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Caramel-Nut Tart with Milk Chocolate and Cognac Cream

This nut tart is my dream dessert: sticky caramel poured into a buttery crust and studded with salty nuts. It’s a chewy, gooey delight, and whenever it’s on the menu at Lucques I can’t stop myself from sneaking over to the pastry station and cutting paper-thin slices to snack on. It’s also an addictive finger food, so encourage your guests to pick it up and eat it with their hands instead of struggling with a knife and fork. To turn it into a decadent, highbrow candy bar, drizzle some milk chocolate over each slice and dollop with cognac cream.

Cooks' Note

The tricky part to this dessert is making the caramel filling. If it cooks too long, it will taste bitter; and if it doesn’t cook long enough, it won’t achieve that chewy consistency.

Ingredients

1 recipe pâte sucrée (see page 196)
1 3/4 cups whole nuts (I like a combination of almonds, walnuts, macadamia, pine nuts, pecans, and hazelnuts)
2 1/2 cups granulated sugar
1 2/3 cup heavy cream
2 teaspoons mild honey, such as orange blossom
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
6 ounces milk chocolate
1 1/2 teaspoons cognac

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Preheat the oven to 375°F.

    Step 2

    Line the tart pan with the pâte sucrée according to page 196. Prick the bottom with a fork and line it with a few open and fanned out coffee filters or a piece of parchment paper. Fill the lined tart shell with beans or pie weights, and bake 15 minutes, until set. Take the tart out of the oven, and carefully lift out the paper and beans. Return the tart to the oven, and bake another 10 to 15 minutes, until the crust is an even golden brown. Set the tart on a rack to cool completely.

    Step 3

    Spread the nuts on a baking sheet (keep each type separate) and toast 8 to 12 minutes, until they’re golden brown and smell nutty. Some will toast more quickly than others, so watch them carefully and remove the toasted nuts as needed.

    Step 4

    Place the sugar and 1 cup water in a very clean medium-sized heavy-bottomed saucepan. Over medium-high heat, cook the sugar, shaking the pan often to stir—don’t use a utensil to stir, as it could cause the sugar to crystallize. Continue cooking and swirling the pan until the caramel is a deep golden brown, just beyond the soft-crack stage (about 310°F on a candy thermometer). It should be a nice dark color, but not burned.

    Step 5

    Remove from the heat, and slowly whisk in 2/3 cup cream, stirring with the whisk the entire time, until the caramel is smooth and the cream is fully incorporated. (Be aware that the caramel will foam up as you add the cream. It’s very hot, so be careful and pour slowly.) Allow to cool a few minutes. Place the nuts and honey in a bowl. Pour the caramel over them, and stir to combine well. Season with 1/4 teaspoon salt, and pour the mixture into the baked tart shell, to just below the rim. It’s important not to overfill the crust. Refrigerate the tart at least 2 hours.

    Step 6

    Melt the milk chocolate in a small saucepan over very low heat, and stir in 1/3 cup water. Just before serving, whip 1 cup cream and the cognac to soft peaks in a stand mixer fitted with the whisk attachment.

    Step 7

    Slice the tart in half, and cut one half into twelve thin slices. Refrigerate the rest for leftover snacking. Place one slice at the center of each of six plates. Prop up a second slice on top of the first, setting it at an angle and letting the pointed end of the slice rest on the plate. Continue with the remaining slices. Garnish each with three dollops of the cognac cream, and drizzle the milk chocolate across the tart.

  2. Note

    Step 8

    The tricky part to this dessert is making the caramel filling. If it cooks too long, it will taste bitter; and if it doesn’t cook long enough, it won’t achieve that chewy consistency.

Sunday Suppers at Lucques [by Suzanne Goin with Teri Gelber. Copyright © 2005 by Suzanne Goin. Published by Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. All Rights Reserved.. Suzanne Goin graduated from Brown University. She was named Best Creative Chef by Boston magazine in 1994, one of the Best New Chefs by Food & Wine in 1999, and was nominated for a James Beard Award in 2003, 2004, and 2005. She and her business partner, Caroline Styne, also run the restaurant A.O.C. in Los Angeles, where Goin lives with her husband, David Lentz. Teri Gelber is a food writer and public-radio producer living in Los Angeles. ](http://astore.amazon.com/epistore-20/detail/1400042151)
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