I love lemon tarts so much I believe they should have their own emoji! PHOTO: ARHAMA SIDDIQA

Gooey filling you want to scoop out with your fingers – Relive your childhood with these delightful lemon tarts!

One of my favourite childhood memories is my mom driving me home from school and stopping to get us a lemon tart each.

Arhama Siddiqa March 30, 2018
If there is one thing in this world that can make me forgive and forget everything and start from scratch, it is lemon tarts. If anyone ever wants me to erase the memory board and wipe the slate clean, all they have to do is present me with these beauties!

I love lemon tarts so much I believe they should have their own emoji! The tangy flavour of sourness, playing around with just the right amount of sweetness, can change anyone’s mood around.

One of my favourite childhood memories would be my mom driving me home from school, stopping at the local bakery and getting both of us a lemon tart each. Now the thing is, my mom (still) likes the tart shells and I like the gooey creamy filling, so we always struck a deal – she could have my tart shell, if I could have her filling. And boy the filling was good! Especially – and yes, all you ‘knives and forks’ people out there can gasp in union – the fun in scooping the filling out with your index finger, which is definitely one of the best feelings in the world! That’s how I still eat it.

As I grew up and the baking madness kicked in, I decided to try my hands at these little devils. And believe me, they are the easiest things in the world to make. In fact, homemade lemon tarts have their own irreplaceable taste – a uniqueness market tarts cannot emulate.

They originate from France, and are called tarte au citron over there. In my opinion, three words sum up lemon tarts: Pretty. Straightforward. Sweet.

Before I start, I want to reveal that in my first attempt for this blog, the pictures came out amazing, but the lemon tarts tasted awful. Shameful as it is, I would have gone forward with it anyway, had it not been for four people who I happened to meet that day, who made me question myself and made my conscience cry out. I would like to dedicate this blog to them to express my gratitude for making me realise the error I would have made otherwise. These tarts below are my fifth attempt, and I am happy to say, they are perfect.

Sometimes, even the easiest of dishes can become a challenge for you.

Before we start, please note that you can use a tart pan for more aesthetics. I, however, used a muffin pan, because even though I would dearly love to get a tart pan, my mother does not let me turn her kitchen into a crockery shop. So I have to exercise restrain, and make do with what I have. I decided to go simple here, but you can garnish them with glazed cherries, sprinkles or even strawberries (since they are in season right now).

Ingredients:

For tart shells:

Flour: 200gm
Butter: 125gm, cold cut in small cubes
Salt: a pinch
Sugar: 2 tbsp
Egg yolks: 1
Water: 2 tbsp, ice cold

For Filling:

Butter: 50gm
Lemon juice: ¼ cup
Eggs: 2 beaten
Sugar: 125gm

Method:

For tart shells:

1. Sift flour and salt.

2. Rub in butter with fingertips until mixture resembles bread crumbs.

3. Stir in sugar. Then add in the beaten egg yolks and water. Do not over knead, otherwise pastry will turn stiff.

4. Roll out and cut out with a round cutter.

5. Arrange each one in the mould and prick with knife or a fork, so the pastry doesn’t rise.



6. Bake in the moulds for 15 min, or until golden.

For the filling:

1. Melt butter on a low medium flame.

2. Add the rest of the ingredients and cook until thick and smooth. This can take 10 to 15 mins.





Note: before the mixture starts getting thick, force it through a fine sieve to remove any impurities or curdled egg. Return to double boiler to thicken it.

3. Let it cool before filling the cases.





Enjoy!

All photos: Arhama Siddiqa
WRITTEN BY:
Arhama Siddiqa The author is a LUMS and University of Warwick alumnus and is currently a Research Fellow at the Institute of Strategic Studies Islamabad (ISSI). She is also a bibliophile and an avid foodie. Her food blog can be found @chakhoous (https://www.instagram.com/chakhoous/) and she tweets @arhama_siddiqa (https://twitter.com/arhama_siddiqa)
The views expressed by the writer and the reader comments do not necassarily reflect the views and policies of the Express Tribune.

COMMENTS (29)

Patwari | 6 years ago | Reply As usual, very eye appealing and tasty. User friendly recipe, of course. Easy to make. However, 'yours truly' is a crumpet idolater, specially on visits to the Emerald Isles. Or on trips to the hometown of the mother of Prince Charles/wife of Duke of Edinburgh. Next, strudel, next, just plain danish pastry, next, pound cake, next, carrot cake. next donuts... Preferably in the comforts of Brown's Hotel or Sketch's. Which are a hop and a skip away from Grosvenor Square. You can watch the Queen hanging out her laundry in the big balcony. With just the right blend of Tetley's or Earl Grey's or Twinings 'chai', [with sugar and milk please].
Hamsid | 6 years ago thank you thank you! Crumpets need to be made ! I will do my best ! after lemon tarts danish pastry has to be my favourite- I remember COSTA coffee with a danish pastry was my go to breakfast for an entire term abroad and donuts of course are love and there are so many varieties apparently! must must must try them all see these comments give me much needed motivation !
Parvez | 6 years ago | Reply Now that's a bit of a coincidence because I remember my wife telling me that she would stop off and get lemon tarts for my son on the way back from school because he, like his father, loved them.....but he would slowly lick up the inside and land up with a yellow dot on the tip of his nose ...... but that was long ago. If I go further back as a child I remember our cook making them on a coal fire with a metal contraption that worked as an oven and they turned out brilliantly, but then he had a special gift.
Patwari | 6 years ago If you go any further back you will be in Tippu Sultan's reign. Or was it Ranjit Singh's?
Hamsid | 6 years ago the gooey filling is to die for and in Pakistan only , other places its a bit too tangy and not scoopable if thats a word! ok I have heard of baking in a pressure cooker but never this technique I'll note this down because ab toa life in convenient but standing Ovation to the people who found ways or jugaads in other words! any other cool I'll say methods he used or any totkas from him?
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