Dear Stephanie Alexander, I ♥ you. The Cook's Companion has never failed me. Okay there is the date scone recipe which I swear has a typo in it because the dry to wet ratio never seems to work for me no matter how many times I retry it, but ignoring that it's my old faithful. The orange teacake recipe is the basis of my cupcake recipe and am always pulling out the chocolate self-saucing pudding, sticky date pudding and banana cake recipes when I am in need of comfort desserts. Much love, from another Stephanie :)
Originally I bought some cheese with wild fantasies of whipping together a fabulous two cheese souffle, after being challenged to bake one by Peter Pad Thai, my Iron Chef judge. But that particular night I was was getting bad vibes from my kitchen (does that sound insane?) and was feeling a little tired. So I lost my nerve and went with a slightly safer but equally yummy option. Stephanie's gruyere tart caught my eye. Shortcrust pastry and melty cheesy innards, you can't go wrong with that. Obviously I replaced the gruyere with the cheeses I had in my fridge which happened to be a wheel of double cream brie and my most favourite cheddar, a Tasmanian cheese mixed with fresh wild wasabi.
Two Cheese Tart with Rosemary
(Adapted from Stephanie Alexander's recipe from A Cook's Companion)
1 sheet shortcrust pastry (I used Stephanie's recipe, will post it up soon)
250g of cheese of your choice (I used 100g wild wasabi cheddar and 150g brie)
1 cup cream
salt
freshly ground pepper
freshly grated nutmeg
2 eggs + 1 egg yolk
2 tsp fresh rosemary finely chopped
Line a 22cm loose-bottomed flat tin with pastry and blind bake at 200 degrees C for 15 minutes and then bake uncovered for 5 minutes. Allow to cool
Warm cream in a pan over low heat and season it with salt, pepper, rosemary and nutmeg. Mix eggs and egg yolk into cream and pour gently into pastry case.
Bake at 200 degrees C for 20 minutes or until the top is golden and the middle is just set. Allow to cool for a few minutes before cutting.
I would definitely recommend buying some of the wasabi cheese for this tart, it was a lovely surprise of flavour to find in the tart and the rosemary matched it quite well, which was unexpected (I only added the rosemary because I have too much of it and needed to use some up).
My only complaint was that it was still a little too eggy for a tart filling, I think next time I might increase the amount of cheese and not use that extra egg yolk, so feel free to try doing that if you use the recipe above.
Originally I bought some cheese with wild fantasies of whipping together a fabulous two cheese souffle, after being challenged to bake one by Peter Pad Thai, my Iron Chef judge. But that particular night I was was getting bad vibes from my kitchen (does that sound insane?) and was feeling a little tired. So I lost my nerve and went with a slightly safer but equally yummy option. Stephanie's gruyere tart caught my eye. Shortcrust pastry and melty cheesy innards, you can't go wrong with that. Obviously I replaced the gruyere with the cheeses I had in my fridge which happened to be a wheel of double cream brie and my most favourite cheddar, a Tasmanian cheese mixed with fresh wild wasabi.
Two Cheese Tart with Rosemary
(Adapted from Stephanie Alexander's recipe from A Cook's Companion)
1 sheet shortcrust pastry (I used Stephanie's recipe, will post it up soon)
250g of cheese of your choice (I used 100g wild wasabi cheddar and 150g brie)
1 cup cream
salt
freshly ground pepper
freshly grated nutmeg
2 eggs + 1 egg yolk
2 tsp fresh rosemary finely chopped
Line a 22cm loose-bottomed flat tin with pastry and blind bake at 200 degrees C for 15 minutes and then bake uncovered for 5 minutes. Allow to cool
After blind baking
Cut cheese into tiny dice and scatter over pastry.Warm cream in a pan over low heat and season it with salt, pepper, rosemary and nutmeg. Mix eggs and egg yolk into cream and pour gently into pastry case.
Bake at 200 degrees C for 20 minutes or until the top is golden and the middle is just set. Allow to cool for a few minutes before cutting.
Mmm melty...
The tart puffed up a tiny bit and was light, airy and full of small pockets of gooey cheese. The shortcrust pastry recipe I used was so buttery and short and so easy to make that I instantly fell in love with in. I even had enough leftover pastry to make a sweet dessert, but I'll save that for another post ;)I would definitely recommend buying some of the wasabi cheese for this tart, it was a lovely surprise of flavour to find in the tart and the rosemary matched it quite well, which was unexpected (I only added the rosemary because I have too much of it and needed to use some up).
My only complaint was that it was still a little too eggy for a tart filling, I think next time I might increase the amount of cheese and not use that extra egg yolk, so feel free to try doing that if you use the recipe above.
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