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Gluten-free tarte tatin

In respect for France, a recipe for tarte tatin. Paris, je t'aime!

Variety of Norwegian apples

Variety of Norwegian apples.

I was so lucky to visit Paris this summer, my first visit in many years. At a little bistro Provencal in the Marais district I ate tarte tatin. I was served in the French way, with crème fraîche and shortcrust pastry. Tarte tatin is the Chanel of the world of desserts. Timeless, elegant and French.

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Coco Chanel was born in 1883, the child of an unwed mother. Tarte tatin was invented by accident in the 1880s by the Tatin sisters. If there is a top ten list of the world’s best desserts, tarte tatin is on the list. The list of timeless classics. This is the type of food I like to cook. Food untouched by trends. Or to phrase Coco Chanel: Fashion fades, only style remains the same.

Coco Chanel revolutionized the fashion industry in the 1920s when she invented the little black dress and the Chanel suit. Previously black was the colour of grief and now Chanel even borrowed from men’s wear when she designed her suits. The two sisters Tatin ran a hotel in France in the 1880s. One day Stéphanie was making an apple pie, she was so busy she forgot the apples, and the caramel almost burned. Attempting to save the pie she put the pie dough on top of the apples and placed the pan in the oven. And this is how she turned the pie upside-down and created a classic. Or so the story goes.

What makes tarte tatin so special?

Tarte tatin stands out in the family of pies. The basis is a caramel that is cooked until perfection, not too sweet and dull nor bitter and burnt. In contrast to other pies the pie dough does more than keeping the filling in place. It creates a holy match between the pastry and the caramel. And lastly the tarte tatin pie makes for an adventure where the looks of the pie is not revealed until the last minute when it is turned upside-down.

Gluten-free shortcrust pastry and apples
Caramel and apples
Before the tarte tatin is inverted

The baking challenge

In the autumn I make tarte tatin with Norwegian apples. They are frail and delicate and cannot stand heat well, so they must be treated with utmost care. Often apples for the tatin are precooked on the stove before they are baked in the oven, but with Norwegian apples you skip the precooking and bake them maximum 20–25 minutes in the oven to avoid them reduced to mush. With cooking apples such as Granny Smith or Bramley it is much easier as they keep their shape – vital to a tarte tatin.

Many recipes call for puffed pastry, which is easy and delicious but poses a problem. What if you cannot eat gluten? The solution is to make a shortcrust pastry. A shortcrust pastry however requires longer cooking than puffed pastry, and usually this is solved by pre-baking (or blind baking) the dough. But with tarte tatin pre-baking is not possible, so one of the key pillars of a tarte tatin is baking it until the pie crust is slightly crisp while the apples still hold their shape.

Gluten-free tarte tatin

Gluten-free tarte tatin.

Gluten-free tarte tatin (makes 4–6)

For tarte tatin it is convenient to use a tarte tatin dish, a sort of frying pan you can place in the oven. But you could also use a 20cm/8in ovenproof frying pan.

Shortcrust pastry:
125 g gluten-free flour (or ordinary flour)
60 g cold butter in cubes
1 organic egg

Filling:
100 g sugar
40 ml water
1 vanilla bean
50 g butter in cubes
60 ml apple juice (or calvados)
about 5 medium-sized cooking apples (Granny Smith or Bramley)
1/4 lemon
crème fraîche to serve

Shortcrust pastry:
1. Crumble the butter into the flour with your hands until a texture like coarse bread crumbs. Make a well in the centre, whisk the egg and add it to the flour. Stir quickly with a spatula and make the pastry come together with your hands. Wrap in cling film and let rest in the refrigerator for 30 minutes.

2. Place the pastry between two parchment papers, and roll out with a rolling-pin until thin and the size of a tarte tartin dish (measure by placing the pan on top of the pastry). Let rest once more in the refrigerator for 30 minutes.

Apples:
3. Usually I would have used the apple corer, but here I want to reveal the “stars” of the apple core. In order to do so, peel the apples and divide them along the “equator”. Remove the seeds, the stem and the blossom end. Rub generously with lemon.

4. Preheat oven to 175C/350F/Gas 4.

Caramel:
5. Make sure the pan is clean as impurities may cause the caramel to crystallize. Split the vanilla lengthwise and scrape out the seeds. Place seeds and pod in the pan with the sugar and water. Let the sugar absorb the water for 2 minutes. Bring to boil and add a few drops of lemon juice.

6. On medium heat cook the caramel until golden brown. Do not stir, just shake the pan once in a while. This may take a while, about 20 minutes, so be patient. But when the caramel starts to change colour, it happens quickly and you should turn down the heat. P.S. If the caramel crystallizes, add a splash of water and continue boiling.

7. Take the caramel off the heat right before it turns golden brown. Now add the butter, which will splutter and stop the caramelization. Add the apple juice and apples and cook for 10 minutes on medium heat while you turn the apples once.

8. Arrange the apples with their round side facing up. What you now see is not the front of the dish. Allow to cool.

9. Take the pastry out of the refrigerator and wait 5 minutes before you place it on top of the apples. Fold it around the edges of the pan. Bake for about 30 minutes until the pastry and apples are golden.

10. Allow to rest for 10 minutes before you invert the tart. Invert the pie by placing the serving plate (wider than the pan) on top of the pan and turn quickly while you hold both plates firmly together. Serve with crème fraîche.

More gluten-free baking and desserts?

Tiramisu with chocolate
Banana cake – the most tolerant cake in the world
Norwegian success tart
Nordic apple trifle (tilslørte bondepiker)

4 comment on “Gluten-free tarte tatin

  • MollieB
    September 17, 2015 | 8:10 am

    Hello! Thanks for the recipe — just what I was looking for! I’m just a little confused about the thickness of the apples. You say to divide them along the equator; do you mean just to cut them in half, or are you cutting them into multiple slices, and if so, how thick? If not using Norwegian apples, will the central star be too woody?
    Also, do you know if the caramel will work if I use coconut oil instead of butter (I know: it’s almost criminal to think of altering the flavour of tarte tatin by removing the butter, …but it turns out I’m dairy intolerant as well as gluten intolerant. I might make two versions, one classic one for the family and one GF and DF for me…)? Many thanks!

    • nordicdiner
      September 18, 2015 | 7:11 am

      Hi, so good that you ask! The apples are cut in half (not multiple slices). “The central star” would probably be a bit woody, so you can use an apple corer. Hm, the question about using oil is more tricky, but when it comes to the caramel the most important thing is the sugar, not the butter. The butter will soften the caramel though, so it does not turn into brittle. I think as a better option than oil, you could try some tablespoons (lactosefree) heavy cream which is done when making regular caramel. Do tell me if you make this and how it went. Best of luck to you! Trude 🙂

  • Mollie B
    October 3, 2015 | 7:07 am

    I tried this with the coconut oil for both the crust and the caramel (heavy cream not an option, as I am dairy intolerant, not lactose intolerant, which means I react to the milk proteins and not just the lactose). It worked brilliantly! Delicious flavour, nice crust.
    I would only say that the bramley apples turned to mush — it looks like apple purée, except in the middle, where I used a smaller apple, which I would guess is something like a gala. It held its shape beautifully but might be too sweet of a variety to work well for tarte tatin(?). Maybe Granny Smith would work better for next time?
    Thanks again for the lovely recipe.

    • nordicdiner
      October 5, 2015 | 5:03 pm

      I am so glad to hear the tartin turned out the right way, because it is quite tricky although it is simple. Yes, Granny Smith and other cooking apples is definetly the choice for making the cake. Best regards, Trude 🙂

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