Dailymaverick logo

Maverick Life

Maverick Life, TGIFood, Nelson Mandela Bay

Lekker Brekker Monday: Rustic tomato tart

Lekker Brekker Monday: Rustic tomato tart
You can also make it round. (Photo: Louis Pieterse, Kudu Studio)
There’s a whack of flavour in this dish thanks to the layer of caramelised onion beneath the tomatoes and the base of tomato and mustard paste below that.

A tart for breakfast? There’s no reason why not. You can even prepare it the day before, refrigerate it, bring it to room temperature just before you have your morning coffee, and then pop it into the oven for a hot, warming breakfast. Perfect for a cold autumn day.

The tomatoes need to be bright red and ripe almost to the point of fading. The onions (and there’s plenty of onion in this tart as well as tomatoes) can be red too, but aren’t roasted for this recipe even though I do often roast them before continuing with a recipe. In this case, round slices are best.

The pastry is a hot water pie crust, the recipe for which was given to me years ago by a local restaurateur in my small town. After I told her how wonderful the crunchy pastry was, she said — here’s the recipe. Find that below too.

For this, you need a standard old-fashioned oven pan, which you need to spray or grease.

Tony’s rustic tomato tart

Ingredients

1 recipe hot water pie crust (see below)

6 large, very ripe tomatoes, sliced (about ½ cm per slice)

4 medium red onions, peeled and sliced thinly

3 Tbsp olive oil for frying the onions

100 ml tomato paste

2 heaped tsp Colmans Hot English Mustard OR 2 Tbsp quality Dijon mustard (note the teaspoon V. tablespoon: hot English is much stronger)

A few oregano sprigs, the leaves picked off

Coarse salt and cracked black pepper to taste

Method

You can also make it round. (Photo: Louis Pieterse, Kudu Studio)



Preheat oven to 200℃.

In a deep frying pan, heat the olive oil and add the sliced onions. Simmer them on a low heat until they are beautifully caramelised and browned. You need to move them around with two wooden spoons every five minutes or so to get the caramelisation even. They can be cooking while you make your pastry. Just keep an eye (and nose) on them.

Make the hot water pastry (see recipe below) and roll it out on a floured board until it is just a bit bigger than your oven tray on all sides. Carefully pick it up with both hands and place it over the oven pan to fit. Roll over the four sides to make a boat, as it were, and crimp the edges all round between finger and thumb. Prick the base in many places with a fork.

Mix 3 Tbsp mustard with 100 ml tomato paste (purée) in a small bowl. Spread this generously and evenly all over the base.

Spoon the caramelised onions all over and spread it to all corners and sides.

Layer tomato slices on top of this, in rows, overlapping a little.

Pick the oregano leaves and scatter them over the tomatoes.

Season generously with coarse salt and cracked pepper.

Drizzle more olive oil on top.

Bake it for 35 minutes or more in the hot oven, or until the pastry is nicely browned at the edges. Don’t be tied down to a cooking time; it’s ready when your eye says so. In my silly old gas oven it took a fair bit longer.

Hot Water Pie Crust

1 cup/250 ml water

250 g salted butter

4 cups plain flour

Heat the butter and water together in a pot and simmer until all the butter has melted and it reaches boiling point. Put the flour into a large bowl, make a well, and pour the hot water into it a little at a time while stirring with a silicone spatula or wooden spoon, just to combine the liquid and flour. Then mix it and knead it with clean hands, while it is hot, to form a nice smooth, pliable dough. It does not need salt.

It’s ready to use immediately, even while still warm, or you can cover it with cling film and refrigerate for use later. You can press it into a tart tin or onto a baking sheet, or roll it out first. DM