Strawberry and Pistachio Galette Recipe (2024)

By Melissa Clark

Strawberry and Pistachio Galette Recipe (1)

Total Time
1½ hours, plus at least 1 hour's chilling
Rating
4(591)
Notes
Read community notes

With a double filling of homemade strawberry compote sitting on top of a layer pistachio frangipane, this elegant galette is a perfect way to showcase ripe summer berries. It is a bit more demanding to make than many other galettes, but you can do it in stages, making the dough, the compote and the frangipane a few days ahead, then bake on the same day as you plan to serve it so the pastry stays delightfully crisp. And if you miss strawberry season, make this with raspberries, blackberries or blueberries, adjusting the sugar in the compote to match the sweetness of the fruit (taste and add more sugar for sour fruit, less sugar for sweeter fruit).

Featured in: A Galette That Lets Early Strawberries Shine

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Ingredients

Yield:12 servings

    For the Crust

    • cups/280 grams all-purpose flour, plus more for rolling the dough
    • 1teaspoon kosher salt
    • 1tablespoon granulated sugar
    • 1cup/226 grams unsalted butter (2 sticks), very cold, cut in 1-inch pieces
    • 4ounces/113 grams cream cheese, very cold, cut in 1-inch pieces
    • 1teaspoon lemon juice
    • 3 to 4tablespoons/45 to 60 milliliters ice water

    For the Strawberry Compote and Frangipane

    • 1pound/454 grams strawberries, hulled and halved
    • ½teaspoon lemon juice, plus ½ teaspoon lemon zest
    • ½cup/100 grams plus 1 to 2 tablespoons granulated sugar
    • ¾cup/100 grams shelled raw pistachios, plus 2 tablespoons chopped raw pistachios
    • ½cup/113 grams unsalted butter (1 stick), softened
    • 3large eggs
    • 1tablespoon brandy
    • ¼teaspoon almond extract (optional)
    • Turbinado or Demerara sugar, as needed
    • Confectioners’ sugar, for serving

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (12 servings)

450 calories; 31 grams fat; 17 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 10 grams monounsaturated fat; 3 grams polyunsaturated fat; 36 grams carbohydrates; 2 grams dietary fiber; 16 grams sugars; 7 grams protein; 209 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Strawberry and Pistachio Galette Recipe (2)

Preparation

Make the recipe with us

  1. Step

    1

    Make the dough: In a food processor, pulse to combine flour, salt and sugar. Add butter and cream cheese and pulse until lima-bean-size pieces form. Drizzle in lemon juice and 3 tablespoons/45 milliliters ice water, then pulse just until dough comes together, adding another tablespoon/15 milliliters of water if dough looks dry. Pat into a disc, wrap in plastic, and chill at least 1 hour and up to 3 days.

  2. Make the strawberry compote: Combine approximately ⅔ of the strawberries in a small pot with the lemon juice and 1 to 2 tablespoons granulated sugar to taste, depending on sweetness of the berries. Cook over medium heat until strawberries start to break down and juices are thick and syrupy, about 12 minutes. Let cool. Compote can be made up to 5 days ahead and stored in the refrigerator.

  3. Step

    3

    Make the frangipane: In a food processor, process ¾ cup/100 grams shelled raw pistachios and remaining ½ cup/100 grams sugar until finely ground. Add butter; pulse until combined, then add 2 eggs, the brandy, the lemon zest and the almond extract (if using), and pulse until smooth.

  4. Step

    4

    Heat oven to 375 degrees. Dust a work surface with flour. Roll out dough to a 16-inch circle (it will be just slightly thicker than ⅛-inch), then transfer to parchment-lined baking sheet.

  5. Step

    5

    Leaving a 3-inch border around the edges, spread the frangipane filling evenly over dough. Using a slotted spoon, dollop strawberry compote over frangipane, spreading any syrup gently so the compote and frangipane remain in separate layers, then fold dough edges up over the filling. About 6 to 8 inches of the filling should be exposed.

  6. Step

    6

    In a small bowl, whisk remaining egg with 1 tablespoon cold water, then brush over the dough. Sprinkle with turbinado sugar and chopped pistachios. Bake until edges are deeply golden, 40 to 50 minutes. Transfer to a wire rack to cool completely. To serve, top with remaining halved strawberries and dust with confectioners’ sugar.

