Steps to Make Homemade Fig Meringue Tart

Bessie Barker   01/09/2020 16:04

Fig Meringue Tart
Fig Meringue Tart

Hey everyone, it’s me, Dave, welcome to our recipe page. Today, we’re going to make a special dish, fig meringue tart. One of my favorites food recipes. For mine, I will make it a bit unique. This is gonna smell and look delicious.

Fig Meringue Tart is one of the most favored of recent trending foods in the world. It is simple, it is quick, it tastes yummy. It is appreciated by millions every day. Fig Meringue Tart is something that I’ve loved my whole life. They are nice and they look wonderful.

The hardest part of making these fig tarts is resisting picking at the sweet pastry! Italian meringue is smooth and glossy, the perfect texture to pipe or spoon on to the tarts. It is one of my favorite times of the year.

To begin with this particular recipe, we must first prepare a few components. You can cook fig meringue tart using 15 ingredients and 9 steps. Here is how you cook that.

The ingredients needed to make Fig Meringue Tart:
  1. Take Tart crust
  2. Get 70 grams ●Butter
  3. Prepare 70 grams ●Powdered sugar
  4. Make ready 1 ●Egg yolk
  5. Prepare 1 dash ●Vanilla extract
  6. Get 150 grams ●Cake flour
  7. Get Almond meringue
  8. Take 1 ○Egg white
  9. Make ready 15 grams ○Sugar
  10. Make ready 25 grams ○Almond flour
  11. Prepare 15 grams ○Powdered sugar
  12. Take 15 grams ○Cake flour
  13. Make ready 80 grams Apricot jam
  14. Prepare 3 Figs
  15. Take 1 Powdered sugar

The combination of the zingy grapefruit with smooth, light meringue is. This Lemon Meringue Tart is very similar to the Lemon Curd Tart recipe on the site except it is topped with a billowy sweet meringue. Most would agree that there are few desserts this irresistible; that. Meringue tart is a sweet dessert consisting of a pastry shell that is filled with flavored curd and then adorned with light and crispy meringue peaks on top.

Steps to make Fig Meringue Tart:
  1. Mix the room temperature butter with the sugar well until it becomes whitish, then mix in the egg yolk. Mix in the vanilla essence.
  2. Sift in the cake flour, then stir it until the flouriness is gone. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and chill it in the fridge for at least 30 minutes.
  3. Use the palm of your hand to flatten the chilled tart dough, then use a rolling pin to flatten it to a 5 mm thickness. Make the size a little bigger than your tart pan.
  4. Lay the pie dough in the tart pan and cut off any excess. Use a fork to pierce holes in the crust, then bake it at 180°C for about 20 minutes.
  5. Peel the figs, then cut them into 8 vertical pieces.
  6. Coat the chilled tart crust with jam, then set aside some fig slices for topping the tart. Line the tart with the remaining fig slices.
  7. Beat the egg whites until they form very soft peaks, then add the sugar and beat until stiffer peaks form. Sift in the dry ingredients and mix it in.
  8. Put the meringue from Step 7 in a piping bag, then pipe it on top of Step 6. Top the tart with the remaining fig slices, and dust it generously with powdered sugar.
  9. Bake the tart at 180°C for about 25 minutes. I recommend eating this slightly sweet tart with Blendy Plus (a sugar-free coffee drink).

Lemon tart with meringue with sweet and delicate meringue top. Meringue is crisp (and brown part is very sticky if you used a blow torch especially) on the outside and soft and marshmallowy underneath. This lemon meringue tart's creamy lemon filling is extra citrusy and has the perfect consistency to balance "The single best gauge of a bakery's quality is its lemon tart," says tart expert Maury Rubin. In this fig frangipane tart, honey is used both to flavour the almond base and as a glaze. Fresh or dried figs work equally well in this tart and sometimes I use both together, especially when fresh figs are.

So that is going to wrap this up for this exceptional food fig meringue tart recipe. Thanks so much for reading. I am confident you will make this at home. There’s gonna be interesting food at home recipes coming up. Don’t forget to bookmark this page on your browser, and share it to your family, friends and colleague. Thanks again for reading. Go on get cooking!

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