This recipe has evolved from lots of different bakewell tart recipes.
Use either a 26cm tart tin or a rectangular baking tray about 20 x 32cm. (It shouldn’t be too shallow, at least 1.5 cm deep).
Pastry
175g flour
30g almonds
40g icing sugar
125g butter, straight from the fridge and cubed
1 egg, beaten with 2 tablespoons tap water
Mix the first 4 ingredients in the processor, pulsing. Keep pulsing as you add the egg/water until it starts to clump. You might not need all of the liquid. Gently press into a lump and wrap in clingfilm. Keep in the fridge for 20 minutes or until you’re ready.
When you are ready, cut a piece of greaseproof paper a bit bigger than your tin. Roll your pastry onto the paper and gently lift it, paper and all, into your tin. Ease it in and tidy up the edges. If the pastry rips, just patch it up with some of the excess. Remember that it will shrink as it cooks. Don’t blind bake it. Just stick it in the fridge till you’ve made the filling.
The greaseproof lining works well: It means that you can lift the whole thing out after cooking and cooling without any disasters.
Filling
125g butter, melted but no longer too hot
125g golden caster sugar
150g ground almonds
3 eggs, beaten
zest and juice of a lemon
2 teasp vanilla extract
2 level tablespoons self-raising flour
3 tablespoons lemon curd or apricot jam
fresh strawberries – as many as you like – normally about 8 – 10
Whoosh up all of the filling ingredients except for the jam in the food processor. Make sure it’s well blended.
Spread the jam/lemon curd carefully over the pastry base, then pour the filling mix evenly over the top.
Decorate artistically (!) with quartered strawberries, hairy-side up.
Bake for 30 – 45 minutes at 180 degrees. When you start to smell it baking, check it, turn it round and if necessary, turn the oven down. When the middle bounces back, it’s ready. Do check, because all ovens are so different. In mine, it only takes about 25 minutes at 170 degrees.
Glaze
3 tablespoons apricot jam
juice of one lemon
As soon as the frangipane comes out of the oven, gently warm the glaze ingredients in a small pan until just melted. Push through a tea-strainer into a mug, then brush evenly over the whole pie.
Serve at room temperature.
If the weather turns before you have chance to enjoy the strawberry version, why not try it with a little bit of grated nutmeg in the mix and finely sliced apples or quartered plums, maybe a little bit of marsala in the glaze? The possibilities are endless!