Ratings

4

out of 5

591

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Private Notes

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Cooking Notes

Richard Scher

A stunning recipe, but flawed. I can smell the galette cooking in the oven, and the scent is awesome. I can only imagine how it will taste! But the flaw is that nowhere does it say the dough should be rolled out on the parchment paper, then transferred to the pan. It is so soft, impossible to transfer. My wife and i used 5 large spatulas, and the dough still collapsed. We tried to reshape and rebuild, with limited success. It will not look like your photo, but it will be delicious.

Alice

Raw pistachios can be hard to find - and relatively expensive. Can an equal amount of sliced almonds or walnut pieces be substituted?

foodcoma

A few extra notes that you might need for this recipe.

1.) If you cut the recipe in half it's far easier to handle. It serves 6.
2.) Refrigerate the dough for an hour before rolling out.
3.) Roll the dough out on the parchment, put the the filling in the center, brush the perimeter with egg wash then fold it in thereby making a seal so there's no leakage.
4.) Put the galette back in fridge for another half hour to make sure it's cold before cooking.

Shelby

Make sure the folds of the pastry are pretty long and you keep the 6" hole in the middle exactly that. My pastry was so beautiful before it went in the oven. The baking shrunk the folds making the whole in the middle much larger and causing the filling to leak out. Boo. I'm sure it will still taste great.

Carol Sacks

The galette is amazing -- brought it to a dinner and everyone raved. The pastry is easy to work with, flaky and very flavorful. The pistachio filling is divine; didn't have brandy, so subbed rum and it was delicious. By accident, I added the lemon zest to the strawberry filling. It was a happy accident; the berries were naturally sweet and the citrus gave them depth. Highly recommend this recipe.

Robin

Probably a rookie mistake -- but make sure the rolled dough stays cold. Depending on how juicy the compote is, a warmer crust can fail to hold it in (think the Last March of the Ents as they break the dam and flood Isengard). Certain structural supports saved my galette -- and it was delish!

Lara

I watched the video twice. There is NO WAY she used 3/4 cup or 100 g of pistachios to make her frangipane. This is a pet peeve I have of professional chefs. They make way too much and throw it away but as a home chef, what a waste. The frangipane recipe should have been halved. The strawberry compote too. I had to throw the whole thing out because there was too much filling and it oozed out all over my oven. I am NOT a novice baker. Please QC your recipe.

Shelley

I like almonds better than pistachios to pair with strawberries.
Pistachios are better with raspberries -- but almonds are, again, just as delicious and both easier to find and less expensive.
One can lightly toast (and cool) nuts before grinding for frangipane. I think it enhances the flavor.

kolsen

Trader Joe's carries pistachios at w reasonable price.

Emily D

That crust is just wow. So flaky, tender, and flavorful. The cream cheese worked wonders in it. I made it a few days in advance, kept in the fridge. I used roasted salted pistachios for the frangipane and skipped the brandy, just used a dash of water instead. After assembling the tart I put it in the fridge for an hour or so, while I made dinner, then I baked it. It was well chilled when it went into the oven and held its shape beautifully. A gorgeous and delicious showstopper of a dessert!

elle

of course :-) -- since crusts were made before food processors were invented. I do agree that these recipes should include instructions for manual handling as well. Especially since not everyone, and the assumption is that EVERYONE owns one. I do not own a cusinart or a microwave!

Christine

If you bake or make candy items frequently I highly recommend buying reusable silicone baking mats, nice substitute for parchment paper & wax paper. These mats are great for rolling out dough & can be used in the oven, also perfect for cooling candy items. I bake frequently & make pralines occasionally, so bought my large one specifically for rolling out dough & cooling pralines. I loved it so much I bought other sizes. Worth the investment.

Sheri California

I had the same problem. I also missed the slotted spoon for the compote and there was too much juice. My beautiful galette bake into a giant flattened cookie. My husband said it looked like our 4 yr old granddaughter made it. Anyway it looked awful but it tasted awesome. I'll make it again - more carefully.

June

I haven't tried this recipe yet, but I use a similar crust recipe for both pies and galettes. I always refrigerate after assembling, for at least 30 minutes. This ensures that the crust will hold it's shape and not turn into a melted mess or a flattened cookie.

elle

The brandy adds a minuscule amount of alcohol that does cook off, if your concern is that. However, what it really does is add a layer of complexity and nuance to the compote. You can easily eliminate it. IF it's not the alcohol that's the issue, but your need to not buy brandy you can substitute rum (dark or light) or bourbon. You can also eliminate it all together.

