Santa Rosa plums proliferate in Northern California, where they were first bred over a century ago by horticulturist Luther Burbank, and where Abraço chef-partner Elizabeth Quijada grew up. Here, she stocks up at Migliorelli’s Greenmarket farm stand. In this simple tart recipe, she poaches the fruit and candies the skin for an edible garnish. -- Robin Raisfeld and Rob Patronite
Ingredients
1/2 cup sugar (Quijada uses Florida Crystals organic cane sugar)
4 Santa Rosa plums
Superfine sugar for dusting (or finely ground Florida Crystals)
Prepared pâte sucrée tart shell (for Quijada’s recipe,
click here)
Instructions
Preheat oven to 300. Make simple syrup by combining the sugar with 2 cups boiling water, stirring well to dissolve. (1) Cut the plums in half from stem to bottom, twist halves to separate, place skin-side down in a skillet, and (2) cover
with simple syrup. Poach over medium-low heat until tender,
approximately 6 or 7 minutes. Let cool for a few minutes, then remove
gently onto a plate. Carefully remove the plum skins, keeping them
intact, and lay on a parchment-lined baking sheet. Spread each skin
flat and sprinkle with superfine sugar (or Florida Crystals that have
been powdered in a small grinder). Bake at 300 for about 6 minutes,
until they start to harden, then flip skins and sprinkle the opposite
sides with sugar. Continue baking for another 6 minutes. Remove from
oven and let cool, and raise oven temperature to 350. (3)
Slice each half-plum into moons and fan over a baked pâte sucrée shell
in a rectangular 4-by-14-inch tart pan. Sprinkle top with sugar and
bake for 10 minutes at 350. When cool, remove from pan and cut into
slices, topping each with a piece of candied skin.
(Published 2008)
Be the first person to write a review.