Apricot orange cake with pistachio crumble
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How often do you buy an ingredient with a specific project in mind, only to have that ingredient languish on the shelf or in the fridge waiting to be used? Fortunately, that doesn't happen too frequently, but, every now and then it's a good idea to see what's on hand, both in the fridge and the freezer, and figure out ways to use up things that are either nearing the end of their shelf life or are begging to be baked into something delicious.
This time - dried apricots and yogurt with unbaked pistachio crumble on the side.

Here I opted for a loaf cake variation on a recipe for orange currant muffins with pistachio crumb which I've had in my files for some time now. I’m not even sure where I found it. I used yogurt instead of sour cream and diced dried apricots for currants. Here goes! It's a straight forward batter.
Get the printable PDF recipe here!
Heat the oven to 325ºF. Butter a medium loaf pan, line it with parchment and butter the parchment as well.
In a separate bowl whisk together 195 g / 1.5 cups all purpose flour, 1.5 teaspoons baking powder, 1/4 teaspoon baking soda and 1/4 teaspoon salt. OPT: replace 1/3 of the flour with white whole wheat or spelt.
In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle, cream 70 g / 5 TBSP unsalted butter with 1/2 cup / 100 g sugar (white or brown) until light and fluffy; blend in 1 large egg; blend in 3/4 cup full fat plain yogurt and orange zest from one medium orange.
Add the dry ingredients and mix just until incorporated; fold in 1/2 cup diced dried apricots. The batter will be thick.
Spread the batter in the prepared pan.
Top with a healthy layer of pistachio crumble made by combining 65 g / 1/2 cup flour, 50 g / 1/4 cup sugar (white or brown) in a medium bowl, then sanding in 56 g / 2 ounces cold, diced unsalted butter to coarse crumbs; add 30 g chopped pistachios. Easily double or triple the quantities and make plenty for freezer extras.

Bake for approximately 45 minutes until the top is browned and a skewer inserted in the center comes out clean.

After about 10 minutes lift the cake out and let cool.

Slice and enjoy!

I simply couldn't wait until this had completely cooled. The still warm, fruit studded, moist, pistachio crumbly and oh-so-delicious slice was just the thing for a middle-of-a-winter-afternoon snack.
And guess what - Steve liked it too!!
Shortbread gift boxes for the holidays
/Here it is - only 8 days left until Christmas! It's definitely winter here in Michigan with a number of inches of snow on the ground and more in the offing. Brrrrr cold too!
I've been busy baking and packaging my assorted shortbread cookies at Patricia's Chocolate shop in Grand Haven.
Daily bread and giving thanks
/A free form savory tart
/Brioche feuilletée
/Brush the upper edge with a little water, milk or egg wash to help seal the seam once you've rolled it up.
It's all about the journey.
Exciting news!
/This past week The French Tarte became licensed to work out of the kitchen at Patricia's Chocolate in Grand Haven, Michigan. Hooray!

What does this mean you might ask? Well to start out I'll be baking and offering my tasty all butter shortbread in Patty's shop, accepting orders for shortbread gift boxes and developing a schedule of travel from GR to GH to dovetail with my teaching schedule at Sur La Table here in GR.
Shortbread bar
Taking it step by step. In the meantime I wanted to share with you some of things I've been making in recent months.
In early August, as I birthday present to myself, I baked an assortment of goodies (from left to right): pavé aux amandes, cocoa hazelnut financiers, bubble eclairs with raspberry currant cream (Yum!) and chocolate milkshake tarts.

By now many of you know my attraction to financiers and tarts. What can I say? I just can't help it!
Once we returned from our trip to France in early October, I've been back in the kitchen doing this and that as well as trying some new shortbread flavors (how about coffee cardamom, oatmeal ginger or coconut lime?!).
My baking activities often seem to revolve around what I happen to have in the fridge - some of my lightly spiced poached pears being just one example. What better than a batch of financier batter to create pear-caramel and raspberry-pistachio crumble versions for our freezer.

The pears also encouraged me to make some individual versions of tarte bourdaloue using the recipe that I had brought back from Le Notre in Paris.

Of course I simply can't forget the household favorite (hint, hint - guess what Steve loves?), the quintessential caramel nut tart. This go around I used some chocolate tart dough that had been waiting in the freezer for that very thing.

Chock full-o-nuts, oh-so-delicious and always a hit.
And for something just a little different - bagels! These were from a class I taught at Sur La Table where the results were stupendous. Chewy, not tough, great depth of flavor and definitely a make-again recipe. These are the "everything" version, the deeply browned exterior being due to molasses in the dough as well as some molasses in the bagel boiling water. Yup!