Wendy

I made half of the recipe to take to a dinner party. Didn’t alter a thing. I’m glad I made the crust the night before. This isn’t a difficult recipe (I’ve made plenty of pies and am not cowed by pastry) but there are a lot of pieces/steps to it. Just know, galettes are very forgiving.This was a big hit. One of the six of us doesn’t eat sugar and our host ate a second piece. I’d definitely make it again.

Sandee

The pleating is simple if you have rolled out the dough on parchment paper. Lift up a small section of the paper, let it flap onto the galette — the dough will release. Then proceed around in a circle, lifting the paper a bit at a time. Easy and no torn pastry edges. And a thousand thanks to the readers who suggested using a pizza stone to bake and a pizza last to remove the cooked galette onto the wire rack for cooking.

bb

April/2023Way too much butter!! Use the usual pie dough.Also, strangely the frangipane was too much using the quantities written… maybe less butter

Kathy Espinoza-Howard

What temp do you bake the galette?

Kathy Espinoza-Howard

You can cut the dough recipe in half or just use have of the dough recipe. Bake at 375 degrees for 40 minutes. When making the Frangipani, use one egg yolk.

Susan H

I made this a tart in a GF shortbread crust pressed into a 11 inch tart pan with removable sides. Very showy on a cake stand as well as tasty. I left 2 inches of frangipane without the compote and just sprinkles that with the chopped pistachios. I agree that raspberries paired well with the pistachio.

amgole

This was excellent. Like some of the other bakers said, keep the center of the galette to 6” for the prettiest dessert. Also, it is essential to chill the assembled galette for 30 minutes before baking.

Kristen

Just made this delicious tart for Easter. Cut the recipe in half, rolled the crust out to an 11” circle. Watch the video to see how Melissa folds over the crust - very helpful. I agree that chilling the formed tart and filling helps prevent leaking. Also, drain the cooked strawberries from the syrup. I then used the reserved syrup to glaze the fresh strawberries after cooking. Very pretty extra touch!

natalie tabor

I made this last night and it was an absolute hit! A few suggestions:- Almond frangipane goes much better with strawberries than a pistachio one. I used my leftover frangipane to smear the edges so when I folded the galette dough over, it sealed the juice in. - I put all of the strawberries into a compote and it was delicious!- I really took the time to let everything COOL. Strawberry compote and used a slotted spoon so there was not excess juices in the filling. Cannot wait to make again!

Mytili

I recommend tweaking the frangipane steps to make it less liquid. Beat the butter with the sugar in a stand mixer on medium speed with your paddle attachment until light. Then add the ground pistachios, eggs, flour, almond extract, and brandy. A pinch of salt couldn’t hurt. Basically I think the food processor is the wrong tool for the job. I also crush my nuts in a plastic bag rather than with a food processor, which adds heat and risks turning the nuts into a paste.

James

Hmm. Had the same problem with the galette unfolding itself, even though I chilled the dough after adding filling. Doesn't usually happen to me. Next time I'll use the egg wash to help adhere. Ah, it just means more space for fresh strawberries, no problem with that! Rolled between two parchment sheets very easily. Chop the pistachio small so it can adhere better. In these socially distant times, made two smaller galettes so each couple can have their own.

stephanie

How can you go wrong with 3 sticks of butter, cream cheese, strawberries and nuts!! I definitely overfilled the dough but it still tasted amazing! Each element of crust, compote, and fragiapane added a unique texture and taste! Freezing composed galette before baking was really helpful to keep the structure.

Nanc

Made just as the recipe states. It expanded when baked, it is large for two people, so I recommend cutting the recipe by half, still will make enough for four generous servings. Delicious!

Cari

I agree that it’s necessary to chill the assembled galette (maybe upwards of an hour) before baking to hold it together. I had prepared all the components the day before, chilled overnight, then assembled and chilled the galette for about twenty minutes. I still had frangipane flowing out the top of the galette not ten minutes into the baking time. Assemble it on your parchment or silpat because it’s impossible to move. Also, 3-4 tbsp ice water was not nearly enough for dough to come together.

