Tomato tart à la Régalade

tarteauxtomatesLRslice1The heirloom tomatoes at Ella Bella farm stand at the farmer’s market last Saturday were so unbelievably gorgeous that I decided to make a tomato tart for a picnic last Saturday in Golden Gate Park. The recipe came from 125 recettes de La Régalade by Yves Camdeborde.

I have wanted to make this tart since I got the book. How could you resist a tart dough comprising of equal amount parmigiano cheese, butter, and flour? I mean, that’s such an irresistible indulgence.

tarteauxtomatesLR1I made two versions in one day, as I wanted to test this brand new recipe. I used pastry flour for the first version, and pretty much followed the recipe exactly. The resulting product was not ideal. The tart dough was a little loose, probably due to not enough gluten from the pastry flour. It was also ever so slightly soggy, probably because I didn’t let the tomato rest long enough.

tarteauxtomatesLR2For the second one, I used regular all purpose flour, blind-baked the tart (about 10 minutes), and roasted the tomato slices for 10 minutes at 300F. Then the tart was reassembled, and in it went to the oven for another 10 minutes. It was a little bit of a challenge getting the soft roasted tomato slices to go neatly on top of the tart, but I managed. The resulting tart was better than the first one, the dough wasn’t as loose, and the bottom of the tart was only a teeny bit wet—but that could have largely been due to the change in the type of flour.. I’m not sure if the difference was worth the pain however. So I ended up with a recipe that was pretty much the same as the one I started out with.

Tarte sablée parmesan, tomate confite, huile d’olive
From 125 recettes de La Régalade by Yves Camdeborde

6 tomatoes, about 100g each
200 g. parmigiano reggiano
200 g flour
200 g. butter, room temperature
olive oil
salt
pepper

For the dough:
In a large bowl, work the cheese, flour, and butter together until forming a dough, using your finger tips or a pastry cutter. Knead it a few times until smooth. Wrap in plastic and refrigerate for at least a half hour.

For the tomatoes:
Slice all the tomatoes thinly, 2-3 mm. thick, and arrange on two baking sheets, sprinkle all over with salt and pepper. Let stand for at least a half hour to get rid of some water from the tomatoes.

To finish:
Roll out the dough to fit 12 inch tart pan or into six individual rounds.
Arrange the tomato slices neatly on the tart, be sure to dry each slice well with paper towel.
Bake in a preheated 350 F (180 c.) oven for 15 minutes for the large tart, or 10 minutes if you have smaller rounds.
Let cool to lukewarm before unmolding.
Pour excellent olive oil over the tart immediately before serving.

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  • http://seattlebonvivant.typepad.com Seattle Bon Vivant

    Gorgeous! You are guilty of reminding me of one of my favorite tomato dishes Les Philosophes Tarte Tatin Aux Tomates. Yum! Soon, soon…

  • liz

    pim, it is better to salt the tomatoes and not roast ahead of time or you can just let the tomatoes drain on paper towels for about 45 minutes. I have a simialr recipe but no parmesan in the crust. Instead I make a classic tarte shell crust – blind bake. Layer gruyere cheese on the bottom which stops the sog, layer with tomatoes and then sprinkle with fresh herbs and parmesan. I bake for about 30 minutes.

  • http://www.tetellita.blogspot.com Estelle

    Bonjour Pim, I have read lots of “tartes a la tomates” recipes where you actually spread some mustard on the crust, before putting the tomatoes. Very simple but very good!

  • http://chezpim.typepad.com Pim

    Lizzie,
    I thought pre-baking was a little pointless as well. Next time I will follow your suggestion and let them drain for 45 minutes.
    Ms.Viv,
    I’ve never had that one, but this one is plenty good. Do try it, you’d better love Parmesan though becuase the dough is very parmesan-y, in a good way of course.
    Estelle,
    The mustard sounds like an interesting trick, would the tart taste much like mustard, you think?
    cheers,
    Pim

  • http://seattlebonvivant.typepad.com Seattle Bon Vivant

    Pim, I’m a mouse when it comes to cheese. I’ll try it ASAP incorporating the draining the tomatoes bit. Thanks! (btw..did you ever get my email?) ;-)

  • mademoiselle a.

    This looks mouthwatering, and I fall for parmesan in crusts. The choice of red and yellow makes it an eye candy.
    I usually make this kind of tartes with zucchini and tomatoes and a creme-fraiche-egg-cream added. I recently contemplated the issue of blindbaking crusts and came to the decision that it helps, despite the circumstances. The bottom of the crust will ‘stabilize’ and rise its tiny milimeters and, all in all, will be less soggy.
    There is nothing like pastry flour here in Germany [not that I ever knew], but adding an egg could have improved the texture and binding.
    You’ve made me hungry for this now, but I wanted to do puff pastry buches with spinach filling today….*sigh*

  • Tana

    Hi, Pim, I thought you might like a peek at Ella Bella Farm. It is one of the most beautiful farms I’ve ever photographed, and is on one of my favorite roads in Santa Cruz county.
    http://outstandinginthefield.com/2002EllaBella.html
    It’s a fabulous year for tomatoes. I’m in love with them all (and headed to the Tomato Festival in Carmel on Sunday–thrilled to bits to finally get to go).
    I have baked the heirloom tomato tart at Epicurious (with parmagiano cheese in the crust, as well) but had more success pre-baking the crust with pie weights, then finishing with the tomatoes. Otherwise, as you can imagine, it got a bit soggy. Nothing with cheese dough is so soggy as to be inedible, though.
    ; )

  • http://megsfoodandwinepage.typepad.com/megsfoodandwinepage/ Meg

    Hi, I had to post a comment because due to a surplus of tomatoes from my garden, I’ve made lots of tomato tarts this summer. . . and the mustard trick works well! I make a tart shell with one egg yolk and a little too much water (this usually happens by accident because I’m not paying enough attention anyway). . . then blind bake it for 10 minutes. After cooling, a THICK slather of mustard (it really bakes in so you can use a lot without being afraid!) before the tomatoes. . . and it comes out really well. I’ve recently become a convert to prebaking tart shells, maybe because we had so much rain in the middle of the summer and all the vegetables were watery? Anyway, tomato tart — yum yum! my new favorite way to use up tomatoes!

  • sandye

    dear pim,
    can’t recall where i first read about doing it, but i have brushed dijon mustard on the bottom of my pie shells for quiches for a long time now–and i am a heathen who uses frozen shells. i really cannot recall there being any particularly negative or strong taste in association with using it though. maybe i should do another tasting. it’s been several years now!
    i enjoy your site tremendously!