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Courgette and Taleggio Tart with Polenta Pastry

This weekend it felt like summer in London. 26 degrees and not a cloud in the sky. Londoners, including me, could hardly believe their luck. After months and months of grim grey skies, the weather had finally decided to take a turn for the better! Parks filled with happy families, ice-cream vans playing their merry tunes and children running around with water pistols.

In London, sunny warm weather means picnic time. I got at least three invitations to join friends on their picnic blankets in the various parks. I love picnics, I really do. Sitting in the sun, drinking wine and nibbling on lots of little snacks, it’s great. I especially love picnics for all the great things that you can make to go into a picnic basket. Little finger sandwiches, homemade dips, fruity cakes and

Lately I’ve really gone for savoury cakes and quiches. Quiche is great whether it’s warm or cold. It’s just one of those baked goods that will always be a showstopper, but a very rustic one. That’s what I like. Good old rustic homemade food. And if it looks pretty, then that’s even better!

Right, over  to this courgette and Taleggio tart. Quite an intriguing combination, ey? Yes, I thought so too when I came across it in an issue of Delicious magazine. For those who don’t know it yet, I’m addicted to cookery magazines and cookery books. I read them during my lunchbreaks, on the tube and before going to sleep. It’s gotten out of control. But hey, at least my addiction tastes good, right?!

So, I was marked this recipe with one of my little yellow sticky notes, put it aside and rediscovered it last weekend when flicking through my stack of cookery magazines for inspiration. Taleggio.. hmmm, I wonder what that cheese tastes like. I love cheese and I love discovering new cheese. So this recipe was perfect to try out a new cheese variety.

I was quite surprised to find that Taleggio is a really mild cheese with a very round taste and a strong aftertaste. The first impression reminded me of a very creamy Saint d’Albray, but then the pungency hit me and it reminded me of some cheese I had when I was little at my grandparents. No idea what cheese that was. Maybe that was even Taleggio. Although, I doubt that. R. thought it tasted like blue cheese, which really surprised me. But on second thought, yes, the pungency definitely has some blue-cheeseness to it. Strange. But delicious.

So Taleggio, prosciutto and courgettes. Let me warn you, this quiche is quite salty. A bit too much for my taste. So for those who don’t like it too salty, let me recommend using a bit less cheese (say 150g) and cut down on the prosciutto. I have already cut down the amount of prosciutto from the original (which used 150g). Also, I found the recipe just too heavy, so I’d recommend swapping the creme fraiche for low fat one (something I never ever do, but in this case I would actually!).

For the rest, delicious. I found the whole flavour combinations very unusual, but surprisingly fitting. The courgette topping and basil (which I added to the original recipe) add a necessary freshness to the tart, balancing out the heavy heartiness of cheese and prosciutto. I like the polenta pastry, although it  crumbled quite a lot, but hey, once it was in the mold and reattached (by just squishing the various loose bits back together) it actually baked quite nicely and didn’t break when removing from the mold.

A lovely tart, which I would have loved to take along to this weekend’s picnics. Alas, it didn’t actually last – we had devoured it before leaving the house… ★

May 24, 2010
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