The Denver Post

This foolproof tart is ready to feed a party

- By Genevieve Ko

It’s been a hard year, and finding small joys feels particular­ly important right now around the holidays. When I considered which treat could deliver that happiness in this season (aside from cookies, of course), I remembered the first pastry I learned as a restaurant cook. In the basement corner of a little French bistro, we turned out chocolate tarts, the elegant little black dress of desserts.

Fashioned in the style of renowned chef Joël Robuchon’s recipe, the filling was as creamy as pudding and as silky and softly set as crème brûlée. With a buttery, crisp crust, the tart made the diners feel special and the cooks feel empowered by their baking prowess.

This big chocolate tart does the same and requires no profession­al training to guarantee stunning results.

In a significan­t departure from most tarts, it’s made in a rectangula­r cake pan. The crumbs of a cocoa dough are simply pressed across the bottom of the pan. The filling, usually a blend of cream, milk, chocolate and eggs, swaps fresh milk for sweetened condensed milk to ensure that the custard doesn’t break, since it covers the football field expanse of a cake pan.

Along with cream and a generous pinch of salt, the canned milk accentuate­s the chocolate and makes this tart delicious on its own. But it can also be a blank canvas. The tops of the individual portions can receive the crunch of nuts or flaky salt, the chew of candied orange peel or ginger, or the pop of tangy freeze-dried berries.

The portions can also be sliced in any shape or size you want. When cutting the tart, I was inspired by artist Piet Mondrian’s later abstract works, which showcase the beauty of squares and rectangles, and by their connection to his early figurative landscape paintings.

Big Chocolate Tart

For how elegant this looks and how complex it tastes, this dessert is incredibly easy to put together. Instead of a dense ganache filling, this one has a shiny top that hovers between the delicate softness of custard and the creaminess of pudding. The crisp-tender cocoa crust is pressed only into the bottom and forgoes the usual sides of a tart because it’s baked in a standard metal cake pan. Not only is this easier to pull off — no rolling sticky pastry or trying to unmold it after baking — it makes a tart big enough to feed a crowd. With a pure chocolate taste that’s great on its own, it also can be customized: simply sprinkle each piece with toppings of your choice. — Genevieve Ko

Yield: One 9-by-13-inch tart. Total time: 1 hour, 35 minutes, plus cooling.

INGREDIENT­S For the crust:

1 1/4 cups/163 grams allpurpose flour

1/2 cup/100 grams sugar

1/4 cup/28 grams unsweetene­d cocoa powder

1/2 teaspoon coarse kosher or sea salt

10 tablespoon­s/140 grams cold unsalted butter, cut into small cubes

1 large egg yolk

For the filling:

1 1/2 cups/357 grams heavy cream 3/4 teaspoon coarse kosher or sea salt

12 ounces/336 grams semisweet chocolate, chopped 3 large eggs, at room temperatur­e

1/2 cup/166 grams sweetened condensed milk

1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract Flaky sea salt, thinly sliced candied orange peel, thinly sliced candied ginger, chopped pistachios or freeze-dried raspberrie­s, or a combinatio­n, for garnish (optional)

DIRECTIONS

1. Prepare the crust: Heat oven to 350 degrees. Grease a 9-by-13-inch metal cake pan, line the bottom and sides with foil or parchment paper, and grease again.

2. In a food processor, pulse the flour, sugar, cocoa and salt until evenly combined. Add the butter and pulse until the mixture resembles sand. Add the egg yolk and pulse until the crumbs look like very coarse sand, scraping the bowl as needed. (Or, use your fingertips or a pastry cutter to work the butter into the dry ingredient­s, then stir in the egg yolk with a fork.) Dump the crumbly dough into

Genevieve Ko’s Big Chocolate Tart. You can cut this stunning chocolate tart however you like, then top it to your guests’ preference­s. the pan, spread in an even layer and press firmly across the bottom.

3. Bake until visibly dry, about 20 minutes. When you press the top gently, it shouldn’t indent. Cool completely in the pan on a rack.

4. Prepare the filling: Reduce oven temperatur­e to 325 degrees.

5. Heat the cream and salt in a large saucepan over medium, stirring occasional­ly, just until the cream bubbles at the edges. Turn off the heat and add the chocolate. Stir gently until smooth.

6. Add the eggs and stir until evenly blended, then stir in the condensed milk and vanilla until smooth. Pour into the cooled crust.

7. Bake until just set, 20 to 25 minutes. The very center should have the barest wiggle when you shake the pan.

8. Cool completely in the pan. When ready to serve, use the sides of the foil or parchment to slide the whole slab onto a large cutting board. Cut into squares or bars, wiping the knife between cuts for clean edges. Top with flaky salt, candied orange, candied ginger, pistachios or raspberrie­s, or a combinatio­n.

Tips: The tart tastes best right after cooling, but it can be refrigerat­ed for up to 5 days, cut or uncut, in an airtight container. Before serving, microwave for 5 or 10 seconds to restore shine to the top and softness to the center.

 ?? ARMANDO RAFAEL — THE NEW YORK TIMES ??
ARMANDO RAFAEL — THE NEW YORK TIMES

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