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Tarte aux mirabelles

Sweet fruit tart From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tarte aux mirabelles
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Tarte aux mirabelles is a sweet French dish, combining pastry and mirabelle plums (stones removed). It is a speciality of Lorraine in north-east France, where the mirabelle is an important crop. It also features in the cuisine of other regions of the country.

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Longest-ever tarte aux mirabelles (206.31 m (677 ft), or 4,000 portions), Nancy, France, 2006

The mirabelle plum has been cultivated since at least the 17th century.[1][2] The Dictionnaire de l'Académie française and the Oxford English Dictionary both give the probable derivation of the name as Mirabel, a fairly frequent toponym in the south of France.[1][2] A tart made with mirabelles is traditional in Lorraine and its neighbour Alsace and is found in other parts of France.[3][4]

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Pastry

The type of pastry used for tarte aux mirabelles varies. The most frequently mentioned in recipes is pâte brisée,[5][6] but other sweet pastries – pâte sablée and pâte sucrée – are specified by some cooks,[7][8][9] and unsweetened shortcrust and puff are also used in some recipes.[10][11] In Beaulieu-sur-Dordogne, Elizabeth David encountered a tarte aux mirabelles made with yeast pastry: "Those little round golden plums of early autumn on their light brioche-like base made an unexpected and memorable end to our outdoor feast".[4]

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Composition

The traditional tarte aux mirabelles consisted solely of fruit, pastry and a little sugar sprinkled on top before cooking. Some more recent recipes, including that of Albert and Michel Roux, have introduced a layer of crème pâtissière spread on the pastry base before the layer of fruit is added.[5]

References

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