Know Your GBBS History: Tart Week (2024)

Our new series runs down the truth behindthe popular bakes featured onThe Great British Baking Show. This week: Tarts!

Tart Week

Tarte Tatin

Interestingly, there seems to be a bit of a theme in this earlier season of The Great British Baking Show.Last week's double feature premiere began with Cake Week, and the cake on the list for the signature challenge was an Upside Down Cake. This week, Tart Week begins with the Tarte Tatin, which is basically the samething, but the tart edition. Originating in France, this dessert, which is named for the Hôtel Tatinin Lamotte-Beuvron that first served it, is traditionally made with apples, so think of it as an Apple Upside Down Tart.

According to legend, the tart was invented by the unmarried French sisters who ran the hotel in the 1880s, so in France, the actual name of the tart is "Tarte des Demoiselles Tatin" (the tart of two unmarried women named Tatin.) It actually didn't become famous until a Parisian restaurant called Maxim's put it on the menu. Nowadays, though theapple tart is still the versionserved in France (with tons of caramel to hold it together). The tarteTatin can be made with any fruit, but to be strictly traditional, it must be served warm with cream on the side.

Treacle Tart

One of the mosttraditionalBritish desserts served so far this season, the Treacle Tart is nowadays a misnomer. There's not a drop of treacle in it. Instead, modern recipes call for golden syrup, which we in America would think of as an inverted sugar syrup (referred to sometimes as "light treacle.") The treacle tart wasn't always made with the stuff though, as the earliest recipes for it stretch back to the 1870s, and Golden Syrup wasn't discovered until the mid 1880s.

The original tart was made with treacle, black treacle to be specific, which is like a less-bitter version of pure molasses. Black Treacle was actually used for medicine in the 1700s, long before people gave up trying to pretend sugar was good for you. The golden syrup version, which is lighter and sweeter, became popular by the 1900s, and that's the version Harry Pottereats at Hogwarts. So as far as everyone should be concerned, it's the most correct version to be had.

Designer Fruit Tart

The fruit tart evolved from the fruit pie. Pies first came into common baking circulation around the 1350s in Europe. The shortcrust, which is the basis for all tartsand one of the things that majorly differentiates it from pies, was invented somewhere in the 1550s. They became hugelypopular in medieval courts during this time period, because the open-facednature of the dessert made them brightly colored works of art to bring to the table and shared among the guests.

Tarts over the centuries have split into two categories: Savory (quiches and the like) andSweet (like the fruit tart). The French are still considered the master of the tart, both sweet and savory, with many traditional recipes stemming from the country, from the quiche to the onion tart, to the "French Apple" tart to the Tarte Tatin.Citrus tartsare still considered the most classic European versions, but as our culinary paletteshave been opened to encompass fruits of all stripes and cultures, they can really be filled with anything. Even, as we saw in this week's episode, chocolate or macaroons.

Next on GBBS: Desserts Week!

Know Your GBBS History: Tart Week (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Madonna Wisozk

Last Updated:

Views: 5972

Rating: 4.8 / 5 (68 voted)

Reviews: 91% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Madonna Wisozk

Birthday: 2001-02-23

Address: 656 Gerhold Summit, Sidneyberg, FL 78179-2512

Phone: +6742282696652

Job: Customer Banking Liaison

Hobby: Flower arranging, Yo-yoing, Tai chi, Rowing, Macrame, Urban exploration, Knife making

Introduction: My name is Madonna Wisozk, I am a attractive, healthy, thoughtful, faithful, open, vivacious, zany person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.