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Friday, 15 June 2018

St Clements Tart


Oranges  and lemons

Oranges and lemons,
Say the bells of St. Clement's.

You owe me five farthings, 
Say the bells of St. Martin's.

When will you pay me?
Say the bells of Old Bailey.

When I grow rich.
Say the bells of Shoreditch.

When will that be?
Say the bells of Stepney.

I do not know,
Says the great bell of Bow

Here comes a candle to light you to bed, 
And here comes a chopper to chop off your head!




The lyrics above are to a nursery rhyme about the churches in the east end of London. I am originally from London but the North West of London, nowhere near the East End. It is a standing joke that D thinks that being from London means you are a cockney, he originates from Southampton. I still have my London accent even though I have not lived there for 30 years but it's a very different accent from those who come from the east end. Not that there is anything wrong with coming from the east end of London or  being a cockney but in order to be classed a true cockney you have to have been born within earshot of the Bow Bells and I definitely wasn't. 

This Sunday in the UK is Father's Day.  The bearded one is the most difficult person to buy for he never knows what he wants and we as a family dread, Christmas, his birthday and father's day as what do you buy for the man who has everything he wants. You would think we would have resolved this issue after 18 years but NO would be the answer to that particular problem. So generally it is cards and a token present, usually chocolate. The weather has been a little inclement over the last few days the aftermath of Hurricane Hector I believe. All this is fine so long as the weather come Sunday sticks to what is predicted and is glorious sunshine with a little light breeze later into the afternoon. This will give us enough time to venture out somewhere with or without the furry paws. 

My culinary plan for Father's Day involves Tom Kerridge's Pulled Pork as I can put this in the oven first thing and leave to slow cook over the course of the day. Desert on the other hand I will make a head of time and leave in the fridge. 




 I make both a lemon tart and an orange tart but sometimes I use both to make a St. Clements tart, as in the nursery rhyme 'oranges & lemons says the bells of St Clements'. 

To make the tart you will need a rolling pin, 9"/23cm loose bottom flan/quiche tin and a baking sheet. 

Although I make my own pastry sometimes when time is of the essence I will use ready made and both this tart and the quiche I make work equally as well with ready made pastry.  If you're not confident with pastry and want to have a go  then you will need to look for ready rolled sweet short crust pastry and you will normally find this in the chilled section of the supermarket. 

To make your pastry from scratch you will need           For the St Clements cream you will need

225g/8oz plain flour                                                            5 medium eggs
115g/4oz butter diced                                                          150g caster sugar
2tbsp icing sugar                                                                  85mls of freshly squeezed juice from the 
1 egg                                                                                        orange & lemon
1tsp of vanilla extract                                                           2tbsp of orange & lemon zest
1tbsp of chilled water                                                           150mls of double cream


  • To make the pastry sift the flour into a mixing bowl and rub in the butter until the mixture resembles breadcrumbs and stir in the icing sugar. 
  • Add the egg and vanilla extract and most of the chilled water, and work into a soft dough
  • On a lightly floured surface knead lightly until smooth. Chill in the refrigerator for 30 minutes or util needed. 
  • For the cream filling, mix together the eggs, sugar and orange/lemon juice and zest and whisk for few seconds. Add the cream and whisk before placing in the fridge until needed. 
  • On a lightly floured surface, roll out the pastry until about 1/8 inch thick. Roll the pastry over the rolling pin and gently unroll over your flan/quiche tin. Gently guide the pastry into the tin and tick into the bottom edge so that it fits well. Take a piece of excess pastry and push the pastry into the sides of the tin. 
  • Prick the base of the pastry with a fork and leave any excess pastry for now as you will trim once you have added the filling. return to the refrigerator for 30 mins or until you are ready to make your tart (this will help prevent shrinkage when you bake your tart).
  • Preheat your oven to 200/400/gas mark 6 not forgetting to put your baking sheet in the oven at the same time so that it gets nice and hot ready to start baking the bottom of your pastry case as soon as you put it in the oven.
  • When you are ready to make your tart remove the pastry case and your cream from the fridge and give it 5 minutes to come up to room temperature. 
  • Add the cream mixture to your pastry case and trim off the excess pastry.
  • Place your tart on the hot baking sheet and reduce the heat of your oven to 180/350/gas mark 4 and bake for 35-45 minutes until the filling is just set and your pastry is golden brown.
  • Remove from the oven and allow to cool.
  • Serve with cream or Ice cream.
And there you have it should you wish to have ago

If you are celebrating Father's Day this weekend I hope you have a lovely time whatever you have planned. 


Mx



16 comments:

  1. I like your rhyme about the bells. So many of the little nursery stories & rhymes come with history in them. I just read that in US of A they are teaching the primary grade children about intruder/gun procedures of taking cover with a nursery rhyme ... I'll say no more.
    Thanks for the recipe, it will be lemons & limes for me too!

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    Replies
    1. Lemon and limes will work too I would think limes on their own might be a little too tart but with lemon that would be a nice refreshing combination. Comes to something when you have to teach children how to hide from a gun by using a nursery rhyme instead of stopping the guns at source.
      Sometimes I think the world has gone a little lala.

      Mitzi

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  2. I always wonder, what old nursery rhymes, reallllly meant. Because many, most certainly did. They were a way of spreading "not-allowed" messages.

    I always make my own pie crust also. My family would not "allow" it, any other way. :-)

    Interesting to see how someone else does it! I simply use 2C. flour, a pinch of salt, 2/3 C. butter, and how ever much ice cold water is needed, to achieve the correct consistency.

    I think that by the time we are grandparents, we all have everything we need. And most everything we want. So perhaps the gift of time, is the best?

    The gift of planing on spending an afternoon, with the recipient. Go to a movie together... Or drive somewhere in the city, where the older person doesn't feel comfortable, driving him/her self anymore? Or something _they_ like to do.

    Have a lovely weekend!

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    Replies
    1. It’s been a quiet day in the end as I have come down with a heavy cold but we’re still having a nice meal later x

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  3. It looks delicious. Mick's exactly the same, so hard to buy for. He'll be celebrating Father's Day with just me this year as Daniel's away from home now and Eleanor's gone to London for a few days, not that we really celebrate anyway.

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    Replies
    1. It’s always been a quiet celebration a small gift for Adams benefit and a nice meal. If the weathers good we’ll go out for a while if not we’ll stay put it may even end up working on the garden. It gets harder as your kids grow up and out and no of them are local.

      Mitzi

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  4. Same problem here, I struggle with presents for Andrew whatever the occasion. Your St Clements pie sounds a lovely treat xx

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    Replies
    1. He’s ended up with a plant for the garden 😊

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  5. Hi,Sadly no such problem.Yummy that tart sure looks good.Hope you are enjoying the day.x

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    1. Plans put slightly on hold as i’ve Been poorly over the weekend but think he still had a nice day.

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  6. Sounds delicious! I will be giving that a go

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    1. Hi Eloise and welcome. I hope you do as I'm sure you will enjoy it, always goes down well here.

      Mitzi

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  7. Made, half eaten (not all by me!) and definitely enjoyed! Thank you

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    Replies
    1. ooh so glad you tried it and enjoyed it. It is a bit addictive one slice is never enough.

      Mitzi

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  8. June 21, 2018

    Happy Midsummer’s Eve...!!!

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Thank you for stopping by today I hope you enjoyed your cuppa and may be a biscuit or slice of cake too. Please leave a comment, I do read every single one and will reply to you all as soon as possible.