Treacle & chestnut tart with spiced quince burnt butter ice-cream recipe (2024)

Australian Gourmet Traveller recipe for treacle and chestnut tart with spiced quince burnt butter ice-cream from Bacchus restaurant in Newcastle.

Jun 23, 2010 12:50am
  • 45 mins preparation
  • 3 hrs cooking plus freezing, resting, cooling
  • Serves 8
  • Treacle & chestnut tart with spiced quince burnt butter ice-cream recipe (1)

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"I'm a real sweet tooth and I couldn't get enough of the treacle and chestnut tart I enjoyed at Bacchus while visiting Newcastle recently. Would the chef share the recipe?"
Lien Chen, Wollongong, NSW

Request a recipe
To request a recipe, write to Fare Exchange, Australian Gourmet Traveller, GPO Box 4088, Sydney, NSW 2001, or email us. All requests should include the restaurant's name and address or business card, as well as your name and address.

You’ll need to begin this recipe a day ahead.

Ingredients

  • 50 gm unsalted butter, coarsely chopped
  • 2 eggs
  • 35 ml pouring cream
  • 350 gm golden syrup
  • 50 gm fine breadcrumbs from soft brown bread
  • 50 gm chestnuts, finely chopped (see note)

Burnt butter ice-cream

  • 225 gm softened butter
  • 350 ml skim milk
  • 100 ml pouring cream
  • 100 gm liquid glucose
  • 6 egg yolks
  • 100 gm caster sugar

Spiced quince

  • 660 gm caster sugar (3 cups)
  • 500 ml red wine
  • 10 black peppercorns
  • 3 each star anise and cloves
  • 2 cinnamon quills
  • 2 fresh bay leaves
  • 1 thyme sprig
  • Thinly peeled rind of 1 lemon
  • 2 large quince (about 330gm each), cored, quartered, peel and trimmings reserved

Sweet pastry

  • 250 gm plain flour, sieved, plus extra for dusting
  • 125 gm cold butter, coarsely chopped
  • 40 gm pure icing sugar, sieved (¼ cup)
  • 1 egg

Method

Main

  • 1

    For burnt butter ice-cream, cook butter in a saucepan over medium-high heat until browned (6-8 minutes), remove from heat, set aside. Meanwhile, combine milk, cream and glucose in a saucepan and bring to the boil over medium-high heat, stirring occasionally. Meanwhile, whisk yolks and sugar in a large bowl until pale and creamy (1-2 minutes). Add milk mixture, whisking continuously, return mixture to pan and whisk continuously over low heat until mixture thickly coats the back of a wooden spoon (7-10 minutes). Remove from heat, whisk in browned butter, strain through a fine sieve, refrigerate overnight for flavours to develop, then freeze in an ice-cream machine according to manufacturer’s instructions. Makes about 1 litre.

  • 2

    For spiced quince, combine ingredients (except quince, peel and trimmings) in a saucepan with 750ml water, bring to the boil over medium heat. Add quince, peel and trimmings, cover closely with baking paper, weight with a plate, cover with a lid, reduce heat to low and simmer until quince is tender and dark (2-3 hours). Remove quince with a slotted spoon, cut into wedges, then strain cooking liquid through a fine sieve (discard solids), pour back over quince and set aside.

  • 3

    Meanwhile, for sweet pastry, preheat oven to 180C. Pulse flour, butter and icing sugar in a food processor until coarse crumbs form, add egg and pulse until a dough forms. Turn onto a lightly floured surface, knead lightly and shape into a disc, wrap in plastic wrap and refrigerate to rest (30 minutes). Roll out on a lightly floured surface into a 2mm-thick rectangle and line a 13cm x 36cm rectangular tart tin, trim edges and refrigerate to rest (30 minutes). Blind bake until golden (10-12 minutes), remove paper and weights, bake until golden and crisp (10-12 minutes), set aside.

  • 4

    Cook butter in a saucepan over medium heat until browned (2-3 minutes), remove from heat and strain through a fine sieve (discard sediment). Whisk eggs, cream and 2 tsp fine sea salt in a separate bowl. Heat golden syrup in a saucepan over low heat, add browned butter, then add to cream mixture. Add breadcrumbs and chestnuts, mix well, then pour into tart and bake until just set (15-20 minutes). Cool in tin on a wire rack, then turn out and cool completely. Serve tart at room temperature with warm quince and a little syrup and burnt butter ice-cream.

Notes

Note Peeled chestnuts are available from select delicatessens. Substitute freshly roasted and peeled chestnuts, where available. This recipe is from the June 2010 issue of Australian Gourmet Traveller.

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Treacle & chestnut tart with spiced quince burnt butter ice-cream recipe (2024)

FAQs

What does a treacle tart taste like? ›

What Does Treacle Tart Taste Like? It tastes like a delightful custard-based pastry, similar to Lemon Bars but with the texture of Lemon Chess Pie. The tart filling, when served warm, is ooey-gooey like a pecan pie without the nuts.

Why is treacle tart called treacle? ›

At first blush, the name 'treacle tart' is a misnomer, since few recipes for this dish call for what we now know as treacle. But once upon a time, 'treacle' was any liquid product of the sugar-refining process.

What is treacle called in USA? ›

More commonly known as treacle or black treacle or, in the US as blackstrap molasses, molasses are essentially what is left over after cane sugar is boiled to produce sugar and most of the sugar has been extracted.

What do Americans call treacle? ›

Molasses. Black treacle is often the British counterpart to North America's molasses. The two are similar in color and viscosity and used in the same way.

What did Americans substitute for treacle as an ingredient? ›

Treacle is a generic British term for any syrup made during the refining of sugar cane. Later, refined sugar became more affordable and overtook treacle as a sweetener. However, colonial Americans often substituted molasses for treacle in their recipes.

What flavor is treacle? ›

It's akin to American molasses, specifically the blackstrap variety, which is stronger, thicker, and more bitter than unsulfured molasses. Some even describe the taste as inky and slightly salty.

What does treacle mean in England? ›

chiefly British. a. : molasses. b. : a blend of molasses, invert sugar, and corn syrup used as syrup.

Does treacle taste like honey? ›

If you are not British then you might not have heard of it and it is rather difficult to compare it to anything else. It looks like honey, but is viscous like a syrup such as corn syrup and yet it tastes like neither. The taste is more like butterscotch or caramel. It is also commonly called treacle.

What does treacle mean in British slang? ›

(co*ckney rhyming slang) Sweetheart (from treacle tart). Listen, treacle, this is the last time I'll warn you!

Is treacle the same as caramel? ›

Treacle, also known as molasses or dark caramel is technically a byproduct of refining sugar by boiling the raw juice. This uncrystallized syrup is thick and dark and has many uses in flavouring food. From being added to cakes and bakes, it finds its uses in sauces and marinades and other sweets too.

Does treacle taste good? ›

To put it plainly, treacle is the thick, goopy syrup that's left behind after raw sugar cane juice is refined to make regular white sugar (via The Times). Known for its intense sweetness and rich caramel flavor, treacle is considered a staple ingredient in many countries.

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