Shikibu

Substituted pistachios with almonds and chilled the galette before baking as suggested by others. Turned out really well. Topped it with homemade vanilla ice cream. Yummm...

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Strawberry and Pistachio Galette Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Can you make galette the night before? ›

You can make the dough up to three days ahead, but this galette is at its best served the same day it was baked.

Does a galette need to be refrigerated? ›

Loosen tart from parchment and carefully slide onto wire rack using two spatulas; let cool until warm, about 30 minutes. Cut into wedges and serve with vanilla ice cream, if desired. Store leftovers in an airtight container at room temperature for 1 day or in the fridge for up to 3 days.

What is the base of the galette? ›

The website joyofbaking.com defines the term galette as "a French term signifying a flat round cake that can be either sweet or savory and while [recipes can use] puff pastry as a base, they can also be made from risen doughs like brioche, or with a sweet pastry crust."

Is galette served hot or cold? ›

Are cherry galettes best served hot or cold? While these cherry galettes are delicious at any temperature, they are at their very best when they're still warm, served with a generous scoop of vanilla ice cream on top.

How do you keep the bottom of galette from getting soggy? ›

Preventing Soggy Bottoms

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.

How do you make a galette not soggy? ›

Don't skip the cornstarch in the recipe, to avoid a runny filling and soggy bottom. Drain the excess liquid from the peach mixture as you add them to the crust. Most importantly, be sure to cook the galette completely. The galette is fully baked when the crust is deep golden brown and the peaches are bubbling.

Why is my galette soggy? ›

Whether making a sweet or savory galette, a soggy bottom can be difficult to avoid because the fruits or vegetables in the filling release water as the galette bakes. Here at ATK, we've come up with many crisp-crust solutions, such as parcooking the vegetables in the filling or macerating and draining the fruit.

What is the difference between pie dough and galette dough? ›

Whereas pies are baked in a sloped pie pan, often with a top crust or open with crimped edges, galettes are freeform, and baked right on a baking sheet. The edges of the galette are folded over the center filling, leaving a wide opening from which the filling can be seen.

Why is the galette eaten on January 6th? ›

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.

What is a fève in a galette? ›

In addition, the galettes always contain a single little charm, or fève, that hidden inside. Historically, there really would be a fève ('broad bean') inside, but in the 19th century this was replaced by small ornaments or figurines.

What is the difference between a galette and a gâteau? ›

In Provence, “gâteau des rois” replaces “galette des rois”

There are two kinds of King Cakes in France. In Provence, the frangipane (almond cream) based “galette des rois” – Epiphany's traditional pastry – is replaced by the “gateau des rois”, a ring-shaped brioche decorated with candied fruits.

What is the charm in the galette? ›

Somewhere within the glorified galette hides a charm known as a “féve” – traditionally this was a bean but it's now more commonly a plastic trinket which many people collect to mark their years of good fortune.

What are the tips for galettes? ›

For an extra pop of flavor and texture, coat the bottom of the galette with semolina flour, crushed cookies, or breadcrumbs before adding the filling. Add about a quarter cup as a base layer before adding the fruit. The crumbs will soak up the juices from the filling, so the bottom of the crust stays protected.

Why do the French eat galette? ›

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.

What are the three different types of galette? ›

For this recipe, we use puff pastry to keep things super easy! What are the three different types of galette? The three most common types of galette are galette Breton, galette de rois, and fruit galette.

How far in advance can you make galette dough? ›

The answer is YES! Both the dough and filling for your galette can be made ahead of time! Once you've finished just cover tightly and refrigerated for up to 3 days – this will cut your prep time in half and allow for more time in your day!

Can you reheat cooked galette? ›

Reheat your galette in an oven preheated to 350 F, until just warmed through. If necessary, wrap in aluminum foil to prevent burning on the crust. If you try to reheat in the microwave the crust may become soggy so I definitely recommend reheating in the oven.

Can you make a pie the night before and bake the next day? ›

Our Test Kitchen doesn't recommend assembling an apple pie before baking it at a later time. If made ahead without baking, the pastry crust can become too wet and end up soggy after baking.

Can you make pastry and keep in fridge overnight? ›

Sweet pastry

It's used as the base for all kinds of sweet treats, from lemon and chocolate tarts all the way to frangipane. Resting is key! Never roll out freshly made pastry because it will shrink when it's baked. Ideally refrigerate it overnight, or at least for a few hours.

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