In the novel “Blackberry Wine”, Joanne Harris’ follow up to Chocolat, the protagonist inherits some bottles of fruit in alcohol that have been steeping for around forty years. Each time he drinks one of them, he has hallucinations and then needs to drink another bottle to see what happens next. Or at least that’s Joanne Harris’ excuse for basing a novel around a drunkard who hangs out in a shed.
Around the time I read this book in the early noughties, I was thus inspired to bottle two little jars of fruit in alcohol; picota cherries in Remy Martin and blackcurrants in vodka. It never occurred to me that I would leave them so long but we only opened the cherries last year serving them with ice cream when some neighbours came to dinner.
We still have the blackcurrants in vodka sitting in my cellar. Maybe I should leave these for another thirty years to see if they have the same effect as in the book. Alternatively, I might use them in a tart rather like this one from The French Kitchen, the first of Harris’ two French cookery books written alongside Fran Warde.
This blueberry tart is the first recipe I have made from The French Kitchen for some time, but it won’t be the last. Filled with beautiful photographs and easy to follow recipes, I don’t know why I’ve neglected this book for so long. We had bought some 2 for 1 punnets of blueberries in the supermarket and this seemed a great way to make use of them.
When I first published this post in 2010, I used a promising new ingredient: cinnamon paste. This thick sweet and spicy deep red paste was marvellous for baking but sadly disappeared quickly. In the ingredients below I have instead suggested mixing a tablespoon of jam with some ground cinnamon for a similar effect.
Blueberry Cinnamon Tarts
adapted from The French Kitchen by Fran Warde and Joanne Harris
This quantity of pastry is less than the amount that I made on the day; I had also made two larger quiches at the same time so half this amount would be enough for these tarts.
I made three five inch tarts with the equivalent of this amount of pastry but you would easily have enough ingredients here for one eight inch tart, possibly larger.
Blueberry Tarts With Cinnamon
Equipment
- baking beans
- baking parchment paper
- baking tin see notes
Ingredients
For The Pastry
- 100 g plain flour
- 50 g butter
- pinch salt
- 3-4 tbsp water
For The Filling
- 1/2 tsp cinnamon ground
- 1 tbsp jam see notes re flavour
- 300 g blueberries
- 2 eggs large
- 125 g caster sugar plus extra for sprinkling
- 100 ml double cream
- 25 g flour
- 40 ml crème de cassis optional - blackcurrant liqueur
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 190c or gas mark 5.
For The Pastry Case
- Rub the fats into the flour and salt until have you have a breadcrumb texture, gradually add several tablespoons of water and stirring in to bring the dough together. Knead gently then flatten into a disc and wrap in plastic and leave in the fridge for 30 minutes.
- Roll your pastry out on a floured surface large enough to make your pastry case(s). Press the pastry gently into your greased case(s). Prick the surface all over with a fork to stop shrinking and bake "blind" in the oven for 25 minutes. Do this by filling the case with a sheet of parchment paper and baking beans to stop the case rising in the middle.
- Allow the cases to cool for a while before filling but they do not need to be completely cold.
For The Filling
- In a small dish, mix the ground cinnamon with jam. Spread this cinnamon jam mix over the base of the cases and fill generously with blueberries.
- Mix the eggs, sugar, cream, flour in a pint sized jug. You can either mix the cassis into the egg mixture now or swirl it onto the mixture in the cases, up to you.
- Pour mixture over the fruit. If you swirl the cassis over after the egg mixture it leaves a pretty trail that will show up after cooking. Sprinkle over a little caster sugar.
- Bake for approximately 25 minutes until the surface is golden. They will puff up like souffles but settle down as they cool. Can be served hot if you are impatient but is best served cold with cream or ice cream.
Notes
For another boozy tart, try my Amaretto Bakewell Tart with Quince







I wonder if your blackcurrant vodka tastes good too (I love sloe gin, which is made in the same way) …
Thanks for entering Sugar High Friday 🙂
@gastrogeek It is ok but I recommend her third book Five Quarters of the Orange more
@lostpastremember Welcome to Maison Cupcake!
@kitchenbutterfly Vanilla paste… now that sounds goooood
@deerbaby It was my first time in there for ages, I have to go quite out my way to get to one so Sainsburys, Waitrose and Asda are my first call
@mowie If you like my pictures I must be doing something right 🙂
@nicisme Yeah I am sick of pancakes big time!!
@jenny I didn't notice that about the vegetables…. I find the layout a bit odd in there and it's very dark
@faithy I need to start cinnamon paste export club I think!
@jeanne Blueberries are definitely better cooked I agree. If you cut open a raw one they're not even blue inside, horrid pale green colour but they get their colour when they're cooked. Very strange.
What perfecly gorgeous tarts! I'm always on the lookout for ways to use blueberries as I knwo they are good for you but I don't really care for them fresh… And that cinnamon paste from Morrisons looks addictively good!