Finally, I remembered to grab all of the ingredients and set out to make some home-made butter tarts. Sounds easy right? Well apparently, not for me.
Let me start out by saying that baking is my thing. I'm pretty darned good at it. Cooking on the other hand... not so much. I'm not so bad that I can't boil an egg or make toast, but that's pretty much the limit of my abilities. I can make a variety of polish food (pierogi, barszcz, golombki, etc.... more on that another time), but aside from that, I can't really cook. That's the husband's department (I'll make sure to post some yummies he makes me every once in a while). Anyway.
I start to make my tart dough for these little butter tarts. Everything is going splendidly until... I have to separate two eggs. What was going through my mind I never know. It's times like this that I thank myself for prepping my ingredients BEFORE mixing things together. I crack my first egg... and plop the whole thing in the bowl. How that was supposed to separate the yolk I will never know, but there I was, face to face with an egg shell and no separate egg bits. Crap.
I managed to separate out the yolks I needed, and put the unused whites in the fail bowl. After mixing up my dough, I had a dilemma. What was I going to do with the extra eggs? Hubby had made me an egg sandwich for breakfast, but it was lunch time, so I figured I'd try and make a fail-omelette. I've never made an omelette. I can barely make scrambled eggs without messing up. And yet, here I was, heating up the pan, cutting up some brie, to try and make an omelette. Guess what?
IT WAS YUMMY!
I somehow managed to make a perfectly cooked omelette!!!!
Yeah, I'm super proud of myself :)
Anyways, the butter tarts are now sitting pretty on the cooling rack, almost ready for their first taste test.
These tarts are actually a Scottish recipe in an old-fashioned tart pastry... yum :D
After they cooled, I gave the hubby the first tart to try. He ate three.
Successful butter tarts are successful :)
English Butter Tarts
Makes 12 butter tarts
Ingredients
- for the shortcrust pastry
• 125g butter
• 100g icing sugar
• a small pinch of salt
• 255g plain flour
• 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
• zest of 1/2 a lemon
• 2 large egg yolks
• 2 tablespoons cold milk (or water) - for the filling
• 1/2 cup packed brown sugar
• 1/2 cup corn syrup (golden syrup makes a richer filling)
• 75g butter (room temperature)
• 1 egg
• 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
• 1/4 teaspoon of salt
• 3/4 cup of raisins (optional)
Dough
Cream together the butter, icing sugar, and salt. Slowly add in the flour. When the dough has a breadcrumb-like consistency, add in the egg yolks, lemon zest, and vanilla. When all of the ingredients are combined, add in the cold milk (water). Gently mix the dough by hand, forming a ball. Cover the dough with cling wrap and put it aside in the fridge to chill for at least one hour.
Filling
In a medium bowl, mix together the brown sugar, corn syrup, butter, egg, salt, and vanilla. Mix until smooth. Add in raisins and mix until combined. Set aside for use.
Tarts
Preheat the oven to 400F (200C). Roll out your chilled dough to about 1 cm in thickness (I found it easiest to grab chunks of dough to roll out bit by bit). Grease your tart pans or muffin pan. Press each rolled out piece of dough into the pans. Fill each tart shell with one tablespoon of filling. Pop into the oven for 12-15 minutes (mine took 14 minutes because my oven always takes a bit longer to bake things). Bring out onto a cooling rack, and enjoy!
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