Tarte Tatin (Seasonal Pie) Recipe

pie tarte

⏲ Prep: 15 mins
🔥 Cook: ~30 mins
🍴 Servings: 4–6

🧑🍳 Stuff to Know Before You Start

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Vegan Baking Bonus: Skipping eggs doesn’t mean skipping flavor! This Tarte Tatin often tastes richer and more vibrant, highlighting the fruit’s natural tang and sweetness.

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Upside-Down Magic: Tarte Tatin bakes fruit on the bottom with dough on top. After cooling, you flip it over so the fruit side faces up—just like magic.

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Cooling Patience: Let it cool before flipping. The fruit and syrup set beautifully, preventing messy spills and letting flavors deepen.

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Honey or Maple Syrup: Either sweetener works. Go with honey for a floral note or maple syrup for a toasty, caramel-like flavor.

🥄 Ingredients

  • 350–400g “Quetschen” plums (or similar variety)
  • 120g flour (plus extra if needed)
  • 40g honey (or maple syrup)
  • 2g Chinese 5-spice
  • 20g corn starch (or tapioca starch)
  • 40g olive oil (or other plant-based oil)
  • 20g sugar
  • 25g water (more or less as needed)
  • Pinch of salt (optional, to balance sweetness)

📝 Step by Step

1

Start the Oven & Slice Plums

Preheat your oven to 180–200°C (350–400°F). Wash and pit your 350–400g Quetschen (or similar plums), cutting them in half. In a bowl, coat the plum halves with 40g honey (or maple syrup) until they’re all lightly sticky.

2

Build the Fruit Layer

Place the sticky plums cut-side up in your pie dish or tart pan, arranging them in a neat pattern. Make sure they’re snugly packed so there aren’t big gaps once the dough goes on top.

3

Stir & Knead

In the same bowl (no need to wash it), add 120g flour, 2g Chinese 5-spice, 20g corn starch, 40g olive oil, 20g sugar, and about 25g water. Mix by hand until a dough ball forms. If it’s too dry, add water a splash at a time; if it’s too sticky, add a bit more flour.

4

Top the Plums

Roll out your dough into a round shape slightly larger than the pie dish. Carefully drape it over the plums, tucking the edges around them if needed. Remember, this will be upside-down—so the fruit is on the bottom for now!

5

Two-Stage Baking

Bake for 15 minutes at 180–200°C. Then reduce the oven to 150°C (300°F) and bake another 15 minutes or until the crust turns golden. Total bake time is about 30 minutes, though ovens vary.

🌸 Pro Tip: Let the tarte cool down before flipping. The fruit’s juices thicken, making it less likely to spill. Best results come from chilling overnight—if you can resist that long!

🍽️ How to Serve This Seasonal Tarte Tatin

  • Brunch Bliss: Serve with vegan yogurt or coconut cream and a sprinkle of cinnamon.
  • Dessert Delight: A scoop of dairy-free ice cream or whipped cream takes it over the top.
  • Celebrate Seasons: Try other seasonal fruits—like peaches or apricots—in place of plums.

🧠 The Science Behind Success

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Why Upside Down? The fruit caramelizes against the bottom of the pan, creating a syrupy jam that fuses with the crust when flipped.

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Temperature Tweaks: Higher heat at first browns the crust quickly, while a lower temp finish helps cook the fruit gently without burning the edges.

📖 Tarte Tatin Tradition

This upside-down pie hails from the Loire Valley in France, but it’s famously flexible. Using plums (“Quetschen”) gives the dessert a tangy sweetness—plus that gorgeous purple hue. You’ll find endless variations around the world, each highlighting local, seasonal fruits for maximum flavor.

Veganizing a classic Tarte Tatin is surprisingly easy. Without eggs or butter, you get a delicate, subtly sweet crust that allows the fruit to shine. The hardest part might just be waiting for it to cool before flipping!

❓ Reader Questions Answered

“Do I need a cast-iron pan?”

Not at all. Any oven-safe pie dish or baking pan works. Just make sure it’s deep enough to hold the fruit’s juices.

“Can I use regular plums?”

Absolutely. Any firm, flavorful plums—or even apricots—will do. “Quetschen” are a variety known for their sweet-tartness, but others will work fine.

“What if I overbake the crust?”

Next time, reduce the first bake stage or lower the oven temp slightly. Keep an eye on the color. A light golden brown is your cue that it’s ready.

“How do I store leftovers?”

Cool completely, cover, and refrigerate for up to 3 days. Reheat slices gently or enjoy them cold. The flavors often intensify on day two!