Thank the Lord it is almost summer again, and I can stop paying over a buck for a lemon. If I had been making these Lemon Tarts 3 months ago, I’d have had a small fortune in them, for too many reasons.
Let me tell you a story you don’t care to hear.
I’ll be honest, when I think of dessert, I naturally lean towards cake, cookies, or brownies. But I do enjoy pie if it’s done right. Meaning – from scratch. Please don’t serve me a store bought crust. I don’t like plain old crusts, and I will scoop the filling out every.single.time. Those pre-made crusts are like cardboard and powdered sugar. They’re weird. They’re tough. They’re cheap and you know it. Skip making the pie if you are going to resort to one of those things.
Okay, rant over.
I’ve had these tarts on the brain for a couple of months now. Spring started so early in many places this year, and Virginia was no exception. So for me, lemons are about summer, and I am ready for a taste of it. And if I am going to go to the trouble of making a decadent, pucker-up and die of happiness lemon curd, I am going to make a crust that’s as good on its own as it is cradling that lemony deliciousness.
Oh, and don’t forget a pile of baked meringue that’s tall and swirling in sweet peaks of toasted glory. Gotta have the meringue.
So over the weekend, lemons finally went on sale, and I picked up enough of them to make these tarts.
Or so I thought.
Imagine, if you will, your good mood turned lemony sour.
It started with my inability to locate anything in my newly remodeled kitchen. It seems nothing has found its new home yet, and to my dismay, my KitchenAid Juicer attachment was nowhere to be found. As in – NOWHERE. For over half an hour, I searched high and low for the juicer. Finally, I gave up and started juicing the lemons by hand.
No big deal, right?
Riiiggghhhtt. After juicing all the lemons I had on hand, because I was just squeezing versus actually juicing, I was a little low on the amount of juice I needed. What to do? Well, I decided the back of a spoon pressed into each of the lemon halves would yield me enough juice to make the tarts.
Except I managed to knock over the entire bowl of juice in the middle of that “spoon juicing”. Violently. Lemon juice covered the counters, the cabinets, the floor. Not a drop remained in the bowl, and I was furious. Combined with the inability to find the juicer, the spilled juice put me over the edge.
I cleaned up the juice, cried a little, and decided I was going to bed, despite it being 2 in the afternoon.
Luckily Jon lassoed me back in to sanity, located the juicer, and ventured back to Food Lion to procure the lemons I needed. Either he really wanted pie, or he didn’t want to see my face explode. He won’t say which.
Now that the backstory is out of the way, let’s talk tarts.
Freeform tarts are genius. No need to make a perfect pie crust or spend lots of time pressing dough into tiny little tart shells. All you need to do is divide up the dough, roll it into balls, and smash them flat. Voila…Freeform Tart Shells.
For mine, as I said, I hate boring crusts. But this crust? It’s amazing. It’s soft, it’s full of richness. You could eat it alone, with a glass of milk and be happy. For starters, I used great butter (Kerrygold, of course!) and sugar. Yes, sugar makes a difference, believe it or not. The storebrand is often cheaper, but I bet you’ll find that it has clumps, the crystals are larger, and it’s “dusty”, for lack of a better word. I used Dixie Crystals, because I am lucky enough to live in the south, and I can get my hands on it. Great stuff. For a punch of flavor I added lemon zest, lavender buds and cardamom. I can’t tell you how amazing it turned out! I could have eaten the dough straight out of the food processor (and did, Shhhh!). I hope you’ll try it!
While the tart crusts baked, I made the lemon curd, which comes together easily and surprisingly quickly. Then, while the lemon and crusts cool, you can whip together the meringue. Time management, kids. It’s almost like I know what I’m doing.
Just don’t ask me where I’ve managed to hide the new ceramic pie pan.
Or the juicer.
Ingredients
- 3/4 cup cold salted butter; cut into pieces
- 2 cups plus 1 tablespoon all-purpose flour
- 1/4 cup granulated sugar
- pinch salt
- 1 tablespoon lavender buds
- 1/4 teaspoon cardamom
- Zest of one lemon
- 1 teaspoon vanilla
- 1/3 cup ice water
- 2 cups water
- 1 cup granulated sugar
- 1/2 cup cornstarch
- Zest of one lemon
- 6 large egg yolks, beaten
- 1/4 cup butter
- 3/4 cup fresh squeezed lemon juice
- 2 tsps vanilla extract
- 6 large egg whites, at room temperature
- 1/2 tsp cream of tartar
- 1/4 tsp salt
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 2/3 cup granulated sugar
Instructions
- Combine all ingredients save for the water in the bowl of a food processor and pulse until dough has combined and has oat size and pea sized bits. Slowly add ice cold water until dough pulls away from sides of the bowl. Do not overmix. (Without a food processor, combine ingredients in a bowl and mix with a pastry cutter. Add water a bit at a time until dough comes together.
- Remove dough from bowl and gingerly knead into a ball, incorporating any scraps or dry ingredients. Wrap in plastic and refrigerate for 30 minutes.
