This is an interesting recipe. Particularly since Dorie gave us her story of first tasing a tourteau, and not really knowing what it was supposed to be... a dessert? cheese? Once made, and tasted... I understand.
This is definitely not an American-style cheesecake. I've had several Italian-style ricotta cheesecakes too, but this is something entirely different. In a very good way! Essentially a goat-cheese-filling in a pastry crust. Dorie offered a couple of choices for the crust - both we've made before. Either the regular tart crust, or the sweeter dessert crust. Since I was interested in trying the tourteau both as dessert and also as a cheese course with a nice glass of wine - I decided on the simpler (un-sweet) tart dough. Because we've made that before, I'll just cut to the chase, and concentrate on the filling.
pretty short list of simple ingredients... |
first the egg whites get whipped to soft peaks they'll be set aside so we can make the cheesy-part |
love this - use the same bowl to mix together the yolks, cheese, sugar, corstarch, a pinch of salt - oh, and a little orange flower water |
this all gets beaten until smooth |
about a fourth of the whites are folded in to lighten the mixture |
then the remainder are incorporated I don't get overly concerned - I'd rather err on the side of keeping all of that lovely air in, and not overmixing |
the tart dough gets rolled out (I love my new mat that has the measurements on it - makes it so easy!) and then placed in the 8" spring-form pan no need to make things perfect here (good thing!) |
just out of the oven, beautifully puffed |
of course, once it cools, the touteau deflates a bit mine isn't quite as brown as Dorie's maybe a bit longer in the oven? I'm not sure it needed it |
and the sliced touteau! |
I thought this was lovely! Like Dorie, I couldn't decide - and maybe didn't need to - when this was better served. It was excellent with a glass of wine, though a cup of coffee would be good too! Or even a glass of port after dinner! Breakfast?
This was really fairly light, a nice contrast with the crust and creamy filling. I enjoyed the little bit of tang from the goat cheese, and the amount of sugar was the perfect compliment. I'm sure it would be wonderful with the sweet crust, but I didn't really think it needed it. And as promised, it did hold up for several days - though I will admit it was nicest when freshly made.
I completely expect to make this again. In fact, I'm really just trying to think of when!
Ah - I have more than one item that I can't remember exactly WHY I bought it. But finding a new use for it is half the fun, right? (And way cheaper than a shoe fetish).
ReplyDeleteLove the puffy cracks!
Your cake looks great! Love the process photos.
ReplyDeleteYou'll have plenty of company in the stocking up on odd ingredients for "later". I have so many of those. I've used more than a few for FFwD, though. Your tourteau looks delioious. Great photos!
ReplyDeleteYour cake turned out beautiful. I did not use the sweet crust either,
ReplyDeleteI somehow thought the plain would taste better with this type of
cheese filling. Tricia and I worked together on the recipe and it was
fun. Less food to eat in the end. Great photos.
I love your rolling mat. The tourteau looks fabulous, I like the contrast of the dark exterior against the light colored, delicate interior :)
ReplyDeleteI can never get enough of seeing that beautiful crackly top. Great pics and your cake turned out perfect.
ReplyDeleteWe had this for dessert and then I ate it for breakfast the next morning with some strong coffee. It was delicious both ways! Yours looks wonderful!
ReplyDeleteOh I don't think you need an occassion per say, I just made this a couple days ago and I'm going to make it again for Thanksgiving and then a few more times I think between now and Christmas. I have some ideas for different flavorings and different goat cheeses to put with them! :) Yours looks great! Mine didn't brown as much either, but I put a foil tent over mine .... lol
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