Pâte Sucrée Recipe
User Reviews
5
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Prep Time
45 mins
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Cook Time
45 mins
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Additional Time
2 hrs
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Total Time
1 hr 30 mins
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Servings
24 servings
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Calories
123 kcal
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Course
Dessert, Baked Goods
Pâte Sucrée Recipe
Description
This Pâte Sucrée recipe blends very soft butter with confectioners sugar, egg yolks, vanilla (or another extract), and flour to form a sweet tart dough. The high butter and sugar content provides richness and flavor, while the careful handling ensures a tender but not tough texture. The optional lemon zest adds brightness, making the dough especially suited for fruit tarts.
For use in tart pans or rings, the dough is rolled out gently without stretching and then chilled before baking. Docking with a fork prevents bubbling during baking. Techniques for trimming excess dough with a rolling pin over the pan ensure neat edges. Mini tarts can also be made by cutting smaller rounds and blind baking with weights like sugar or rice to maintain shape, baking until golden brown.
The dough’s delicate balance of fat and sugar requires careful mixing and handling to avoid gluten development, ensuring a crisp but tender crust that supports sweet fillings well.
Ingredients
- 150 g butter 10 ¼ tbsp, very soft but not melted, unsalted
- Pinch salt fine sea salt
- 120 g confectioners sugar about 1 cup powdered sugar
- 70 g egg 4 - 5 yolks, you could also use whole eggs, about 1 large egg + 1 egg yolk - see recipe notes, yolk
- 1 tsp vanilla extract or almond extract or lemon extract
- 1 tsp lemon optional, better for fruit tarts, finely grated zest
- 325 g all-purpose flour 2 ⅔ cup, measured by spoon and level method
Instructions
For tart pans
- Line the bottom of a 9 inch tart pan (1 inch height) with parchment paper, and lightly butter the sides.
- Transfer the rolled out pate sucree onto the tart pan, but make sure it’s not stretched out over the pan. Gently and carefully press the dough into the sides, edges and bottom of the pan. With a rolling pin, roll over the surface of the tart pan. This will trim off any excess overhang dough.
- Dock the bottom of the pan with a fork. Cover the surface with plastic wrap, and let the dough chill in the freezer for at least 30 minutes until firm.
For a tart ring
- Place an 8 inch tart ring on a silpat lined baking tray and lightly butter the side of the tart ring. Using the tart ring, cut a circle in the rolled out dough. Make sure to cut the circle from the edge of the rolled out dough, with enough dough to cut 1 - 1.5 inch strips.
- Place the ring on the silpat, then place the round dough that you cut inside the tart ring.
- Cut strips of dough that are a little taller than the sides of the tart pan (about 1 inch for the ones I use).
- Brush the edge of the round dough with water, and line the strips of dough along the side of the tart ring. Make sure the strips are placed flush against the round dough on the bottom, so that it forms a seal.
- Dock the bottom of the tart shell with a fork. Cover the tart shell with plastic wrap and let it chill in the freezer for at least 30 minutes until firm.
How to blind bake the pate sucree tart shell
- Preheat the oven to 350°F / 180°C.
- Place the chilled pate sucree lined tart pan on a baking tray (the tart ring should already be on a baking tray).
- Take a piece of parchment paper that is large enough to fit inside the pan (with some overhang), and crumple it up. Be careful not to tear it.
- Now unfold the parchment paper, and place it on top of the chilled dough. Weigh the parchment paper down against the tart dough with pie weights, or dry beans, or dry rice, or sugar. The parchment paper overhang should go over the edges to prevent the edges from browning too quickly.
- Bake in the preheated oven for about 20 - 25 minutes, until the edges are just starting to brown.
- Remove the tart from the oven, and carefully lift the parchment paper with the pie weights and set it aside.
- If you're baking the tart with a filling, this is where the filling would be used to fill the tart and then baked until the filling is set.
To completely bake the tart shell
- If necessary, dock the bottom of the pan again, and return the tart pan to the oven to bake until golden brown. This can take about 10 - 15 minutes.
- If you want to egg wash the tart shell, remove it from the oven 5 minutes before it’s done baking (when it’s a light golden color), and brush the entire surface and edges with an egg wash (whisked whole egg, or egg yolk + milk). Return it to the oven and bake for a further 5 minutes until the shell is golden brown and has a sheen.
- Remove from the oven and let it cool down slightly. When just cool enough to handle, remove the tart shell from the pan / ring and let it cool completely to room temperature on a cooling wire rack.
Storage
- Store the unfilled tart shells in air-tight containers, at room temperature, for up to 1 week. If you like, you can brush the inside of the cooled tarts with melted and slightly cooled chocolate or cocoa butter.
- OR wrap the shells with plastic wrap, and at least 1 layer of foil, and place it in the freezer for up to 3 months.
Notes
- Using all egg yolks creates a richer, more flavorful dough that's also more tender and less tough.
- If using whole eggs, measure carefully to maintain moisture and avoid toughness; avoid over-handling dough to reduce gluten formation.
- Mini tarts can be made by cutting circles to fit molds; use rice or sugar weights for blind baking.
- Blind bake mini tarts about 15-20 minutes with weights, then an additional 10 minutes uncovered until golden.
Nutrition Information
Show DetailsNutrition Facts
Serving: 24servings
Amount Per Serving
Calories 123 kcal
% Daily Value*
| Calories | 123kcal | 6% |
| Carbohydrates | 15g | 5% |
| Protein | 2g | 4% |
| Fat | 6g | 9% |
| Saturated Fat | 3g | 15% |
| Cholesterol | 43mg | 14% |
| Sodium | 2mg | 0% |
| Potassium | 19mg | 0% |
| Fiber | 1g | 4% |
| Sugar | 5g | 10% |
| Vitamin A | 195IU | 4% |
| Calcium | 7mg | 1% |
| Iron | 1mg | 6% |
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet.