Michelle Darmody: How to bake a perfect rhubarb and raspberry galette
Don't handle your pastry too much or you will get the famous soggy bottom.
A friend gave me a tuft of rhubarb two years ago. It was not that appealing: long straggly roots and a big clump of clay. He warned me with a smile that it was vivacious.
Rhubarb and Raspberry Galette
If you are really stuck for time, you can make this recipe with premade puff pastry
Servings
8Preparation Time
30 minsCooking Time
40 minsTotal Time
1 hours 10 minsCourse
BakingIngredients
For the pastry
225g flour
1 pinch of salt
140g of cold butter, cut into cubes
55g caster sugar
1 egg, lightly beaten
For the filling
1 egg, separated
200g raspberries
Zest 1 orange
1 tbs raspberry jam
400g rhubarb, cut into batons
1 tbsp dessert wine
10g of granulated sugar
Method
Mix the flour and salt together and rub in the cold butter until it looks like rough breadcrumbs, do not over mix.
Stir the sugar into the egg, mix it lightly until it begins to dissolve. Add this to the flour with a fork. Bring everything together with your hands then rest the pastry for an hour in the fridge or overnight.
Roll the pastry to a disc about 15 inches in diameter.
Slide the disc onto a sheet of baking parchment and then slide this sheet onto a large flat baking tray.
Place the baking tray into the fridge to allow the pastry to cool.
Preheat your oven to 220ºC/gas mark 7.
Mash the raspberries and stir them and the zest into the jam and set aside.
Toss the rhubarb in the sweet wine.
Brush the centre of your cold pasty disc with egg white.
Spread the raspberry mixture in the centre of the cooled pastry disc where the egg wash was brushed, leaving about three inches around all sides.
Arrange the rhubarb on top of theraspberry mixture.
Fold the edges over the filling to create an overlapping crust. Pinch the sides of the pastry up around the rhubarb so that it forms a little dish that firmly holds thefilling.
Beat the egg yolk and brush it over the pastry and sprinkle the sugar over it so it sticks to the egg.
Place the tray into the centre of your preheated oven.
Bake for 10 minutes then turn the oven down to 200ºC/Gas mark 6 and bake foranother 30 minutes until the pastry is golden.
Allow to cool on the tray until it is cool enough to handle then very gently slide it onto a wire rack to cool completely.
It is advisable to keep your pastry cool at all times and not to handle it too much. Handling it and making it greasy will mean that it will not crisp up when baking and you will get the famous soggy bottom. Mixing the sugar into eggs helps the sugar to dissolve so it blends into the pastry quicker with less mixing.
I use a jam like Folláin’s raspberry jam that has a nice fruit content; either the sugar or no-sugar version will do.
You can add a few grams of light muscovado sugar to the rhubarb if you feel it is not sweet enough. The sweetness level of rhubarb varies quite a lot.
Drain any excess sweet wine from the rhubarb as it will make the filling too wet.
It is advisable not to add too much flour to the work surface when you are rolling the pastry. It is tempting to coat the surface with a generous dusting of flour but adding too much can cause the pastry to dry out and toughen.
Make sure the pastry is pinched tight, so it does not unfold or lose shape during baking. Ensuring the dough is cold before you start shaping it will also help prevent this by stopping the dough from shrinking.
Having the oven temperature very high to begin with will ensure a nice crust, but it will also help to firm up the shape of the pastry and stop it unfolding and allowing the filling to leak out.


