


Transfer the cooked tarts onto a wire rack and allow to cool.Bake for 18-20 minutes, turning the tin around after 10 minutes to ensure even cooking.I use a small ice-cream scoop but 2 spoons will also work.

.png)
Line the prepared tin with the pastry.Add about a tablespoon of filling to each tart.
#GYPSY TART WITH CONDENSED MILK PLUS#
#GYPSY TART WITH CONDENSED MILK FREE#
I’ve opted for an unsweetened pastry, but feel free to use a sweetened one if you prefer. The pastry is crisp and dry and a perfect contrast against the moist filling. Adding the jam after baking (unlike the method for Bakewell Tarts) circumvents cooking the jam for a second time, and so it retains its brightness of flavour as well as colour. I’m not a fan of almond flavouring, so I’ve used lemon zest to brighten the almond sponge and used a seedless blackcurrant jam inside. In essence, these are a Bakewell Tart with cream, but a little tweak turns them into sweet ‘oysters’. These little tarts are a beautiful example of how the simplest ingredients can be given a subtle twist and appeal by both their appearance and the ease with which they are whipped up. I’m not sure which edition my Be-Ro booklet is, as it’s undated, but from the appearance of the smiling lady on the front it definitely has a 1930s feeling it’s pictured on the Be-Ro website, with a deep red cover. Now in it’s 40th edition, the company claims that, at over 38 million copies, its recipe booklet “is arguably one of the best-selling cookery books ever.” This proved so popular, and requests for the recipes so numerous, the Be-Ro Home Recipes book was created. To encourage the use of self-raising flour, the company staged exhibitions where visitors could taste freshly-baked scones, pastries and cakes. Amongst other items, he manufactured and sold baking powder and the world’s first self-raising flour under the brand name Bell’s Royal.Īfter the death of King Edward VII the use of the word ‘Royal’ in business was prohibited, so Thomas shortened each word to just two letters, and the Be-Ro brand was born. Thomas Bell founded his grocery company in Newcastle-upon-Tyne in 1875. A great little recipe from that classic baking institution: Be-Ro.
