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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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I didn't want to make a crust, but I wanted to make a tarte Tatin. I had
six ginger gold apples that I wanted to cook. Got down the cast iron skillet and melted 3/4 stick of butter in it. Added 3/4 cup sugar and cooked it until it was bubbling and medium-dark brown. Stirred with a wooden spoon. Cut the first three apples into 8ths, chopped the rest (1/2 inch pieces). When the caramel was smooth from all that stirring, I took the skillet off the heat and laid the apples in the bottom in a pinwheel pattern radiating from the center. Dumped in the chopped apples and put it back on the heat, medium-low. Let it come to a simmer and basted the apples with the caramel that now had apple juice diluting it. Scooped the liquid up with a spoon and trickled it over the apples. Cooked that way for about 20 minutes, until the liquid thickened and became like a light syrup. Heated the oven to 400°F. At this point, the normal way to make this kind of "pie" is to put a crust on top of the skillet and bake it for maybe 20 minutes. I remembered that apple charlottes are made by lining the mold with slices of bread. Five slices of whole wheat bread, buttered on both sides just covered the skillet (looked like a flower, petals radiating from the center). They stuck out over the edge, so I tucked them in along the skillet sides. Sprinkled sugar on the bread and baked for about 17 minutes. Put a platter on top of the skillet and flipped the whole thing over so it would plop out and be an upside-down pie. Some few apples stuck to the skillet (I've never made one where that didn't happen, and virtually every recipe I've ever seen for it says that. No biggie. Scoop any stuck apple out of the skillet and drop it into place. Voila. It was grand. The apples are wonderful for cooking. It was a glorious red-brown from the apples darkening and the caramel adding its color. The bread was wonderful used this way. I actually liked it better than the traditional crust. Pastorio |
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