If you love mushroom recipes, you’ll love this mushroom galette recipe. Made with flaky pie crust, a mixture of cheeses, and a delicious combination of caramelized onions and mushrooms, this savory mushroom tart is the perfect meal or appetizer!
Mushroom Galette Recipe
If you’ve never heard of a galette, it’s essentially a rustic pie or tart. On the blog, I’ve shared recipes for an apple galette and strawberry galette, which are both dessert galettes.
Today, I’m sharing this recipe for a savory galette, which is basically a mushroom tart.
If you’ve ever made a French onion tart, it’s not too different from that.
For this mushroom galette recipe, you’ll need pie dough for the pastry aspect.
You can make your homemade pie crust or simply use a sheet of store-bought pie dough.
Once you’ve got the pie crust ready to go, you’ll spread a layer of ricotta cheese over the crust, then top it with some grated parmesan for extra flavor.
The cheese is then topped with sautéed mushrooms and caramelized onions before all of the filling is topped with gruyere cheese.
The great thing about a galette is that it’s incredibly versatile. You can use all kinds of vegetables and cheeses to make a galette, so if you’re not a fan of mushrooms or you’re not a fan of gruyere, you can swap them out.
You could pile on sautéed veggies like zucchini, tomato, and bell pepper for a rustic summer version.
Or, turn this into a meat lover’s delight by incorporating ham or sausage.
If you are a fan of mushrooms, however, you are going to love the version shared here today, just as it is!
The combination of mushrooms with onions is divine. Anytime I make this for a gathering with friends, I always get people asking me for the recipe.
You can also enjoy this mushroom galette as a meal with a glass of crisp, white wine.
To serve the galette, simply cut it up into pizza-like slices. If you’re serving it as an appetizer, you’ll want to cut them into smaller slices.
If you’re serving it as a meal, you can afford to be more generous with your portions.
You can also prep this galette and freeze it for baking later. If you decide to make ahead and freeze, just be sure to increase the duration in which you bake the tart as it will likely need more time to bake through.
Mushroom Galette Recipe
Yield: 4
Prep Time: 15 minutes
Cook Time: 25 minutes
Total Time: 40 minutes
A savory tart made with flaky pastry and a delicious combination of cheeses, mushrooms, and caramelized onions.
Ingredients
1 sheet of pie dough
1/3 cup whole milk ricotta
6 oz. crimini mushrooms, cut into slices
1/4 of a jumbo white onion, cut into thin crescent-shaped slices
1.5 oz gruyere cheese, shredded
parmesan cheese, for grating as a garnish
pinch of salt and freshly ground pepper
pinch of nutmeg
1 egg, separated into white and yolk
olive oil
1 sprig of thyme
Instructions
Preheat the oven to 400°F. To a pan, add about a tablespoon of olive oil. Warm over medium heat and once hot, add in the onion slices. Cook until the onions begin to become golden along the edges and caramelize.
Add the mushroom slices to the pan and cook for another few minutes until the mushrooms are tender. Turn off the heat and temporarily set the pan aside.
Unroll the pie crust onto a baking sheet fitted with parchment paper or a silicone baking mat. Brush the egg white over most of the pie crust, leaving about a 1 1/2 inch perimeter bare. Let the crust rest for a minute for the egg white to slightly dry.
Spread the ricotta cheese all over the area covered with the egg white. Use a zester to finely grate a little bit of parmesan cheese as a slight garnish over all the ricotta cheese. Add a small pinch of salt and freshly ground pepper, as well as the pinch of nutmeg, over the cheese.
Distribute the mushroom-onion mixture all over the ricotta cheese, then top that with the shredded gruyere. Add the thyme leaves all over the top.
Fold the edges of the pie crust over the mushroom filling, all along the edges. Brush the egg yolk over the pastry, then top the pastry with some of the finely grated parmesan.
Bake the galette for 20-30 minutes. If you're using store-bought crust, it will typically look golden and be ready in the 20-25 minute mark, whereas homemade pastry can take up to 30 minutes.
Let the galette rest for 10 minutes on the baking sheet, then transfer to your serving plate.
A galette, if you're unfamiliar, is a kind of open-faced, freeform pie. The dough for the crust is the same as a traditional pie, but the structure of the dessert is different.
Some galette recipes call for puff pastry; however, a more traditional galette uses dough that's buttery and flaky like a pie crust. You can make your own galette dough recipe from scratch, but I think the Pillsbury refrigerated pie crust dough is a really high-quality shortcut.
Galettes refer to the catch-all term for a pastry base, topped with either sweet or savoury fillings with the edges roughly folded in to create a gorgeous, rustic-looking bake.
Because you can't par-bake a galette crust to prevent the fruit's juices from making the crust soggy, many folks brush their galette crust with egg white or make a layer of crushed cookies or cake crumbs, either of which work fine.
The French have been serving up galette des rois since the 14th-century. Traditionally, it's served on January 6th – the 12th day of Christmas – to celebrate the Epiphany, a religious feast day commemorating the arrival of the Three Kings to the manger where Jesus was born.
First, galettes don't require a par bake like quiches do, which speeds up the baking time. Secondly, they are easier to travel with and share. Lastly, there's more crust to filling ratio. Usually the filling in a quiche is quite liquidy, which would just leak out of a free-form pie like a galette.
Crostata is an Italian term, and galette is French; however, by definition, you can use these terms interchangeably. They're referring to the same, easy and distinctly elegant dessert. By whichever name, this free-form pastry is always a great choice when you find yourself with a bounty of peak season produce.
Traditionally, Epiphany is celebrated on January 6th, 12 days after Christmas. Beginning around the 13th or 14th century, sharing a Galette des Rois became a popular way to celebrate this occasion, with the cake signifying the arrival of the Three Wise Men in Bethlehem.
Cover the galette with the skillet, then, holding the handle with one hand and the bottom of the sheet pan with the other, flip the whole thing so the galette lands back in the skillet, browned side up.
Remove the dough from the plastic wrap and roll it out into a 12 by 12-inch circle. It's okay if the circle isn't perfectly round. In fact, my galette dough usually appears quite rustic and I like it that way. For a perfect circle, simply use a pizza cutter to cut off any uneven edges.
The galette des rois is a cake traditionally shared at Epiphany, on 6 January. It celebrates the arrival of the Three Wise Men in Bethlehem. Composed of a puff pastry cake, with a small charm, the fève, hidden inside, it is usually filled with frangipane, a cream made from sweet almonds, butter, eggs and sugar.
Bakeries usually sell these cakes for the whole month, and they come with a golden cardboard crown. If you find a fève (charm) in your portion then you get to wear the crown and be the king (le roi) or queen (la reine) for the day.
Galette (from the Norman word gale, meaning "flat cake") is a term used in French cuisine to designate various types of flat round or freeform crusty cakes, or, in the case of a Breton galette (French: Galette bretonne [galɛt bʁətɔn]; Breton: Krampouezhenn gwinizh du), a pancake made with buckwheat flour usually with a ...
The cake contains a lucky charm (une fève) which originally was a broad bean (fève means broad bean in French). Whoever found the charm in their slice of galette, becomes King or Queen. At the beginning of the 20th century, the lucky charm started being made of china.
The simple answer is that a galette is a savoury crêpe. Galettes are made with buckwheat flour instead of usual flour varieties. This gives them a slightly stronger flavour than a normal crêpe or pancake and also means they're gluten free.
Introduction: My name is Carlyn Walter, I am a lively, glamorous, healthy, clean, powerful, calm, combative person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.
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