And so the adventures continue. Stay tuned.
Coconut sugar and maple cream - new ingredients on my shelf
/There was really no difference in the flavor - still tasty - so for me it's simply a matter of using an unrefined sugar in place of a refined one. I've been doing this for some time with unrefined raw cane sugar which gives a pleasing crunch to shortbread cookies or as a topping for things like financiers.
Don't be afraid to use your imagination - come up with your own ideas!
Saying goodbye to Paris
/That morning Steve had a cemetery visit to make and I visited the new LCB Paris. We then connected at metro Sèvres-Babylon and strolled to rue du Cherche-Midi for lunch at Cuisine de Bar. For years I've been enamored of this spot for dejeuner, right next to the Poilâne boulangerie, but this time we were unimpressed. The main server didn't seem able to get his act together, even though this is a small place and it wasn't very busy. Finally we were served our tartines (open face sandwiches) made with Poilâne bread and, in our case, topped with a curry chicken. It was tasty I must admit, but the place has lost it's appeal, and I suspect we won't go back again.
A visit to the new Le Cordon Bleu in Paris
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Lady Liberty |
A walking tour of Montmartre with Clotilde Dusoulier
/Succès class at Le Nôtre
/Les Tartes class at Le Nôtre
/Brioche class at Le Nôtre Paris
/and is invited inside by pleasant staff ready to serve you coffee, water or whatever.
Pretty tasty too!
Gateau au chocolats from Des Gateaux et du Pain
/Café gourmand
/Richard's wife Pauline had the house version of apple pie which was more like a thick crepe filled with apples and raisins with vanilla ice cream on the side.
Méert pastry shop in Lille
/Peach blueberry buttermilk cake
/Cherry-berry feuilleté and peach buttermilk ice cream
/The summer annuals are showing off their colors here in Grand Rapids MI . . . .
lovely coleus in our little garden courtyard |
and the summer peaches are out in full force!
Fresh Michigan peaches are one of my favorite fruits. So of course I've been thinking of the many wonderful ways to use them. This time I was inspired by a peach buttermilk ice cream recipe from "Food and Wine" magazine.
I followed the recipe for my usual ice cream base (2 cups heavy cream, 1 cup whole milk, 3/4 cup sugar, 5 large egg yolks, pinch of salt) replacing the cup of whole milk with buttermilk. I blanched 1.5 pounds of peaches, then peeled, pitted, sliced and blender-ized them with a squeeze of lemon juice, folding the purée into the cooled base.
peach purée at the ready |
ice cream base finishing its chill down |
I usually chill my base in the fridge for a day or two, then process in my ice cream maker and transfer to a freezer container several hours before serving.
I also wanted to use some cherries and blueberries I had on hand to complement the peach ice cream in a dessert I was planning for a family meal. And, to top it off, there was some reverse puff pastry in my freezer just waiting to be made into something oh-so-delicious.
The beauty of the feuilleté preparation is that I can roll, shape and bake them ahead of time and hold them either at room temperature if using the same day, or in the freezer for a number of days if planning a bit farther ahead.
When ready to fill them, I simply push down the center layers of puff to make room for the fruit mixture that will be mounded in the feuilleté.
I mixed 4 cups of fruit (cherry/blueberry combo) with a teaspoon of fresh lemon juice, 3-4 tablespoons granulated sugar (I like my fruit on the tart side) and 1 tablespoon cornstarch. I then cooked this concoction on med-low heat until bubbly and thickened.
Note: this quantity of fruit filling was enough for 7-8 feuilletés about 3.5 inches square.
Then I scooped a mound of filling in the center of each feuilleté and baked at 350ºF for about 10-15 minutes. Since the puff pastry is already baked and the filling already cooked, it's really just a matter of heating everything up.
the end result! |
I know I've mentioned crumble before in this blog. It's a great thing to have on hand and is so easy to make. Make as much or as little as you'd like.
Simply mix equal weights flour and sugar in a medium bowl, sand in the same weight of cool, diced butter to form coarse crumbs. In this case I added some matcha powder with the flour and sugar (you don't need much).
Spread the crumbs out on a parchment lined sheet pan and bake at 325ºF, stirring and breaking up clumps every 5 minutes or so until lightly browned and crisp, 10-15 minutes total. Let cool.
Store in a zip-top bag in the freezer and use at will!
Mmmmmm! |
While the ice cream was a bit more icy in texture than I had hoped (I suspect due to using low fat buttermilk rather than whole milk, plus the water content of the fruit purée), the contrast of the tangy peachy coolness with the tart cherry-berry filling and buttery, flakey puff was oh-so-good indeed.
Three cheers for summer fruits! Hip hip hooray . . . .
Pavé aux amandes
/Periodically looking back at some of the classic recipes from pastry school, I recently decided to make a classic French pavé aux amandes, a moist, dense-but-not-heavy almond cake.
I think of this as one of the many treats that kids might enjoy for le gouter, the traditional afternoon snack time in France, usually around 4 pm. And of course adults wouldn't mind it either with a nice cup of coffee or tea.
Top it with a delicious whipped mascarpone cream and some fresh seasonal fruit and you have yourself a tasty dessert!
It's a simple and straight forward recipe, baked in a 9" square shallow pan lined with parchment, buttered, then sliced almonds layered on the bottom.
les ingredients |
Cream 125 gram softened butter with 200 grams sugar until blended. I do this in a medium bowl with a spatula, but you can also use a stand mixer with the paddle - just don't cream too long since you really don't want to aerate this batter. It's meant to be a dense cake.
Then blend in 250 grams egg (about 5 whole eggs) followed by 250 grams blanched almond flour.
Note: for a bit of variation add some orange zest and a splash of vanilla and/or almond extract to punch up the flavor. Yum.
And that's it! How easy is that, eh??
The trickiest part of this whole thing is transferring the batter to the prepared pan. Do it carefully - I place blobs of batter over sections of the pan, then gently spread so as not to dislodge the almonds on the bottom.
evenly spread and ready for the oven |
Bake at 325ºF for about 45 minutes until the top is golden brown, there is no jiggling in the center and it feels firm to touch. You'll see a few moist crumbs if checking with a skewer or cake tester.
Carefully run a knife around the edges of the cake and turn it out onto a cooling rack.
Once cooled, dust the top with powdered sugar and dig in!
The flavor is subtly almond, the texture is dense yet light and the crumb oh-so-moist.
And guess what - Steve liked it!! Yay!!!