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Taste makers

Sally Butters NZ House & Garden Food Editor These delightful combinatio­ns of textures and flavours are sure to tickle your taste buds and wow your friends.

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Asparagus, gruyere & pancetta quiche

You could save time and use bought savoury short pastry sheets for this tasty tart, but pastry dough really is a doddle to make in a food processor.

Pastry

200g flour 100g butter, well chilled, cut into small cubes 1 egg yolk

3-4 tbsp chilled water

Filling

20g butter

1 small onion, finely chopped

8 slices pancetta, coarsely chopped

30g gruyere cheese, grated

3 eggs

150ml cream

50ml milk

1 small lemon, finely grated zest

Pinch of freshly grated nutmeg

450g fresh asparagus, trimmed and blanched

Pastry: Place flour and butter in a food processor and mix until fine and crumbly. Add egg yolk and 3 tablespoon­s chilled water. Continue to process until dough comes together in a ball, adding a little extra water if needed. Form dough into a flat brick, cover with plastic wrap and refrigerat­e for at least 30 minutes.

Heat oven to 190C. Roll out dough between 2 sheets of plastic wrap and line a 34cm x 12cm tart tin. Prick base all over with a fork. Cover with crumpled baking paper and top with a layer of baking beans.

Bake 10 minutes, then remove from oven and take out paper and beans. Trim pastry edges and return to oven for a further 5 minutes or until lightly golden.

Filling: Reduce oven temperatur­e to 180C. Melt butter in a pan over low heat. Add onion and half the pancetta and saute´ until onion is soft and transparen­t.

Spoon mixture over base of pastry case and sprinkle with half the cheese.

Combine eggs, cream, milk, zest and nutmeg, then season with salt and freshly ground black pepper. Pour mixture into pastry case and top with asparagus spears, remaining cheese and slices of pancetta.

Bake 25-30 minutes until set. Allow to sit for at least 10 minutes before serving. Makes a 34 x 12cm quiche

Yoghurt panna cotta with poached tamarillos & caramelise­d white chocolate

All of the components of this gorgeous dessert can be made in advance. Caramelisi­ng the white chocolate – which is actually just a case of roasting it in the oven – gives it a deeper, toasty, amazingly delicious flavour. If tamarillos aren’t available, bottled or canned apricots, feijoas or peaches would be fine.

500ml cream

125g sugar

10g powdered gelatine or 1 sheet leaf gelatine 1⁄2 tsp good-quality vanilla extract 1⁄2 tsp rose water

500ml natural yoghurt

6 tamarillos, poached in water until tender, skins removed 1 cup chopped white chocolate (we used Whittaker’s)

Heat cream gently in a medium saucepan. Add sugar and stir to dissolve.

Sprinkle the powdered gelatine over a little water and leave to bloom. If using leaf gelatine, soak in water to soften then squeeze to remove excess water.

Take cream off heat and mix in gelatine until thoroughly dissolved. Mix vanilla and rosewater through yoghurt, then add to cream mixture. Pour into 6 moulds (200-250ml capacity) and leave to set in the fridge overnight.

When ready to serve, carefully run a rubber spatula around the edge of each dessert and upturn onto a plate. Add a poached tamarillo and scatter caramelise­d white chocolate crumbs over.

Caramelise­d chocolate: Scatter chopped chocolate on a baking tray and cook in a moderate oven for 5-10 minutes until it starts to brown. Remove and run a fork through it. Leave to set – some will go the consistenc­y of crumbs, which is what you’re after. Serves 6

 ??  ?? Recipes: Bernadette Hogg, Delaney Mes Styling: Kate Arbuthnot, Claudia Kozub Photograph­s: Manja Wachsmuth
Recipes: Bernadette Hogg, Delaney Mes Styling: Kate Arbuthnot, Claudia Kozub Photograph­s: Manja Wachsmuth
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