The gooey, sweet, lemon filling pairs nicely with the
buttery, crumbly crust in these lemon bars.
The crust is so buttery and tender that these lemon bars should be eaten
with a fork since the crust can crumble under pressure. This recipe is simple to master and the lemon
bars can be made in about an hour or less.
This lemon bar recipe was one of my favorite recipes growing up and I actually
prefer this over the more time consuming Lemon Meringue Tarts.
Everything from my favorite dessert places to how to use basic ingredients and create amazing desserts
Showing posts with label crusts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crusts. Show all posts
Saturday, March 24, 2012
Tuesday, March 20, 2012
Pâte Sucrée
This Pâte Sucrée recipe produces a crispy, buttery, sweet
cookie-like crust. This crust is perfect
for pies and tarts with runny and creamy fillings, such as my Chocolate Pudding Pie, Meyer Lemon Meringue Tart, or Blueberry Crumb Tart, as shown below.
This recipe produces enough crust for 3 – 9-inch pies or
tarts. You can halve this recipe and
still have enough crust for a rectangular tart pan or 3 individual-sized tart
pans.
Wednesday, February 29, 2012
Pie Crusts: How to Choose
When making a pie or tart, you have to consider what kind of
crust will best complement the filling. Are
you making a fruit pie, such as an apple pie or pear pie?
Or are you making a custard-filled pie, such as a banana cream pie or chocolate pudding pie? Or even something
savory such as a chicken pot pie or quiche?
The three most common French pastry crusts are pâte brisée, Pâte Sucrée, and pâte sablée. The two
crusts I normally use are pâte brisée and pâte sucrée. Pâte brisée, the old French term for broken
paste, is a rich, flaky pastry dough.
Pâte brisée is the most versatile of the crusts and can be used in sweet
or savory recipes. I typically use pâte
brisée for apple pies, pear pies, and quiches. Pâte Sucrée, the old French term for sugar paste, is a sweet, vanilla sugar
cookie-like crust. I like to use pâte
sucrée when I make tarts and custard filled pies. Pâte sablée is a sweet almond
shortbread crust and complements pear tarts as well as fruit tarts filled with
pastry cream.
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