maids-of-honor-tarts-ii

Maids of Honor Tarts II

2 Reviews

“Rich little tarts with ground almonds and raspberry jam.” - by Joanne

Ingredients

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Adjust Servings

Original recipe yields 12 tarts

Directions

  1. Preheat oven to 400 degrees F (200 degrees C). Generously grease 12 2-inch tart tins.
  2. Roll out pastry. Cut 12 3-inch circles. Reserve pastry scraps. Fit pastry circles into greased tart tins. Spread 1 teaspoon of jam into bottom of each tart shell.
  3. In a small mixing bowl, beat together egg, sugar, and salt until light in color. Mix in milk and almonds. Spoon an equal amount of filling into each tart shell. Cut pastry scraps into small strips and form a cross on top of each tart.
  4. Bake in preheated oven for 15 minutes, until tops are golden brown.

Nutrition

Amount Per Serving (12 total)

  • Calories
  • 277 cal
  • 14%
  • Fat
  • 16.4 g
  • 25%
  • Carbs
  • 29.1 g
  • 9%
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Based on a 2,000 calorie diet

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Reviews (2)

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L_SANTARPIO
12

L_SANTARPIO

"This is a recipe I remember my mother used to make when I was a child. I made them for Thanksgiving and used the slivered almonds grinding them in a coffee mill to make a fine powder. I also cooked t..." See morehe tarts in a mini muffin pan and used cream cheese dough instead of pastry. 1/4 lb soft butter, 1 cup flour and 1/4 lb. soft cream cheese. Mix all together and roll into 3/4 inch balls. Place one ball in each compartment of a mini muffin pan. Press down with thumb and up sides of each compartment in order to line the pan. Refrigerate pan while you make the filling. I used 1/8 teaspoon of rasberry jam into bottom of each muffin before filling with almond mixture. I baked it at 350 for 25-30 minutes. Tops should be light brown."

COOKINKEL
5

COOKINKEL

"These were pretty tasty! I did change the recipe a bit because I needed to substitute pecans for almonds, but I found that those two flavors tasted well together. I made a double batch, in fact I wa..." See mores planning on making a quadruple batch, but it was pretty time consuming and tedious for the first two. I had two different tart pans, and the EKCO brand yielded much better results than the darker aluminum no-name brand pan I had. The EKCO pan allowed for nicer browning, and the cups were deeper to hold the ingredients. When adding the nut/sugar/egg mixture, I found that one teaspoon was plenty for each cup, and there was quite a lot of the mixture left over. (Maybe I will make two more batches with that tomorrow!) Overall, the presentation was fine, and it was important to make sure the pastry cross on top was firmly pressed to the crust."

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