Apple Tarte Tatins Part 1
Submitted by eleni
Classic French apple tarte Tatin with Granny Smith apples caramelized in a skillet and topped with buttery homemade pastry. A stunning upside-down dessert with deep golden caramel.
YIELD
1 piePREP
30 minCOOK
30 minREADY
60 minTarte Tatin is the queen of French apple desserts, and this version starts where it should: with a proper dry caramel made right in the skillet. No water, no corn syrup shortcuts. You melt ¾ cup of sugar low and slow until it turns pale gold, then layer in eight Granny Smiths and let the whole thing bubble away until the juices cook off and the caramel deepens to a rich amber.
Granny Smiths are the right call here. They hold their shape through the long stovetop cook and their tartness pushes back against all that butter and sugar. A softer apple like McIntosh would collapse into sauce.
The two-layer arrangement matters more than it looks. Rounded sides down on the first layer, rounded sides up on the second. This gives you that gorgeous concentric pattern when you flip the finished tart. Pack them tight because they shrink as they cook.
The homemade pastry in this recipe uses cold butter and an egg yolk for richness, creating a flaky, tender crust that soaks up caramel without going soggy.
Pro Tips
- Don’t stir the apples once they’re arranged in the pan. Let the caramel do its work undisturbed
- Watch the caramel color closely. Pale golden is where you stop and add apples. Go too dark and it turns bitter fast
- Toss the apple quarters in lemon juice immediately after cutting to prevent browning
- The butter scattered over the top bastes the apples as it melts, building flavor in every layer
Variations
- Use a mix of Granny Smith and Honeycrisp for a balance of tart and sweet
- Add a split vanilla bean to the caramel for a fragrant, warm note
- Swap the homemade pastry for store-bought puff pastry if you’re short on time
Ingredients
Directions
Peel, quarter and core the apples.
Put in a large mixing bowl and toss with the lemon juice.
Set aside.
Place the sugar in a 10-inch skillet or Tarte Tatin pan over lowheat.
When some of the sugar begins to melt, begin stirring with a wooden spoon until all of the sugar is melted and begins to turn a pale golden color.
Remove the pan from the heat.
Arrange the apple pieces in the skillet, rounded side down, in concentric circles, fitting them together as close as possible.
Fill the center with 2 or 3 apple pieces as needed.
Arrange the remaining pieces, rounded side up, in concentric circles, filling in the gaps left in the first layer.
Cut the butter into small pieces and scatter over the apples.
Place the pan over medium heat.
Cook until the sugar turns a deep caramel color and the juice released from the apples are nearly evaporated, about 15 to 20 minutes.
(Continued in Part 2)
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