Rustic Tomato Tart with Thyme and Parmesan

It may be fall but there are still plenty of lovely late summer tomatoes to be found at the market. I made this tart early last week for the first time and it immediately assumed a place on my “favourite summer tomato recipes” list.

I love the simplicity of this tart. Just a few well chosen ingredients. Beautiful ripe tomatoes, some sprigs of thyme, a bit of grated Parmesan cheese. Making pastry tends to send me into a nervous tizzy but I absolutely know this is one fear that I need to conquer. At home I always use my food processor to make sweet or savory pastry but not having access to one here in Miami I knew I was going to have to make this tart the old fashioned way.

My Baba made pastry long before the invention of the food processor and the blueberry pies that I remember vividly from my childhood boasted some of the most tender, flaky flavourful pastry I have ever had.  I headed to the cookware store and purchased a pastry blender. I fired up the computer and looked online for some sort of “pastry-by-hand” tutorial. I set to work.

I chilled the bowl with the flour, thyme, salt and parmesan. I froze the chunks of butter. I blended until the ingredients were combined and the butter resembled small peas. I added the water and mixed and added a bit more water and brought the dough together. I kneaded just a very little bit. I gathered the dough into a ball, wrapped it in plastic wrap and allowed it to take a well deserved rest in the fridge for a couple of hours.

I sliced some beautiful heirloom tomatoes and salted them and allowed them to drain for an hour or so.

I rolled out the dough on a lightly floured pieced of parchment and then sprinkled on some finely grated parmesan cheese. I layered on my drained and dried tomatoes and pleated the dough up around the tomatoes. A few grinds of pepper and a drizzle of good olive oil and then into the oven. I crossed my fingers.

Then the magic happened. The most lovely, herbal smell began to scent the apartment. I did a bit of hand wringing because I never trust my pastry making skills and a delicious smell does not guarantee a tender crust. After 35 minutes a beautiful, browned, fragrant tart emerged from the oven.

Well, at least it looked good. I sighed, relaxed, smiled and allowed the tart to cool. I took a couple of tablespoons of salsa verde I had in a bowl in the fridge and mixed them into 1/2 a cup of crème fraîche.

I cut a slice  and put it on a plate. I spooned a bit of the salsa verde crème fraîche alongside.  I sprinkled the top with a bit of coarse salt.

Then, I took a bite. I hope it wasn’t beginner’s luck because this was one of the best tomatoes tarts I have ever, ever had. And the pastry? The best I have ever made and one of the best I have ever tasted. Top five for sure. I will try this when I get home and have access to a food processor but there really is something to be said for making pastry by hand.

If you are nervous about making pastry I urge you to give this thyme scented pastry a try. It pairs beautifully with the tomatoes but I bet it would be good with slices of zucchini or summer squash and a sprinkling of feta. Or how about some wild mushrooms and some Gruyère cheese?

I see a lot more of these tarts in my cooking future. This week, next week and the week after too. Pastry practise makes perfect.

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