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« Banana Espresso Chocolate Chip Muffins | Main | Honey Cinnamon Roasted Chickpeas »
Tuesday
Nov082011

Caramel Apple Tart

Caramel Apple Tart

I love caramel apples. In fact, they make the short list of my not-so guilty pleasures. Around autumn, I slowly begin to have a singular focus for those sweet bites of heaven on a stick. Eventually it builds to a climax and I suddenly find myself in the candy aisle buying sweets I never allow myself to buy the rest of the year. Butterfingers, Twix bars, M&Ms, roasted peanuts, Snickers bars, toffee...

I turn into a sugar monster, leaving the store with an extra fifteen thousand calories in tow.

Caramel Apple Tart

Unfortunately for me, I have only successfully made caramel apples once, long ago, before I had a place to share beautiful food with you. Once. Nevertheless, my caramel apple cravings don't cease. Every year I give them another try, if not twice or thrice, hoping this will be the year they turn out. I can gather the apples, freshly picked from trees, and buy copious amounts of sugar and chocolate, but I can never seem to get the caramel to hug the apples. Instead, it sinks to the bottom of the apples forming sweet, mournful puddles.

The recipe doesn't seem to matter, nor does the intensity in which I watch the mercury rise in my candy thermometer. Perhaps I am cursed, never to produce beautiful caramel apples again (though beautiful or not, those sweet apples are promptly devoured anyway).

Caramel Apple Tart Caramel Apple Tart Caramel Apple Tart

So this year, after my caramel apples failed to turn out yet again (curse you, caramel apple gods!), I turned to new ideas and recipes to share this flavor combination with you. Perhaps the saving grace to come out of this sad situation is that, if I didn't have such poor luck with caramel apples, these gorgeous tarts may have never been born.

Now that would be truly devastating. The world needs more cinnamon apples drowned in an orange citrus caramel overflowing a sweet, almond shortbread crust. Don't you agree?

Caramel Apple Tart

These Caramel Apple Tarts are a perfect treat served warmed on a cold fall day. Apples are coated in cinnamon and orange zest before being covered in an orange citrus caramel and set in an almond shortbread crust to bake. The hint of orange really lends a greater depth of flavor to these tarts. Though the recipe may appear intimidating in length, the steps are not difficult. I simply went into greater detail than usual to help you along the way.

One Year Ago: Pumpkin Spice Oatmeal and Sweet Potato Fries

Caramel Apple Tart

Yields 8 4-inch tartlets or 1 9-inch tart

Tart Dough
8 tablespoons (1 stick) butter, room temperature
1/2 cup powdered sugar
1/4 cup sliced almonds
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 egg
1 3/4 cups all purpose flour

In a food processor, blend the butter until smooth and creamy. Add the powdered sugar and process until well mixed. Add in the almonds, salt, vanilla extract, and egg and process again. Scrape around the bowl if necessary. Add the flour and pulse just until the dough forms a ball. The dough will be the consistency of very soft and sticky cookie dough.

Remove the dough from the bowl, shape into a disk, and wrap in plastic. Chill in refrigerator for 4 hours or overnight to firm up the dough.

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (180 degrees C).

When chilled until firm, roll out the dough on a lightly floured surface until it is 1/8-inch thick (you may have to wait a few minutes for the dough to soften). Cut out rounds of dough to fit the tartlet pans (alternatively, if you are making a large, single tart, roll out the dough and cut a large circle to fit the tart pan). Press the dough carefully into the pans; be careful not the stretch the dough! Stab the bottom several times with a fork so the dough will not rise in the oven.

Bake the tart shells for 15-18 minutes, or until they are lightly colored and the shell feels dry to the touch. Let cool completely before filling.

Orange Citrus Caramel

Yields 1 1/2 cups

1 cup granulated sugar
1 cup heavy cream, warmed
1/4 cup freshly squeezed orange juice (about 1 orange)
1/2 teaspoon salt

In a large saucepan over medium heat, mix together granulated sugar and 1/4 cup water. Scrape down sides of pan and let sugar boil, without stirring, until sugar reaches a golden amber color (if using a candy thermometer, this happens somewhere between 325F to 350F). Remove sugar from heat and allow to rest for a full minute before pouring in warmed heavy cream. Whisk vigorously to incorporate cream (caramel will bubble up violently so be very careful!). Whisk in orange juice and salt.

To store, keep refrigerated in an air-tight container.

Apple Filling (Note: You will have to 1 1/2 this recipe for a 9-inch tart)
4 medium apples, peeled, cored, and diced
1 tablespoon freshly squeezed orange juice
1 tablespoon orange zest
1 teaspoon cinnamon

In a medium bowl, combine apples, orange juice, orange zest, and cinnamon.

To Assemble

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (180 degrees C).

