Tarte Tatin with Oatmeal Crust
Tarte Tatin with a nutty oatmeal crust: apples caramelized in butter and brown sugar in a cast-iron skillet, baked under the crust, then flipped to reveal the glossy upside-down apple tart.
YIELD
1 recipePREP
30 minCOOK
1 hrsREADY
1 hrsTarte Tatin is France’s great happy accident, an upside-down apple tart where the fruit caramelizes in butter and sugar before the pastry ever touches it. This version swaps the usual crust for a nutty oatmeal pastry, ground oats and flour cut with cold butter, which adds a toasty, wholesome edge against all that caramel.
The magic happens in a cast-iron skillet. Melt butter, stir in the white and brown sugars until they bubble into caramel, then pack the apple wedges in tightly on their sides, because they shrink as they cook and you want a solid, gap-free layer. A little lemon zest keeps the sweetness bright.
Cook the apples in the caramel until the juices turn syrupy but the fruit is still firm, then drape the chilled crust over the top and bake.
The real moment of truth is the flip: invert the whole thing onto a plate while it’s warm, and the caramelized apples emerge glistening on top. Use a firm apple like Golden Delicious so the wedges hold their shape instead of collapsing to sauce.
Chef Tips
- Keep the oat crust cold and barely worked so it bakes up flaky, not tough.
- Pack the apple wedges in tightly. They shrink as they cook, and gaps leave a patchy tart.
- Cook the apples just until the caramel is syrupy and the fruit is still firm, so they hold shape after baking.
- Invert the tart while it’s still warm. Let it cool too long and the caramel glues it to the pan.
Variations
- Use pears in place of apples for a softer, fragrant tart.
- Add a pinch of cinnamon or a splash of Calvados to the caramel.
- Serve warm with crème fraîche, vanilla ice cream, or lightly whipped cream.
Ingredients
Directions
Blend oats and sugar in a processor until oats are finely ground.
Blend in flour and salt. Add butter and process using the on/off button, until mixture resembles coarse meal.
Mix in ice water by the tablespoon, until mixture begins to clump together.
Gather dough into ball, flatten into disk.
Wrap in plastic; chill 1 hour.
Keep chilled. Soften at room temperature before rolling.
Preheat oven to 425 degrees F.
Melt butter in a heavy 10 inch diameter cast iron skillet over medium heat.
Gradually mix in both sugars; stir until sugars begin to dissolve and mixture starts to bubble, about 2 minutes.
Mix in lemon peel.
Remove from heat. Arrange apple wedges on their sides in a circle around the eges of the skillet, so they fit tightly.
Place several apple wedges tightly together in center of skillet.
Cut any remaining apple wedges into pieces, scatter over apple wedges, mounding slightly in center.
Place skillet over medium heat and cook 3 minutes.
Cover skillet and cook apples 5 minutes.
Uncover skillet and cook until apple juices and sugars form syrup but apples are still firm to touch, about 10 minutes.
Remove from heat.
Comments




you are missing the crust instructions.