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Title: Wine Tart (Vaud)
Categories: Tart Switzerland
Yield: 6 Servings

PASTRY
140gPlain flour
1tsBaking powder
60gUnsalted butter; softened
1/2tsSugar
3tbMilk
  Butter; for the tart tin
  Flour; for the tart tin
FILLING
120gCaster sugar
1tsGround cinnamon
10gPlain flour
1dlDry white wine; from Vaud !!
15gButter

(Units: 100 g = 3 1/2 oz; 1 dl = 3 1/2 fl oz = 2/5 cup; 180 oC = 350 oF; 200 oC = 400 oF; 230 oC = 450 oF; 250 oC = 475 oF; 2.5 cm = 1 inch)

This is a recipe from the Vaud: both the pastry and the filling are local specialities. If you cannot get Vaudois wine, use any good dry white wine instead.

Pre-heat the oven to 260 oC.

Lightly butter and flour a tart tin with a removable base 20 cm (8 in) in diameter.

To make the pastry, put the flour, baking powder and softened butter together in a large bowl. Rub all the ingredients together with your fingertips until the mixture resembles coarse semolina. Add the milk and mix it in lightly and rapidly with your fingers, without exerting any pressure. Form the pastry to a ball, using it to collect all the loose flour. If need be, add another drop or two of milk.

Do not let the pastry rest, but roll it out straight away to fit the prepared tart tin.

Mix the sugar, cinnamon and flour together. Strew this mixture all over the bottom of the tart (This is a liquid filling so the bottom of the tart is not pricked with a fork). Pour the wine over the sugar mixture and mix it in with your fingertips. Dot the surface with the butter, in flakes.

Cook the tart in the bottom of the pre-heated oven for 15 to 25 minutes, turning it from time to time to equalise the heat and to prevent bubbles forming (at the end of the cooking time, the filling must look like "middle-firm" gelatin).

Leave the tart to cool before taking it out of the tin.

From: Fredy Girardet, Cuisine spontanee, M Papermac, 1986, ISBN 0-333-40957-4

Typed for you by Rene Gagnaux

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