Gluten apple tart recipe1/11/2024 ![]() ![]() HA! Forgot all about the apples, didn’t you. And I think I had this in for about 45 minutes.īut even though I couldn’t cut a slice to show you because we were celebrating two birthdays that night and I needed the tarte, can you see how the raspberry jam peeps through the apple slices?Ĭan you see what a perfect and easy dessert this is for a fall day?Ĭan you see the other dessert I made for the 2-birthday occasion? I like to cook at a low temperature (325°, or 160° in my hot oven) to properly cook the thick crust without burning it. The combination of butter and honey over the apples keeps them from drying out. Or if you’re more reasonable.īut otherwise, put the mini pats of butter, and then drizzle honey all over the top. Of course you can skip this step if you don’t plan on eating the tarte warm. Cut small chunks of butter to sprinkle on top – a couple tablespoons. When that’s done, sprinkle a generous amount of cinnamon (I tend to go overboard, but you can use less). You need enough to fill the quiche pan with overlapping apples in concentric circles. Spread a generous amount of raspberry jam on the crust. ![]() Pinch the edges and admire your handiwork. Yes – you want a quiche pan, instead of a pie pan. This enables you to pull the crust into the quiche pan in one go so that it’s perfect. Make sure you put wax paper underneath when you’re ready to roll out the dough. And if you feel like it’s not forming a ball, put a tablespoon of water. (These extra ingredients help make a good crust that replaces the gluten in the flour).īlend. So many ideas! So little time! So much neuroses.įor the crust, put 125 grams of butter, 2 cups GF flour mix, a teaspoon of large grain sea salt, a half-cup confectioner sugar and a half-cup ground almonds, and one egg. And I’ve also been studying up on the Regency period because I can’t wait to attempt a novel set in that period. I’ve taken an editing/writing class, which helped me to pinpoint the weaknesses in my romance novel. I’m in the process of abridging my memoir so that it’s less of a tome (would that I could manage the same in this post). But I have discovered this love for writing books too. □ĭo you know, I have about twice as many ideas for posts as I have time to blog for? I don’t see stopping this blog any time soon. Some people want infrequent book news some people want frequent posts. Contrary to the author website, when you subscribe by e-mail to this blog, you’re getting the posts sent by e-mail a couple times a week. On the author website there is a place to sign up and receive newsletters, which I will send out on an infrequent basis, and which relate specifically to the books. My purpose in separating the two is so that I can reach people who have read my books, and who would like to know more. That is all fixed now.Īnd have you clicked on my author website? You might have done so when it wasn’t fully ready, but it is now. The blog was also slow to load and the e-mail subscribers were not getting the full post delivered to their inbox. The posts weren’t loading properly on the tablet or phone – the left-hand side was cut off. There have been a few small glitches, which are pretty much resolved (I think). Even if you’re not interested in blogging or website design, she blogs about other things and every post is like eye-candy. I would like to introduce you to the brilliance behind both my new blog look and my author website: Lauren Carns! Lauren is truly talented and is such a pleasure to work with. These following few paragraphs are just personal news).īefore we get elbow-deep in gluten-free flour, I just wanted to touch base with you about the blog design. (If you are a new reader, or have just clicked over for the recipe, you can skip down to the next photo where the official post begins. I’ve changed all that for this post, and have included the pie crust recipe. And I made the tarte in the evening when the light was not good for photos. When I blogged about it years ago, I was using a pre-made, frozen, gluten-free pie crust that I rolled out as a base. Sometimes a post just needs a do-over because the photos weren’t stellar or the recipe could be improved upon – and this gluten-free French apple tarte recipe is one such post.
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