Toffee apple tart
Photography by David Loftus

Toffee apple tart

This is a fantastic dessert that I love to make for friends as they can’t get enough of it. The combination of toffee and apples is a fairground classic but feel free to try it with pears, bananas, even strawberries.

Put your unopened tins of condensed milk in a high-sided pan, covered with water. Bring to the boil, then reduce the heat and simmer constantly for about 3 hours with a lid on top. It’s very important to remember to keep checking the pan, as you don’t want it to boil dry – otherwise the tins will explode. It will give you the most amazing toffee. Put the tins to one side and allow to cool.

First of all you need to make your pastry. Score down the length of the vanilla pod, if using, and remove the seeds by scraping a knife down the inside of each half (keep the pod for making vanilla sugar). Cream together the butter, icing sugar and salt and then rub in the flour, vanilla seeds, lemon zest and egg yolks – you can do all this by hand or in a food processor. When the mixture looks like coarse breadcrumbs, add the cold milk or water. Pat and gently work the mixture together until you have a ball of dough, then flour it lightly and roll it into a large sausage shape – don’t work the pastry too much otherwise it will become too elastic and chewy, not flaky and short as you want it to be. Wrap the dough in clingfilm and place in the fridge to rest for at least an hour. Remove it from the fridge, slice it up and line a 28cm/11 inch tart mould with the slivers. Push them together, then tidy up the sides by trimming off any excess. Place the tart mould into the freezer for an hour.

Preheat the oven to 180ºC/350ºF/gas 4. Take the pastry case out of the freezer and bake blind in the preheated oven for 15 minutes. Peel and quarter the apples and remove the cores, then slice finely and toss in the icing sugar. Remove the pastry base from the oven and smear the caramel from both tins of condensed milk over it. Place the apples on top and pour any remaining juices over. Cook at the bottom of the preheated oven for about 40 minutes, to give you a crispy base and bubbling toffee over the apples. Serve with vanilla ice cream. Beautiful!

Comments

gwen [Visitor]
Tue 02 Oct 2007 @ 15:08
sounds great but it would take too long th cook xx

campingcath [Visitor]
Tue 02 Oct 2007 @ 20:51
its well worth the time

Sally L. [Visitor]
Thu 04 Oct 2007 @ 21:20
Nestle Carnation makes Dulce de Leche (they call it Caramel) It is easier to find in the shops than Merchant Gourmet.

x.Amy.x [Visitor]
Sat 06 Oct 2007 @ 11:44
This looks tasty!! i gotta try this1 thanks for the tip about the toffee ands i cant see myself finding merchant gourment toffee in tescos!!

kiki [Visitor]
Sun 07 Oct 2007 @ 10:40
I'm a big fan Jamie, but this tart really has me stewed. I'm now on my 3rd attempt to make the toffee this weekend. The first 2 times yielded cans of a lovely light brown colored milk, but no lovely, gooey toffee (this despite cooking the 2nd batch for nearly 5 hrs, and yes I'm using condensed milk). I am also now seeing that the copy of the book I have shows that only 5 tablespoons of butter are needed for the crust, not the 9 that is written here. I hope I can eventually get this right, else you owe me a tart :-) !!!!

rene [Visitor]
Tue 23 Oct 2007 @ 17:48
kiki, it has to be sweetened condensed milk, not just condensed milk. It's the sugar in the sweetened version that thickens it.

Annika [Visitor]
Thu 08 Nov 2007 @ 05:06
Well I'm "J-OL's" very,very,very,very,very,very,very,very, huge fan. I love all his stuff as its easy-peasy! I love experimenting and as I say the kitchen is my lab I'm syre its his too. This recipe does appear to be a task but I think I wouldn't have a problem if I go according to his word as its never wrong. I'm only 15 years at the moment but i have lready done most of his dishes from his cook books. I also follow his podcasts and videos not to forget his DVDs. I love them all. So on the whole.....I wouldn't mind this recipe as a challenge is good!

abrafi [Visitor]
Mon 19 Nov 2007 @ 18:48
i love your cooking been to restraunt from st john baptist school

Shawn [Visitor]
Thu 22 Nov 2007 @ 13:34
Lovely recipe. I've been making caramel this way for years but never thought to make a tart out of it as it always disappears too quickly to be used in separate recipes. Ill have to make it next time the house is empty.

cuddles [Visitor]
Fri 23 Nov 2007 @ 13:46
Sounds fabulous like all Jamies stuff, but I am really worried about boiling tins unopened, in case they explode. Sounds very risky!

fennande [Visitor]
Thu 29 Nov 2007 @ 10:02
hi,
I didn't really believe, that three hours would make this lovely toffee, but it did! tomorrow i'll make the apple tart. One question, in the recipe it says that you put the apples on top, but the picture shows the caramel on top? anyone?
thanks, fennande, amsterdam

raffaella [Visitor]
Fri 30 Nov 2007 @ 20:03
sei un cuoco che si diverte a vivere la cucina e grazie a questo sei riuscito a trasmettermi la curiosità di sperimentare cose nuove (naturalmente riferite alla cucina)che, da buona italiana mostro sempre diffidenza verso le spezie orientali,le creme francesi ed i pasticci inglesi grazie e traduci il sito in italiano

Mette [Visitor]
Sat 01 Dec 2007 @ 18:04
I tried this recipe.. but indeed, as Fennande said, the pic shows the toffee to be on top.. I thought myself it might melt in the oven, cause the recipe also says that when you take it out, the toffee should be covering the apples. My toffee doesnt! and it's more of a pudding than a toffee... I'm wondering if I've used the right milk...

