How to make caramelised apple tarts – French-inspired recipe from our archives calls for sharp green apples and puff pastry
- These individual tarts are inspired by the tartelettes aux pommes from the famous Poilâne bakery in Paris
- You can make your own puff pastry or buy it, but make sure you use firm, acidic apples that keep their shape
For me, France is apple dessert heaven.
There are the buttery, flaky chaussons aux pommes sold at bakeries that specialise in Viennoiserie, elegant tarts made with shortcrust pastry and thin, overlapping slices of apple, more rustic (but even more delicious) galettes that use puff pastry and thick chunks of the fruit, and the easy-to-make but extremely difficult-to-make-well tarte Tatin.
Then there are regional specialities such as tarte Normande (which incorporates Calvados, the apple brandy that is also made in the region) and apple strudel, from Alsace.
Caramelised apple tarts
This is my version of the delicious tartelettes aux pommes from Poilâne bakery in Paris. These individual size tarts are best made with all-butter puff pastry – either a commercial type (available in the frozen section of some shops), or, even better, home-made rough-puff dough.
I use Granny Smith apples (often labelled “green apples” at Hong Kong supermarkets) for this dessert, but other firm, tart varieties also work. Don’t use apples (such as Red Delicious) that turn to mush when cooked.
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6 large tart apples
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125 grams (4½ oz) granulated sugar