Yield: 8 servings
Measure | Ingredient |
---|---|
160 grams | Butter (5 2/3 oz) |
160 grams | Sugar (5 2/3 oz) |
2 \N | Eggs |
240 grams | Flour (8 1/2 oz) |
1 teaspoon | Baking powder |
1 teaspoon | Orange flower water |
1 \N | Cake tin, about 18cm/7in diameter, 5cm/2in deep |
2 decilitres | Creme patissiere (7 fl oz) |
1 \N | Egg yolk mixed with 1 tb milk |
\N \N | Butter for the tin |
\N \N | Flour for the tin |
\N \N | Piping bag |
EQUIPMENT
Using a bowl and whisk, beat the butter until smooth; add the sugar and beat for 3 minutes. Still beating, add first one egg, then the other and finally beat in the flour, baking powder and orange flower water. The mixture should be very smooth.
Preheat the oven to 200 oC / 400 oF.
Butter the inside of the cake tin and sprinkle with flour. Turn over the tin and tap out the excess flour. Fill the piping bag with some of the egg-sugar-...-mixture. Starting from the outside and working inwards, pipe the mixture into a spiral so that the bottom of the tin is entirely covered, with no gaps between the spirals.
Carefully spoon the creme patissiere into the centre of the tin, spread it out slightly, but leave at least 2 cm / ¾ in uncovered all round the edge of the tin.
Continue to pipe spirals from the outside inwards, piping one on top of the other, so that the creme patissiere is complerely enclosed on all sides by the egg-sugar-...-mixture.
Brush the top of the tart with the egg yolk-milk-mixture, score a lattice pattern with a fork and cook in the preheated oven for 45 minutes.
Leave to cool, then unmould on to a wire rack.
Serving
Accompanied by some home-made jam or, better still, redcurrant jelly.
(Albert and Michel Roux, The Roux brothers, French country cooking, M Papermac, 1992, ISBN 0-333-57670-5)