13 September 2009

D's Bakewell Tart

D:I have been a fan of Simon Rimmer and his cooking for about three years now. When Bakewell Tart was decided as the British recipe and I found Simon’s recipe for the dish in his book ‘Rebel Cook’ it just had to be made.

For research purposes I had a slice of Bakewell Tart with my coffee in M&S yesterday which was very moist and tasty. However just like the Mr Kipling shop bought individual Bakewell Tarts, the one in M&S had icing on it. Simon’s recipe is made without icing so as I am a huge fan of icing/frosting, I was hoping that the tart tasted just as nice without.

There are many variations of the Bakewell Tart recipe. Just this morning I saw the Hairy Bikers use eight eggs in the filling as part of their TV show ‘Hairy Bakers’. They even visited Bakewell in Derbyshire from where the tart takes its name.


The ingredients this time were easier to find but I had to by a tart tin and some baking beans. For those of you who don’t know what baking beans are, they are ceramic balls that you line the pastry case with when you bake it blind. I eventually found some baking beans in TK Maxx of all places so it’s not just for designer clothes! They even had Root Beer the other week.

With all the ingredients at the ready the pressure was on to make a really good Bakewell Tart to take to friends for dinner. I had my back up dessert plan at the ready too - McFlurries at MacDonalds!!!

As usual I found the recipe easy to follow, as I have other Simon Rimmer recipes. The pastry was made by hand as I do not have a food processor. There’s nowhere to put one in my kitchen! You can’t even swing a cat in there! With this in mind I decided to do things the old fashioned way and make the whole recipe by hand. Creaming the butter and the sugar was hard work!


I found that I had some left over pastry so I used that to make some jam tarts. They were good with a cup of tea after I’d finished baking.

When the filling was cooking I found that I had to cook it for about 28 minutes not the 20 minutes that the recipe called for. The middle seemed to take a while to set and it wasn’t golden after the initial 20 minutes hence the longer cooking time.


The next challenge was how to transport the Bakewell Tart in my car! Luckily it survived the car journey in the foot well wrapped in foil, still in the tin.

It was a successful dessert to a roast chicken dinner. Empty plates and lots of positive comments. The adults enjoyed the subtle almond flavour and the lemon zest. The children still wanted icing and a glace cherry as well, just like the Mr Kipling ones. Although I love icing in this case I think it would have made the tart too sweet.

1 comment:

  1. Sounds really yummy. Don't suppose there are any free samples???
    Steve

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