet your finger with a little water, dampen the dough where its broken and make repairs by pressing the dough back together. Do the same for any holes you might have.

Baking the tart case blind (empty) Many recipes call for a fully or partially baked tart shell. After the dough has been rolled out and allowed to rest for an hour in the fridge, prick the bottom of the tart with a fork all over to alllow steam to excape during baking which stops the center of the pie shell but rising up like a dome during the baking, (this is called docking). Place a piece of baking parchment or aluminum foil (slightly larger than the tart pan) in the bottom of the uncooked tart shell. Into this pour in a couple of cups of dried uncooked white beans (kidney or navy will do, rice also works). Distribute them evenly over the bottom and into the corners of the unbaked pie shell. These will stop the pie crust from shrinking and will also stop air from lifting up the bottom of the shell during the baking process. We want a thin and completely flat crust when we are done. I have been using the same old bag of beans for the past 10 years.

For a partially cooked shell which you usually need for quiche and some savory pies bake at 200 degrees for 20 minutes minutes.

For a fully cooked shell which you would make for a classic strawberry or banana tart, bake for 20 to 25 minutes, at 200 degrees, remove from the oven and take away the parchment and the beans. Return to the oven and bake for a further 10 - 15 minutes or until the pie shell gets a lovely even light golden color and is cooked trough.

Remove from the oven and leave to cool on a cooling rack.

Note: Baking times vary from oven to oven especially if you have a convection oven, begin checking from the earliest times given here.


Notes:

To see technique notes with photos and instructions click here!
Short pastry by hand
Short Pastry in a food processor.

This can be a rather difficult recipe for some people. If you follow some simple rules and understand what you are trying to accomplish you shouldn't have too much trouble with it.

This recipe is also very good for quiche and some savory tarts. Be sure to leave out the sugar.

You really only want to have just enough liquid in the mix to bring it all together. I think that this is where most people have problems.

Your tart pan should be buttered and lightly floured before you begin rolling out the dough.

Resting: The longer the dough rests the better and I almost always make this the night before. One hour resting time is alright but I prefer to give it as much time as I can. After the dough is rolled and put in your tart pan rest it in the fridge for another hour before baking. Resting the dough lets it relax and avoid the dough from shrinking too much while it is being baked.

You need to keep the dough as cold as you can while your rolling it out, a really warm room and work surface is your enemy during the rolling out process.

A good work surface for this is amost any surface that is not porous. Definitely not wood. Marble, stainless or plastics such as melamine or formica are all great.

All pie crusts that contain sugar are a little more difficult to roll out than those without, they like to stick to your work surface and rolling pin. Keep your work surface and rolling pin well dusted with flour as you go.

This is a professional recipe and the butter content is really high in comparison to the amount of flour. This will make rolling it out more difficult than some other recipes I have tried. You need to work quickly with it. It should not take more than 5 minutes for the rolling out.

The dough should be 2 to 3 millimeters or 3/16th of an inch which for most American and British pie recipes would seem to be a little too thin. But that is what I am always going for when I make fruit tarts.

So I suggest that you open a window and just practice and make one a week until you have it right. After all pie is pie and who doesn't love pie? Apple tarts in particular are yummy and all in all pretty cheap to make.


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