Mikey [Visitor]
Sun 02 Dec 2007 @ 13:27
This a time consuming dish but the time is worth it. As a short cut use the Nestle Caramel (saves you three hours!)I put the apples on top, dont forget to coat the apples with the icing sugar in a seperate plate before hand and let it sit for a minute. You get this great juice. Arrange the apples on top and pour the remaing apple juices on top. The sugary apples and juice will caramelise in the oven. After its browned in the oven let it cool for 10 minutes (this allows the caramel to reform). Its very rich so you dont have to serve big portions, great with icecream.

fennande [Visitor]
Mon 03 Dec 2007 @ 11:40
Nestlé Caramel is unfortunately not available in Holland... This weekend I made the tart, but it was a bit of a disappointment. The toffee didn't melt at all, so no bubbling toffee, but a mess on the tart. And the toffee still tasted a bit like the old-fashioned schoolmilk... Not a big succes after all. to bad...

William [Visitor]
Tue 04 Dec 2007 @ 13:29
yeah you can't get vanillia pods here......in china

fennande [Visitor]
Tue 18 Dec 2007 @ 14:51
Well William, I could send you some if you need. Maybe you can let me know where to buy Nestle Caramel in Holland, since you sound .. a bit... sarcastic?

tan [Visitor]
Thu 20 Dec 2007 @ 20:03
William, your just a SAP!! go import some vanila pods u sapling. Fennande, do you even know the meaning of sarcasm...here it is...You are not a SAP...there's the sarcasm for you.
I LOVE THIS DISH, u people talking about it is ruining the dish for me. So just bog off u saps.
Spiggin idiots.


Rosa [Visitor]
Tue 25 Dec 2007 @ 20:09
You see the toffee on the top, because the apples aren't done yet at the photo;)They lay still next to the tart. It's delicious! I made it today, for christmas. Everyone loved it!

Rosa [Visitor]
Tue 25 Dec 2007 @ 20:15
Ps, in the Netherlands you can buy dulce de leche at Jumbo, it's called something like 'my grandmother's' You can look on the internet, they have an internetsite.

Josh Miners GTK [Visitor]
Sat 29 Dec 2007 @ 22:00
Its a loada shit tbh.

rebecca [Visitor]
Mon 31 Dec 2007 @ 04:26
sounds beautiful but i dont think i get enougth pocketmoney to try it! :P :)

Linda [Visitor]
Wed 23 Jan 2008 @ 15:06
kiki - you should look for SWEETENED condensed milk, not just condensed milk.. that's all the difference ;)

(the sweetened one doesn't look like milk in the first place)

tasha [Visitor]
Sun 10 Feb 2008 @ 09:25
I also use this toffee for bonoffee pie. have done for 17 yrs. you only have to boil it for 2.5 hours but you need to keep topping it up with boiling water as it is the water that cooks the condensed milk. Also turn the can over half way through cooking, using a tea towel as it will be very hot! x

Irene [Visitor]
Fri 29 Feb 2008 @ 22:08
My mom and grandmom have been boiling away these tins for years. I love using this 'toffee' mixture as icing for chocolate cake. AMAZING.

caz [Visitor]
Sat 15 Mar 2008 @ 19:15
merchant gourment toffee is in tesco!!

Bani [Visitor]
Sun 30 Mar 2008 @ 02:23
I just made this with bananas instead of apples, and although everything went according to plan, it was disappointing because the bananas don't caramelise in the same way and I needed far more than 40 minutes to cook the pastry. Plus my toffee didn't melt or bubble either. But still worth the experience!

colin masson [Visitor]
Thu 01 May 2008 @ 19:53
hi jamie
i am a 16 year old chef in training
a am wondering were the best place is to train to become a chef
a luved makin this dessert and it sold very well were i work

maria [Visitor]
Tue 06 May 2008 @ 02:44
hi..jamie..i'm a big fan of your recipes..i'm a filipina..a maid here in singapore..and i have a british employer..every people have different taste buds..thats why i make some adjustment for my employer...he introduced me in your book called "jamies dinners" and he also admire your cooking abilities...i do also watching "travel and living...jamie at home"...so if i never catched up some ingredients i do search it thru internet...this toffee apple tart is a wonderful dessert..they do loved it!!!time consuming but its all worth it...i just wondering why its hard for the others to follow a simple instruction...keep it up!! jamie..

may [Visitor]
Tue 06 May 2008 @ 08:23
raised the roof!!! jamie..

may [Visitor]
Tue 06 May 2008 @ 08:24
raised the roof!!! jamie..

kate [Visitor]
Tue 13 May 2008 @ 06:45
hey! i've just begun my 1st yr chef's apprent. and was told that i would be put in charge of desserts within the month! i would also have to help make up the new winter desserts menu!! thanks for all your helpful hints and ideas found on ur web site!! lovin 'em...i've made a few of these recipes and they've all amazed me sooooo much, love your work!!

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serves 6-8

ingredients

• optional: 1 vanilla pod
• 125g/4½oz butter
• 100g/3¾oz icing sugar
a small pinch of salt
• 255g/9oz flour
• zest of ½ a lemon
• 2 egg yolks, preferably free-range or organic
• 2 tablespoons cold milk or water

for the filling
• 2 x 397g tins of condensed milk or 2 jars of Merchant Gourmet Dulce de Leche toffee
• 4 medium-sized cooking apples
• 2 heaped tablespoons icing sugar