Spoon apples into baked and cooled tart shells (apples will cook down while baking so pile them high). Pour caramel over each tart until it reaches the rim of the shell. Place tarts on a parchment lined baking sheet (do not skip this!) and bake for 30-35 minutes, or until apples are tender. Allow to cool for 15 minutes on pan before attempting to move them (the caramel needs to harden up slightly or the tarts will crumble under your fingers).

Serve slightly warmed, with a dollop of whipped cream if desired.

Reader Comments (20)

oh my god... as always your pictures leave me drooling.
gorgeous pictures that make me drool ... such a pity that you don't write the recipes in metric (grams,ml) too ... that you be definitely a "plus" for non-US readers ... thanks for the recipe anyways !
11.9.2011 | Unregistered Commenterargone
This looks amazing, thank you!

Question: In the dough ingredient list it calls for sliced almonds but in the directions it says to put the almond meal in the processor. Which one should it be? Sliced almonds or almond meal? Or did I miss something?

Thanks again for the great recipe
11.9.2011 | Unregistered CommenterJeanna
I recently read on Pioneer Woman (of course, she would know as she is a genius) that to make caramel stick is to wash the waxiness off the apples really well. Maybe that will help? This tart looks delish!
11.9.2011 | Unregistered CommenterJenna
I love when you explain how to do it without a Candy thermometer, I can't find one that is ok here in Spain!
11.9.2011 | Unregistered CommenterMhina
Carrie-- Thank you so much!

Argone-- Thank you! If I ever find myself with a kitchen scale, I will start including them!

Jeanna-- Thank you for catching that! It should be sliced almonds, not almond meal. I've fixed the recipe above to reflect this.

Jenna-- Thanks for the advice! I was using fresh picked apples from a tree. Since I can't imagine the neighbors sneaking over to wax them, I think it's safe to say I just fail at the caramel apple game. This tart makes it all better, though.

Mhina-- My candy thermometer is always doing something weird, so I've found that visual clues are more helpful than a particular temperature.
11.9.2011 | Registered CommenterKristin Rosenau
This just screams "time for the holidays!" ;)

Looks absolutely delicious!
11.9.2011 | Unregistered CommenterElle
I believe the world DOES need more caramel apple tarts with shortbread crust. And by the world, I mean me, actually. I've never tried to make caramel apples before, but after your many attempts, I don't know if I'll bother trying. In fact, I don't know if I've ever even had one in my entire life. Sad, huh??

This looks great Kristin, per usual! :)
As much as I love caramel apples, they are never very easy to eat. So I totally love this idea of turning those flavors into a tart!!
11.9.2011 | Unregistered CommenterDeborah
Oh my goodness, this looks fabulous! Caramel and apples are a match made in Heaven! LOVE!
wow these pictures are gorgeous!!! and the tart sounds amazing too :) thanks for sharing such an awesome recipe!
Just beautiful!!
The apple tart made me hungry! But I also like your photos and how you took shots of your dish. The chopping board, knife and apple tart look good together. Even the peeking blue cloth under the board added detail on the image composition. Nice work.
11.11.2011 | Unregistered CommenterArthur Taper
I once saw a person who makes all kinds of absolutely luscious and unique caramel apples as a business say they add a few marshmallows to their caramel to help ensure it will stick to the apples. Maybe getting caramel to stick to apples is like getting polish to stick to nails - you could always try gently buffing the skin somehow - lol:)
11.15.2011 | Unregistered CommenterSweet Pea
Wow... first off your pictures are incredible. Secondly, I don't want to think of a world without caramel + apples. The whole point of living in the North East (for me) is to eat an obscene amount of apples during the Fall. And cider. And apple butter. You get the idea. I'm not the greatest when it comes to pastry dough. I'm thinking of just making the filling and the caramel and just eating that with a spoon :) Yea that sounds about right to me :) Thanks for sharing.
Looks delicious, definitely will try it out.

On another note, I make caramel apples all the time with no problems. I had someone tell me long ago that they blanched their apples before putting them on the sticks, so I did that and have never had a problem. :)
07.25.2012 | Unregistered CommenterAnna
This looks great and I'm planning to make it for Thanksgiving Dessert this weekend. Just wondering if the cooking time is the same if making one large tart?
Thanks!
10.3.2012 | Unregistered CommenterJill
Jill-- The bake time will be the same. Just be sure to increase the apple filling to 1 1/2 times the recipe listed to get a fuller tart.
10.3.2012 | Registered CommenterKristin Rosenau
I'd love to try this for christmas morning, but I'm wondering if I could omit the orage juice in the caramel and if I do how much is that going to change the consistency of the caramel and if i could replace it with more cream or something else? thanks for the recipe!
12.18.2012 | Unregistered Commenterjesse
Jesse-- You could easily substitute the orange juice for the heavy cream. The consistency of the caramel should be fine. If the caramel is too thin, just simmer it on medium-low heat until it thickens up.
12.19.2012 | Registered CommenterKristin Rosenau

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