Kid-friendly Apple Cranberry Tarte Tatin Cups Recipe - Sticky Fingers Cooking
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Recipe: Apple Cranberry Tarte Tatin Cups

Recipe: Apple Cranberry Tarte Tatin Cups

Apple Cranberry Tarte Tatin Cups

by Erin Fletter
Photo by Brent Hofacker/Shutterstock.com
prep time
15 minutes
cook time
18 minutes
makes
4-6 servings

Fun Food Story

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Apple Cranberry Tarte Tatin Cups

Raise your hand if Thanksgiving dinner is really just an excuse to eat cranberry sauce and apple pie? Eighty million pounds of cranberries are consumed during the week of Thanksgiving. There are about 450 cranberries in one pound! That’s 36 billion cranberries eaten every year around this time! Cranberries are one of the only native North American fruits. Although they may be known for their face-twisting tartness, humans learned how to sweeten them by mixing them with sugar and combining them with apples. Cranberries and apples are a classic North American combination that is so delicious this time of year, when cranberries are fresh and apples are crisp. 

The French get all the credit for the invention of puff pastry and the classic tarte tatin dessert: an upside-down pie that originated at a Parisian hotel from an accident, as so many beloved classic recipes do. 

Your kid chefs will love stirring, dolloping, chopping, mincing, and whisking their way through these recipes, which are slightly grown-up but still kid-tested and approved.

Happy & Healthy Cooking,

Chef Erin, Food-Geek-in-Chief

Fun-Da-Mentals Kitchen Skills

  • chop :

    to cut something into small, rough pieces using a blade.

  • fill :

    to add food to a wrapper, like pasta, rice paper, tortilla, or wonton, before folding or rolling it up (e.g., dumpling, spring roll, and taco); or to add food, like jelly or pastry cream, inside the cavity of another food (e.g., eclair and jelly donut).

  • roll :

    to use a rolling pin to flatten dough; use your hands to form a roll or ball shape; or move a round food, like a grape or a meatball, through another food, like sugar or breadcrumbs, to coat it.

  • shape :

    to form food into a specific shape by hand or with a cutting tool—examples are cutting cookie dough into shapes with cookie cutters, forming bread dough into a roll or crescent shape, and rolling ground meat into a meatball.

  • whisk :

    to beat or stir ingredients vigorously with a fork or whisk to mix, blend, or incorporate air.

Equipment Checklist

  • Oven
  • Muffin pan
  • Paper cupcake liners
  • Mixing bowls
  • Dry measuring cups
  • Measuring spoons
  • Cutting board
  • Kid-safe knife
  • Wooden spoon
  • Whisk
  • Round cookie cutter or jar lid
scale
1X
2X
3X
4X
5X
6X
7X

Ingredients

Apple Cranberry Tarte Tatin Cups

  • 1 puff pastry sheet OR 1 ready-to-bake pie crust **(for CELIAC/GLUTEN/DAIRY ALLERGY sub gluten-free/vegan puff pastry sheet OR ready-to-bake pie crust)**
  • 1 T butter or vegetable oil to grease pan **(for DAIRY ALLERGY use vegetable or nut-free/soy-free oil)**
  • Pie filling:
  • 3 apples
  • 1/3 C fresh cranberries
  • 1/3 C brown sugar + more if sprinkling on top
  • 2 tsp cornstarch
  • 1/4 C cream cheese, room temperature **(for DAIRY ALLERGY: Omit for child with allergy OR sub 1/4 C dairy-free/nut-free cream cheese)**
  • 1/2 tsp salt

Food Allergen Substitutions

Apple Cranberry Tarte Tatin Cups

  • Celiac/Gluten/Wheat/Dairy: For 1 puff pastry sheet OR 1 ready-to-bake pie crust, substitute 1 gluten-free/vegan puff pastry sheet OR 1 gluten-free/vegan ready-to-bake pie crust.
  • Dairy: For 1/4 C cream cheese, omit for child with allergy OR substitute 1/4 C dairy-free/nut-free cream cheese. Use vegetable oil or a nut-free/soy-free oil to grease the pan instead of butter.

