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For the pastry

Nutrition: Per serving

  • kcal365
  • fat20g
  • saturates9g
  • carbs39g
  • sugars15g
  • fibre3g
  • protein6g
  • salt0.3g
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Method

  • step 1

    First, make the pastry. Blitz the hazelnuts and sugar in a food processor until finely chopped. Add the spelt and plain flours, butter and a good pinch of salt, and blitz again until all of the butter has been incorporated and the mixture is sandy. With the motor running, drizzle in 1-2 tbsp cold water until the dough starts to form in clumps. Squeeze a little between your fingers – if it feels like it will come together, tip the mixture onto your work surface and knead briefly into a ball. Shape into a disc, wrap and chill for 30 mins or overnight.

  • step 2

    If the pastry has been chilled for longer than 30 mins, let it come to room temperature for 20 mins before rolling. Mix the brown sugar, lemon zest, cornflour and maple syrup together in a large bowl. Add the apples and toss well. Set aside while you roll out the pastry.

  • step 3

    Heat the oven to 180C/160C fan/gas 4. Dust a sheet of baking parchment large enough to line a large baking tray with flour, then roll the pastry out to a roughly 30cm circle on top of the parchment. The pastry will crack and crumble a little as you roll it, but just keep pushing the edges back together – don’t worry if it looks rustic. Slide the pastry on its parchment onto the baking tray. Pile the apple slices into the centre of the pastry circle using your hands, letting any excess syrup drip back into the bowl as you do (save the syrup for later). Be sure to leave a clear 2cm border around the edge. Use the baking parchment to help you lift the edges of the pastry over the apples, leaving the most of the apples exposed. Pinch together any cracks around the edge to make a rustic pastry border.

  • step 4

    Brush the pastry edge with some beaten egg, sprinkle with a little extra brown sugar and scatter over the hazelnuts. Bake for 50-55 mins until golden brown. Meanwhile, pour any leftover syrup from the apples into a small saucepan and bubble for a few minutes until syrupy. When the galette is cooked and still hot, brush the syrup over the top. Leave to cool for at least 30 mins, then serve warm with cold cream. Will keep in the fridge for up to two days, or freeze in well-wrapped slices for up to two months.

Recipe from Good Food magazine, September 2021

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Comments, questions and tips (3)

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Overall rating

A star rating of 3.5 out of 5.4 ratings

elise.maddocks

This is lovely- but a little more sugar in the pastry would definitely enhance it.

rowan72

question

Can you use a shop bought pastry instead?

goodfoodteam avatar
goodfoodteam

Hi, thanks for your question. Yes you can use about 500g sweet shortcrust pastry instead. We hope this helps. Best wishes, BBC Good Food Team.

pevian

I put the pastry in the fridge during the day and it took far longer than 20 minutes to come to room temperature and then fell to bits. May be needed a bit more water than the recipe suggests and I don’t recommend putting in the fridge to chill. Tasted good, just looked a lot more than just rustic!

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