On Sunday, following a few days of re-adjustment once all
my kitchen equipment and baking boxes had found new homes, I started to feel
more at ease. I began to look forward to baking again and I moreover I needed
to cook up some snacks to keep me going throughout the coming week.
So, I had to go for it. An afternoon of baking in a new
environment and with a new perspective… and it felt good. I’d even go so far as to say it was a
resounding success!
First up I tried a ‘safe’ recipe with few ingredients and
minimal mess to test the waters… more on that in a later post (clue- it
contained ginger!)
Second up, these apple and raspberry coconut tarts…
indeed they are as good as they sound. Since I was feeling adventurous and
surprisingly confident by that point I decided to go all out and put together a
crazy gluten free pastry base to boot. Feel
free to use your own ‘tried and tested’ pastry recipe if you prefer (GF or not),
but I felt this version turned out surprising well- see additional notes below.
The ingredients and method might appear long winded- but please do not let this
put you off, each step is pretty simple and there is really not too much to it.
It will be worth it!
Do I really need say any more or does this picture speak
for itself….mmmmm, crisp coconut flakes, sweet moist coconut buttery apple
topping and drippy raspberry centres all wrapped up in a crisp pastry shell.
Recipe: Apple and raspberry coconut tarts
Makes 12 tarts
Ingredients
Pastry base:
130g GF flour mix
30g ground almonds
¼ tsp xantham gum
80g coconut butter
40g banana puree (approx. ½ mashed
banana)
½ tsp cinnamon
Filling:
1tsp sugar free raspberry jam per tart case
1 apple grated
1tsp lemon juice
2 tbs agave
50g coconut butter (partially
melted)
40g unsweetened desiccated
coconut
1/3 tsp stevia (or to taste)
Topping:
1tbs ground flax plus 2 tbs hot
water
Approx. ½ cup unsweetened desiccated
coconut
Method
Prepare GF pastry base (as above
or use own recipe) but combining all ingredients together and forming a ball of
dough. Cover in cling film and let rest whilst you prep the remaining
ingredients.
Mix the grated apple with the
lemon juice and set aside. Mix the partially melted coconut butter with the
agave, stevia and desiccated coconut then add the apple mixture.
Either roll the pastry and use
a cutter to cut circles to lay in each tart case, or if the pastry is a little
too crumbly (as in this case) put of sections of dough and press into each tart
case with fingers tips ensuring the pastry is not too thick. Note- it is impotant that the pastry is pretty thin as otherwise it will dominate the tart and be too tough.
Mix the ground flax with hot
water and allow to sit for a few minutes until gloopy.
Fill each tart with a tsp of jam
and then top this with a ‘disc’ of apple/coconut mixture- I pulled off a piece
the size of a walnut and then flattened this in my hands.
Lastly, using a pastry brush,
cover the top surface of the tart with the flax mixture and sprinkle over a
generous layer of desiccated coconut so that it sticks to the wet flax.
Bake at 180C for approx. 15 minutes
until the top begins to turn golden.
First- add 1 tsp of jam per tart
Second- lay the apple/coconut 'pattie' over the jam
(note I ran short of topping hence the lonely jam tart!)
before adding the coconut sprinkles over the top.
Note: My pastry base was
completely experimental, but I felt it worked quite well with a subtle sweetness of
banana and coconut. I haven’t created a GF pastry before so have little experience to go on. It wasn’t at all flaking but neither was it too tough the next day (however it got tougher in the following couple of days so maybe still needs torefinement!) It
had the characteristic of a more robust pastry shell with a substantial ‘bite’
as opposed to melt-in-your-mouth, so make sure you keep the pastry case very thin. I quite liked the robustness it gave it but I understand some people
may prefer a more delicate flakier pastry. Any neutral pastry base would work
well here so feel free to mix it up a bit and use your own pastry recipe.
For tips and info on recipe measurement conversions, ingredients, substitutions and the methods behind how I do things.... check out my 'baking tips' tab at the top of the page.
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