Jamie drizzling honey on top of a fig tart

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Berry tart

The quickest berry tart

with smashed up meringue & vanilla cream

Berry tart

45 mins plus resting & chilling
Not Too Tricky

serves 12

About the recipe

Although this recipe is a bit off the wall, the flavours and textures work so well together. Swedes absolutely love berries, and this is basically a berry tart that’s crashed into an Eton mess to create an insanely easy and delicious dessert. I can’t tell you how quick it is to knock together.

If you’re making this for a dinner party and want to work ahead a bit, just bake the pastry a few hours before, whip the cream mixture together and keep it covered in the fridge. Then, when you’re ready to serve it, add the fruit and meringues. That way, the meringues will still be crunchy and create an exciting contrast with the soft cream and berries.


nutrition per serving

Calories

g

Fat

g

Saturates

g

Sugars

g

Salt

g

Protein

g

Carbs

g

Fibre

of an adult’s reference intake


Recipe From

Jamie Does...

Jamie Does...

By Jamie Oliver

Ingredients

1 orange

3 tablespoons vanilla sugar

400ml double cream

600g mixed seasonal berries, such as blackberries, loganberries, blueberries, red and white currants, good gooseberries

4 meringue nests

PASTRY

250g plain flour, plus extra for dusting

50g icing sugar, plus extra for dusting

125g unsalted butter (cold)

1 large free-range egg

a splash of milk

olive oil, for greasing the tart tin

Method

Although this recipe is a bit off the wall, the flavours and textures work so well together. Swedes absolutely love berries, and this is basically a berry tart that’s crashed into an Eton mess to create an insanely easy and delicious dessert. I can’t tell you how quick it is to knock together. If you’re making this for a dinner party and want to work ahead a bit, just bake the pastry a few hours before, whip the cream mixture together and keep it covered in the fridge. Then, when you’re ready to serve it, add the fruit and meringues. That way, the meringues will still be crunchy and create an exciting contrast with the soft cream and berries.

  1. You can make the pastry by hand, or in a food processor. If making it by hand, sieve the flour and icing sugar into a large mixing bowl from a height.
  2. Chop the butter into small cubes, then gently work the it into the flour and sugar with your fingers until the mixture resembles breadcrumbs.
  3. Beat the egg and add to the mix with the milk and gently work it together using your hands until you have a ball. Don’t work the pastry too much or it will become elastic and chewy, not crumbly and short.
  4. Sprinkle some flour over the dough and a clean work surface, and pat the ball into a thick flat round. Sprinkle over a little more flour, then wrap the pastry in clingfilm and pop it into the fridge to rest for 30 minutes.
  5. Lightly oil the inside of a 25cm non-stick loose-bottomed tart tin.
  6. Dust a clean surface and a rolling pin with flour, then carefully roll out the pastry, turning it every so often, until you've got a circle about 0.5cm thick.
  7. Roll the pastry over the rolling pin, then unroll it into the tin, making sure you push it into all the sides.
  8. Trim off any extra pastry, and use it to patch any holes, then prick the base of the case all over with a fork, cover with clingfilm, and pop it into the freezer for 30 minutes.
  9. Preheat the oven to 180ºC/350ºF/gas 4.
  10. Line the pastry case with a large piece of greaseproof paper, pushing it right into the sides.
  11. Fill the pastry case right up to the top with uncooked rice, and bake blind for 10 minutes in the preheated oven. Take the case out, carefully remove the rice (save it for baking blind another time) and greaseproof paper, and return the case to the oven to cook for a further 10 minutes, until it’s firm and almost biscuit-like. Leave to cool completely.
  12. Finely grate most of the orange zest into a bowl and whisk with 2 tablespoons of vanilla sugar and the cream until you get a silky mixture that forms soft peaks.
  13. Put half the berries into another bowl and use a fork to mash them up with the remaining tablespoon of vanilla sugar. Break up the meringue nests into rough pieces.
  14. Gently fold the mushed-up berries, and the meringue pieces, into the cream.
  15. Tip the cream mixture into the cooled tart case and gently shake it to help spread it out to the edges. Use a spatula or the back of a spoon to spread it out evenly, then sprinkle the remaining berries all over the top.
  16. Finely grate over the remaining orange zest and serve right away, with a dusting of icing sugar.

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