Isn’t something to have a recipe after your name? Fettucini Alftedo, Béchamel sauce or cake Savarin! I wonder if these people knew that one day their name would be remembered and taught for hundred years later.
Most of us have special recipes passed to us thru our parents, relatives or neighbors. Recipes that are famous in the family and even sometimes in the neighborhood! But how is it possible to make a recipe internationally recognized and adapted for the next generations?
I invited my friend Carole to spend the day with us. She got us with her a box filled with apricot crumble tart cut in squares.
I tasted one and it was the best buttery shortbread-style cookie ever with a soft crumbly texture that just melts in your mouth. Totally delicious! And when I asked for the recipe, Carole answered with confidence: “Tart Em Tony” (translated from Arabic to Tony’s mama), as if I was supposed to know what does that mean and what’s inside. She continued: ” Everybody on the block knows Tart Em Tony. That was our favorite dessert when we were kids”.
My face turned pale, it must be jealousy! Who on Earth is Em Tony and has a recipe after her name? A recipe that all the neighborhood shared at a time when food blogger wasn’t even a word.
I requested the recipe and instantly Carole whatsaped it to me. It was a picture from a recipe book handwritten just like the old days. How many of you remember his mom writing all her recipes in an old agenda notebook. The trend was to copy recipes into our books, while now we take snapshots with our smart phones and share digital copies effortlessly with friends or on the Whatsapp family group.
I know that many of my recipes have been tried all over the country. I know that my pumpkin sweet potato soup is a hit and have been passed to many people on the five continents, but would I ever have one recipe that will outlive me? A recipe recognized as the Oryana recipe, and for decades from now? I will call that an achievement!
Ingredients
- 200g unsalted butter, at room temperature
- ¾ icing sugar
- 1 egg
- 1 tsp vanilla
- Pinch of salt
- 1 tsp baking powder
- 3 cups plain flour
- 1 cup apricot jam
Preparation
Grease or line a 9-inch square pan. In the bowl of the stand mixer cream the butter and the icing sugar on medium speed. Beat in the egg and vanilla and mix further until light and fluffy.
In a separate bow, combine flour, baking powder and salt. Add it slowly to the butter mixture, mixing until the dough comes together.
Push half of the dough into the pan so it covers it evenly. Let it chill in the fridge along with the other half of the dough for about an hour.
Take it off the fridge and spread the jam on the top.
Preheat oven to 180C/350F.
To make the crumble topping, grate the remaining dough over the jam to cover it all.
Bake the tart in the oven for 20-25 minutes or until it is lightly browned. Remove from oven and let it cool completely before cutting.
It can be sliced into squares using a knife or cut into circles using a cookie-cutter.
It looks delicious!
Thanks for sharing,
Love
You welcome:)
These have such a melt-in-your-mouth looking texture to them. Very nice Maya 🙂
Thank you:)
Can’t wait to taste it tomorrow !!
I made your lemon cake too 🙂 my guests will be happy i hope ^^
Have a great weekend ahead
Hope they turned out soft as you want them to be:)