Pear Vanilla Bean Brûlée Tarts + Pear Crisp

Pear Vanilla Bean Brûlée Tarts + Pear Crisp

As my harshest critic, I rarely, no, NEVER, make statements of this nature however the time has come where I have finally blown my own mind; ladies and gents, this has to be one of the most fabulous thing I’ve ever created.

No, really.

I was invited to take part in Australian Pears’ What Can You Pair with a Pear competition for Australian Pear Month and naturally I couldn’t resist the challenge; from a very young age I never enjoyed the pear (I’ll put it down to an amazing aversion to soft fruit) but lately I’ve been sneaking pear into my salads to shed the irrational reluctance. Also, have you ever experienced the joy of receiving fresh produce via courier? Feels good, man.

Pear Vanilla Bean Brûlée Tarts + Pear Crisp

A few ideas for a new pear dish included salads and poaching etc however I ended up a little carried away so this may be a little lengthy for the Australian Pears were after (err, sorry!). For those wanting to try this recipe; I prepared the crisp, crème pâtissière and pastry on one day one, baked the tart shells and filled them on day two and blow-torched on day three.

The pear flavour isn’t overwhelming but instead offers a massive hit of freshness behind the crème pâtissière. The tart shells are buttery and sweet and of course the brûlée provides a shardy crack and amazing crunch. And as for the embedded pear crisp; well, it’s like eating magically charred toffee pear. It’s one of those rare occasions where completely winging it resulted in complete success! The only thing I’d considering trying for next time is using a little more pear purée. This recipe makes four 12cm tarts, or, many little tartlets.

Pear Vanilla Bean Brûlée Tarts + Pear Crisp

Pear Vanilla Bean Brûlée Tarts + Pear Crisp
(an original recipe)

Pear crisp
1/2 pear

Pear crème pâtissière
2 Williams pears, peeled, cores removed
200ml cream
1/2 vanilla bean
100g (approx. 5) egg yolks
100g caster sugar
60g corn flour
70g butter

Pastry
200g flour
60g pure icing sugar
Pinch of salt
120g cold butter
30ml cold water

Assembly
1 cup sugar

For the pear crisp
1. Preheat oven to 100°C.
2. Slice pear along its cross section and very finely slice with a mandolin. Transfer to baking tray and bake for 2-3 hours, checking occasionally, until pieces have dried out. Store in a sealed container until use.

For the pear crème pâtissière
1. Roughly chop pears and purée in a food processor. Push through a fine sieve.
2. In a separate bowl combine egg yolks, sugar and cornflour and whisk until combined.
3. Over medium heat place pear purée, cream and scraped, split vanilla bean and stir continuously. Heat until just beginning to boil. Slowly pour mixture into bowl of yolk mixture to temper then return to pan and heat. Again, whisk continuously until beginning to thicken, this should take a few minutes.
4. Decant into another bowl, remove vanilla bean husk and cover with plastic wrap until cool enough to touch. Gradually add cubed butter, whisking after each addition.
5. Return plastic wrap and place in fridge to cool completely.

For the pastry
1. Preheat oven to 180°C.
2. Combine flour, icing sugar and and salt in a food processor. Cube butter, add to mix and process once more. Add the cold water and once again process until mixture forms a ball. Remove, form into a disc, wrap in plastic and refrigerate for a few hours (or until cool if you’re in a hurry).
3. Roll out pastry, stamp out circles and prepare into tart greased tart tins. Fill with pastry weights (or rice, or beans) and bake for 15 minutes. Remove weights and bake for a further 15 minutes until browned and cooked through. Remove from tart tins and allow to cool completely on a wire rack.

For the assembly
1. Carefully spoon pear crème pâtissière into tart shells until just overflowing. Flatten with a palette knife and allow to cool and set in the fridge for at least a few hours. Once ready (the surface will have firmed up) sprinkle with an even layer of sugar and scorch with a kitchen blow-torch until toffee has formed. Place a pear crisp round in the centre, sprinkle with more sugar and again scorch with blow-torch until toasted and embedded. Serve immediately with additional pear crisps on the side.

Pear Vanilla Bean Brûlée Tarts + Pear Crisp

Or rather; enjoy immediately. Happy Australian Pear month!

  1. chocolatesuze’s avatar

    that last pic- OHEMGEEEE

    Reply

  2. JJ @ 84thand3rd’s avatar

    You had me at pear crème pâtissière – and totally agree with Suze about that last pic – YUM!!!

    Reply

  3. Juliana’s avatar

    This pear dessert looks fabulous, especially that it is pear season…I love the idea of the pear crème pâtissière…very elegant and awesome pictures.
    Thanks for the visit and hope you are having a fabulous week Alana :)

    Reply

  4. Tina @ bitemeshowme’s avatar

    wow. dont think i’ve drooled this much at this hour before. You’ve done an amazing job. That brulee looks friggen amazing!!!!!

    Reply

  5. Jesica @ Pencil Kitchen’s avatar

    you just married Creme Brûlée and a pear tart together. A pudding and a pie. I got to say, they are a match in heaven!

    Reply

  6. myfudo’s avatar

    This is a real must try…The combination is perfect! There is nothing more I’d rather do with pears after seeing this recipe.

    Reply

  7. beti’s avatar

    wow what a lovely combination, never thought of making a fruit brule but it does look good

    Reply

  8. Orange Latte’s avatar

    OMG! Your Creme Brulee looks very stunning!!! Can wait to try it. ^_^

    Reply

  9. Shumaila’s avatar

    This sounds really good, love that you used pears!

    Reply

  10. Vivian - vxdollface’s avatar

    This looks like such a wonderful recipe! Pears are underrated in desserts, I love how they have a subtle sweetness – can’t wait to make this

    Reply

  11. Richa@HobbyandMore’s avatar

    Woah.. i love this idea of a brulee crisp tart!!

    Reply

  12. Apple’s avatar

    So delicate! Looks amazing, I’d never have the patience to create something like that!

    Reply

  13. jessica’s avatar

    these look increadible! i’m not much of a pair fan either (it’s something about the graininess of the skin) but whoa. these sounds and look so great! you had better win the competition!

    Reply

  14. Amber’s avatar

    :O
    This recipe is a hybrid of two of my favourite things in life. You are an inspiration!

    Reply

  15. Sara’s avatar

    I’m totally in love with this recipe… it’s really interesting, thanks a lot.

    Reply

  16. Jessica’s avatar

    Looks AMAZING! How many small 8cm tarts does this recipe make?

    Reply

  17. Maxine’s avatar

    Hi

    I have just attempted this tart and have a few questions…..firstly the quantity of sugar in pastry sounds quite low.
    I also found the crime patisserie very yellow and there was quite a large quantity of corn flour.Are you sure these quantities are accurate?

    I will bake the pastry just now and assemble the tart and am sure it will taste very nice,just concerned about those 2 things.

    Regards
    Maxine

    Reply

    1. Alana’s avatar

      Hey there Maxine, thanks for giving this a try! The pastry is a version of pâte sucrée which is supposed to have a cookie-like texture. The level of sugar is accurate as the crème pâtissière will provide enough sweetness. As for the colour and cornflour; I’m not exactly sure what shade yours turned out to be but having a yellow-ish tinge sounds normal! The large amount of cornflour is to keep the tart in tact once refrigerated; the crème pâtissière would spill out otherwise. I hope this answers your questions, do let me know how you go!

      Reply

    2. Maxine’s avatar

      Hi again

      Thanks so much for your reply.I baked a large tart and it was absolutely delicious! It was devoured in minutes……yum.

      Look forward to trying another one of your recipes.
      Thanks
      Max

      Reply

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