This is the pastry crust I used in the Pistachio Pear Tart recipe I also shared today!

About this Sweet Tart Crust (sweet pastry recipe)

This is a recipe for a classic French Sweet Tart Crust that is suitable to use for tarts, large or small, or for sweet pies. It can be cooked in a tart tin, as demonstrated in this post, or in pie tins. You’ll love how the dough is easier to work with than traditional shortcrust pastry. It’s less crumbly, more pliable and less prone to tearing. And you’ll love how the crust is not quite as crumbly and flaky as shortcrust pastry so it’s easier to eat with a fork, rather than disintegrating into crumbs. It’s still however beautifully buttery – it is French after all, so we would expect nothing less! – yet without being excessively sweet. As for its utility, it makes a tart shell that is crispy so the base won’t go soggy once filled. It’s suitable for no-cook fillings (like Chocolate Ganache) or cooked fillings (ie. where the tart is filled then baked again, like Pistachio Pear Tart and the Chocolate Tart pictured below). In short, it’s a master recipe worth, well, mastering – I promise it will serve you well for the rest of your life!!

What goes in this Sweet Tart Crust

Here’s what you need to make this tart pastry:

Flour – Just plain / all purpose flour;Icing sugar / powdered sugar – The finer, powder-like grains make this incorporate more thoroughly and easily into the dough compared to ordinary white sugar grains;Almond meal / ground almonds – Not to be confused with almond flour which are finer grains, this adds a touch of nuttiness that complement sweet fillings as well as adding a hint of moistness to the pastry; andButter – Ain’t no French pastry if it doesn’t contain plenty of butter! 😂

How to make Sweet Tart Pastry

1. The tart pastry dough

2. Rolling out the pastry

3. Baking

Why the different baking times? Par Baked vs Fully Baked Tart Crust.

If the tart will be baked for more than 30 minutes once filled, then the pastry will finish cooking through during this time. In this case, we just make a Par Baked Crust ie cooked enough so the surface is crisp and protect base from going soggy, but inside of base is slightly undercooked. This way, the tart crust will not be dry and overcooked once the filling is cooked. Don’t have baking beads? Use 2 cups dried rice or dried beans instead; However, if you’re making a tart with a filling that doesn’t require baking OR the bake time once filled is very short (25 minutes or less), then we need to fully cook the shell through before filling. So use the Fully Baked Crust bake times.

How to use this pastry crust

This pastry shell can be used for baked or no-bake fillings. The shell is cooked enough so it is crispy on the outside, but slightly undercooked on the inside, and the surface is light golden. This is so once it’s filled and then baked again (anything up to around 45 minutes), the pastry will finish cooking through and the edges will be a lovely golden colour rather than burnt, as shown in the Pistachio Pear Tart pictured below. If using for a no-bake filling (for example, if filling with Creme Patissiere) or a filling that requires less than 25 minutes of bake time (like a Chocolate Tart that I will be sharing soon that bakes for 25 minutes at a low temperature), then the bake time needs to be increased by 10 minutes to fully cook the pastry through. The pastry shell can be made up to 3 days ahead and stored in an airtight container in the pantry.

Fillings for Tarts

I wish I had a library of tart recipes I could share with you to fill this tart shell with! But I’m just starting out on my tart collection journey, so I’m a bit lacking. However, here are some ideas:

Pistachio Pear Tart – the tart recipe I shared today that I used this tart crust for. With a Pistachio Frangipane Filling topped with soft Vanilla Poached Pears, this is a smart yet rustically casual tart fitting for all occasions!Salted Caramel Tart – use the filling from my Salted Caramel Tart recipe (which uses a biscuit base, just fill this pastry shell instead);Peanut Butter Caramel Tart – use the filling from my Peanut Butter Caramel Tart recipe;Pecan Tart – use the filling from my Pecan Pie;Chocolate Custard Tart – use the filling from my Chocolate Cream Pie;Lemon Tart – I use the lemon filling from this Lemon Tart recipe by David Lebovitz. I find it a bit too tart – as in sour, hah – as written (and I don’t even have a sweet tooth!). So I reduce the lemon juice to 3/4 cup and increase the sugar to 1 cup;Lemon Meringue Tart – Top the above Lemon Tart with Italian Meringue. I use this recipe. It involves hot sugar syrup slowly drizzled in while beating the meringue. You can’t just use ordinary whipped egg whites with sugar as it will weep / sweat; andCustard Fruit Tart – I haven’t published this yet, but here is a PDF of the recipe!

So many more possibilities … but that’s a few to get you inspired! – Nagi x

Watch how to make it

Life of Dozer

Dozer vs Nagi in the battle of the doughnut. Who won??

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