Instructions

Apple Cranberry Tarte Tatin Cups

1.
preheat + chop

Preheat your oven to 350 F and grease muffin pan wells with butter or vegetable oil. Chop 3/4 pound apples and 1/3 cup cranberries into little bits. Place all the chopped fruit into a large bowl.

2.
whisk + toss

In a medium bowl, combine 1/3 cup brown sugar, 1/4 C room temperature cream cheese, 2 teaspoons cornstarch, and 1/2 teaspoon salt and whisk together. Add the sugar and cream cheese mixture to the fruit in the large bowl and toss to coat well.

3.
roll + shape

On a lightly-floured work surface, roll out 1 sheet of puff pastry with a rolling pin. Using a circular cookie cutter or the lid of a jar, cut the dough into circles that will fit into your muffin pan wells.

4.
spoon + fill

Gently press the dough into the well of the muffin pan to make cup shapes. Spoon about 1 to 2 tablespoons of the fruit filling into the middle of each cup of dough.

5.
bake + cool

Bake at 350 F until tarte tatin cups are golden brown and juices are bubbling, about 15 to 18 minutes. Let them cool down a bit, then sprinkle extra brown sugar or a dollop of French Vanille Crème on top before eating. "Bon appétit" (Bohn AHP-peh-tee) or "Enjoy your meal" in French!

Surprise Ingredient: Apples!

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Photo by Bozhin Karaivanov on Unsplash

Hi! I'm Apple!

"I'm delighted to be part of your recipe! Not only does "an apple a day keep the doctor away," but I'm also versatile and delicious in both sweet and savory dishes, like pies, cakes, breads, salads, and casseroles, and added to vegetables and roasted meats. Not to brag, but I have a fabulous, round(ish) figure and come in several colors and varieties of sweet and tart flavors!"

History

  • Here's a story about the Granny Smith apple that is long but cute: In the year 1868, near Sydney, Australia, a grandma named Marie Smith had been testing different types of French crabapples for cooking, and she ended up throwing the used apple cores out her window as she worked. Granny Smith saw that a new apple tree (or cultivar) had sprung up below her kitchen windowsill. She cultivated the tree and found that the apples it produced were good for cooking and eating. They were tart, sweet, and crisp. Grandma Marie Smith took a stall at a farmer's market in Sydney, where her apples stored exceptionally well and became very popular. She sold her apples once a week and called them Granny Smith's Apples. Smart (and enterprising) fruit merchants in the 1890s and 1900s experimented with methods to transport the Granny Smith apples overseas in cold storage. Because of its excellent shelf life, they could export the Granny Smith apple long distances and most times of the year. Since growing fruit from the seeds of the Granny Smith apple produces trees with fruit that isn't as good as the original, grafting or cuttings are required instead. All Granny Smith apples grown today are from grafts of Grandma Marie Smith's original tree in Sydney.
  • Apple trees were domesticated thousands of years ago. A wild apple native to the mountains of southern Kazakhstan in Central Asia is considered the ancestor of most domestic apple varieties.
  • Worldwide, 7,500 varieties of apples are grown! If just 12 kids were growing that many, each of them would end up with 625 different kinds! 
  • Apples are victims of (or blessed by, depending on how you look at it) their own genetic creativity. An apple from a tree grown from a seed will be nothing like its parents. And because of this, historically, thousands upon thousands of varieties of apples have come into existence. Apples have evolved to adapt to all environments. They can be grown all over the world. Now, the number of apple varieties is much more narrow due to farming practices and consumers' desire for the "perfect red apple." The only way to ensure genetic repeats of apples is to "graft" the trees.
  • Grafting apple trees involves combining a bottom rootstock of one tree to the scion, or budding branch, of another tree to grow a new successful apple tree.

