2020 Notes: Walk into any pastry shop in Paris and you’ll see a lemon tart (
tarte au citron). One of the most classic pastries, it’s just lemon curd poured into a baked buttery pastry crust. Some will be more tart, some more sweet, some have meringue or fresh fruit on top, but most will be unadorned. Lime curd tarts are far less common but I think they equally deserve a place in your dessert canon. I’ve been making
this one from Ina Garten (refer to it if you miss the original) for eons but these days I make it in fewer steps (no butter to warm, fewer dishes, and no pie weights) and thought you deserved to know how you could do the same. I like that it uses whole eggs, instead of just yolks, so you don’t have any leftover ingredients; that it doesn’t, like so many lime desserts, demand tiny, annoying-to-juice key limes; and takes full advantage of the lime zest, for full-bodied lime flavor. The recipe below makes a thicker tart shell that is, to be honest, not my favorite. My go-to is
the one I use in this peanut tart. This would also be excellent in a graham crust, and save you some time too;
use this one.






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