Anatomy & Etymology

  • Apples come in all shades of reds, greens, and yellows. They are members of the Rose family. Other members include strawberries, pears, plums, peaches, and raspberries.
  • Every spring, apple trees bloom or flower. At the bottom and inside each blossom is an ovule. Inside the ovule are the seeds that will eventually turn into an apple! It takes about 4 to 5 months from the time the blossoms are pollinated for the apples to be ready to pick.
  • New apple trees take four to five years to produce their first fruit!
  • A raw apple can contain 86 percent water! 
  • If you put an apple in water, do you think it will sink or float? It will float! That's because about 25 percent of an apple's volume is air. And that's why you can play a game of "bobbing for apples" at Halloween parties!
  • An apple tree can grow to more than forty feet and live over a hundred years!
  • A Japanese farmer picked the heaviest apple on record in 2005. It weighed 4.1 pounds! 
  • The word "apple" came from the Old English "æppel," which is Germanic in origin. Until the 17th century, "apple" could refer generically to any nut or fruit other than berries. 

How to Pick, Buy, & Eat

  • August marks the beginning of apple season. Apple season peaks in September—some of the most delicious apple varieties are available then: the Honeycrisp (our fave!), Cortland, Macintosh, and Gala. October apples are perfect for baking. 
  • Apples are picked by hand when it's time to harvest them. Choose apples that have smooth skin and are free from blemishes. They should feel heavy for their size and feel firm. Then, give it a sniff—fresh apples smell almost floral-like and super pleasant.
  • It is so fun to go to an orchard in the fall and pick apples for yourself. Of course, apples are available year-round in most grocery stores and are most affordable during the months when they're in season (August through October).
  • Farmers often use honeybees to pollinate apple trees.
  • You can eat apples in so many ways. Try dicing half an apple and adding it to a spinach salad with walnuts or pecans, red onion, and goat cheese. Stuff and bake them for a cozy autumn treat. You can juice, blend, or grind apples to make juice, cider, or smoothies. Slice, chop, or mash them and add them to a variety of apple treats: pie, strudel, cake, donuts, tortes, turnovers, dumplings, galettes, fritters, muffins, and crisps or crumbles. You can thinly slice and dehydrate apples to make chips or cook and mash them to make applesauce, adding a dash of cinnamon for extra flavor. Apple marries beautifully with a ton of different sweet AND savory foods like fennel, cheddar, caramel, cinnamon, butternut squash, rooibos, sauerkraut, and sausage.    

Nutrition

  • "An Apple a Day Keeps the Doctor Away." This saying originated because people believed fruits were important to a nutritious diet. A 2015 study found that people who ate an apple a day took fewer prescriptions. 
  • Red Delicious and Fuji apples contain the most polyphenols, micronutrients found naturally in plants with antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties. They can help prevent heart disease, control blood sugar, lower cancer risk, and help your immune system function properly. More polyphenols are found in an apple's peel than its flesh, so be sure to eat the peel, which will also add to your fiber intake!
  • Isn't it amazing to think that our bodies are hard at work keeping us strong and healthy while we go about our daily activities? Think of it: just now, your body is pumping blood through your veins and arteries, delivering nutrients to your cells to create energy, building proteins to protect you from getting sick, and so much more. That's why it's so important to eat nutritious foods, like apples!

 

History of Tarte Tatin!

Photo by Chatham172/Shutterstock.com
  • French "tartes" have a nearly ancient history; early records show that they have been a staple of the Sologne region of France since the 18th century. However, two hotel-owning sisters in the 1880s popularized the dish when they accidentally made a pie upside down and served it anyway. Later that dish would be known as "tarte Tatin," which reflected the sisters' last name, Tatin. By the 1920s, everyone in France had heard of a tarte Tatin. The clumsy dessert had made its way into many prominent food critics' reviews and recommendations.
  • Tarte Tatins can be made with fruit, like apples, bananas, pears, and pineapple. You can also make a tarte tatin with tomatoes or root vegetables, like carrots, parsnips, and shallots.

Let's Learn About France!

Photo by Alliance Images/Shutterstock.com
  • Bonjour (hello)! Bienvenue en (welcome to) France and the spectacular Eiffel Tower in Paris, the Mona Lisa, painted by Leonardo da Vinci, and ancient Roman ruins in the Provence region.
  • France is a European country, and its official name is the French Republic. The capital city is Paris, which also has the most people. 
  • France's land area is 248,573 square miles. That is almost the size of the US state of Texas! The number of people in France is 67,874,000, about 43 percent more than in Texas.
  • The official and national language is French, which is also the official language in 12 other countries, and a co-official language in 16 countries, including Canada. 
  • France's government consists of a president, a prime minister, and a parliament and is divided into regions and departments rather than states and counties.
  • The French have a well-known motto, "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity."
  • In addition to the Eiffel Tower, France is known for the Louvre, the most visited art museum worldwide (the Mona Lisa resides there), the Notre-Dame Cathedral, and the French Riviera (Côte d'Azur) in southeastern France on the Mediterranean coast.
  • France is famous for the "beaux-arts" (fine arts). Paris is still home to many artists and great painters, artisans, and sculptors. Great literature came from French authors, such as Victor Hugo's novels Les Misérables and The Hunchback of Notre Dame.
  • Paris has two popular nicknames. The most common is "The City of Light" (La Ville Lumière), which came about because Paris was the first European city to implement street lighting in 1860, lighting up the city with 56,000 gas street lamps. The second is "The City of Love," (La Ville de L'amour). This name is probably due to Paris being considered one of the most romantic cities in the world and the high number of marriage proposals at the Eiffel Tower!
  • French cuisine is known for its freshness and high quality. Many of the world's greatest pastries originated in France, such as the croissant, eclair, and macaron!
  • Other French foods are escargot (snails!), baguette (bread), ratatouille (roasted tomato, zucchini, and eggplant—remember the movie?!), and crepes (very thin pancakes).

What's It Like to Be a Kid in France?

  • Most kids start school (preschool) at around age three. Depending on the area and the school, students go to school 4 to 5 days a week. They often get a 1½-hour lunch break, and some kids go home for lunch. 
  • Dinner is served at 7:30 pm or later, so afternoon snacks are essential. "Le goûter" (goo-tay), or afternoon tea, often includes a "tartine," a slice of bread topped with something sweet or savory (like cheese, butter and jam, or Nutella). Other popular snacks are yogurt, fromage blanc (white cheese), and fruit. 
  • Popular sports for kids are soccer, bicycling, and tennis.
  • There are several parks in France, in and around Paris. Napoleon III even designed one of them, the Bois de Boulogne, where you can find beautiful gardens, lakes, a zoo, an amusement park, and two horse racing tracks. In addition, kids can go on pony rides, play mini-golf, and race remote control boats at many public parks.  
  • Of course, kids can also go to the most popular theme park in Europe, Disneyland Paris, which opened in 1992. While there, kids can go on a ride unique to Disneyland Paris: Ratatouille: The Adventure!

That's Berry Funny

What did the baby tart say to the mommy tart? 

Where’s my "pop" tart?

The Yolk's On You

Why couldn’t the cranberry go to Thanksgiving dinner?

It was bogged down with homework.

The Yolk's On You

Why did the apple cry? 

Its peelings were hurt!

The Yolk's On You

What do you get if you cross an apple with a shellfish? 

A crab apple!

That's Berry Funny

What reads and lives in an apple? 

A bookworm.

THYME for a Laugh

What did the Sticky Fingers Chef say to the kid chefs? 

"I love you from the bottom of my tart!"

Lettuce Joke Around

Why did the cranberries turn red? 

Because they saw the turkey dressing!

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