- Preheat oven to 350. Remove from plastic wrap and divide into 6 even pieces. Roll each into a disk, and flatten to 1/8 inch, approximately 5 inches in diameter. Place on parchment lined baking sheet or SilPat.
- Bake for 25 minutes, or until edges are lightly browned. Remove from oven and allow to cool.
- Bring water to a boil in a large, heavy bottomed saucepan. Remove from the heat and allow to cool for round 5 minutes. In a separate bowl whisk the sugar, cornstarch, and lemon zest together, then add the mixture slowly to the hot water, whisking constantly until incorporated.
- Place mixture over medium heat,continuing to whisk until it comes to a boil and becomes very thick.
- Add about half of the hot mixture to the beaten egg yolks, and whisk until smooth. Carefully whisk the warmed yolks into the pot and continue cooking and whisking until mixture comes to a boil.
- Remove from heat and add butter,lemon juice, zest and vanilla, stirring until combined. Pour into the prepared crust. Allow to cool roughly 10 minutes, then add by large spoonfuls to the cooled tart crusts.
- Preheat oven to 425.
- Beat eggwhites, cream of tartar, salt and vanilla until soft peaks form. Gradually add sugar until stiff peaks form and meringue is shiny. Pipe or spread onto prepared tarts.
- Bake for 12-15 minutes, or until meringue is browned. Allow tarts to cool, serve, and enjoy!
The Giveaway
You can certainly opt to use a bowl and a pastry cutter to make your crusts, but honestly, a food processor makes it SO much easier. So. Much. Easier. I have the new KitchenAid 13 Cup Food Processor, and it whips out flaky crusts in a few pulses. Perfect size, too – the 13 cup size will easily hold this recipe, and quite possibly double the recipe. Which I may attempt next time.
Of course I will.

Would you like to have one of these gorgeous new KitchenAid Food Processors? It does just about everything under the sun. It shreds. It chops. It slices a freaking tomato. Yes, really. There is a bowl within the bowl. There are more blades and gadgets on this thing than my first car. So again, I ask you…would you like to have one?
Of course you would! Well, it just may be your lucky day.
Tell me you want it. Voila, you are entered to win.
For more chances:
- Follow KitchenAid on Twitter
- Become a Fan of KitchenAid on Facebook
- Pin a photo from this post
- Stumble this post
- Tell me you’ve had a kitchen mishap that sent you over the edge. Make me feel better.
There you are – 6 chances to win. Just be sure to leave a SEPARATE COMMENT for each one you do…Good luck!
Contest is open until May 28 at 11:59pm EST. Prize is courtesy of and shipped by KitchenAid. US Addresses only. Disclaimer – I was supplied a Food Processor of my own to review, but was not compensated for my post or review. My thoughts are 100% my own.
FYI – The floral plates used in today’s post are the Amazonia Collection from Villeroy & Boch. Aren’t they beautiful??



































{ 381 comments… read them below or add one }
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I’m a fan of KA on Facebook!
Kitchen mishap…While cooking a frozen pizza in the toaster oven, it caught fire. The only thing I could think of was to toss it outside. Let me just say that it wasn’t a good idea.
I want it
Sounds wonderful! Can’t wait to try it!
I follow KitchenAid on twitter @elliebunny24
Pinned it! http://pinterest.com/pin/16607092346341032/
I follow Kitchen Aid on facebook
Love it! Want it! Gotta have it!
I want this food processor!
and I follow Kitchenaid on Facebook
Yeah one time our thanksgiving turkey was raw after cooking the recommended time – I think the oven was broken
I follow KitchenAid on Twitter.
I am a fan of KitchenAid on Facebook.
Oh, yes please!!! I only have the tiny chef chopper. I need this!!
I follow kitchen aid on Facebook
and I frequently have mishaps in the kitchen, most recently involving the misuse of powdered salad dressing in a crock pot recipe, resulting in nuking chicken nuggets for supper. I’m a star like that.
I pinned! http://pinterest.com/pin/241857442459001913/
I not only want this I NEED it! My old one is dead
I follow KA on twitter
Probably not the biggest but the one I STILL find myself cleaning up after (I hope it’s finally gone!) is this – my mother-in-law brought lemonade to our house for a party. Not knowing it was partially frozen (I didn’t know either), my husband took it out of the fridge and started to lightly shake it. The half-frozen lemonade literally exploded everywhere – cupboards, refrigerator, floors, EVERYWHERE. The sticky mess was next to impossible to clean up and I still feel like I find some of the sticky stuff every once in awhile.
I would love this to replace my old clunker food processor.
I’m a KA fan on Facebook!
I follow KA on twitter.
I follow KitchenAid on Twitter!!
I follow KA on facebook.
I’m a fan of KitchenAid on Facebook!
I’ve had tons of mishaps in the kitchen that bring me to teats! My dear hubby just takes us out to eat when it happens!
When I was in college, I sent a shipment of chocolate chip cookies to woo my boyfriend (now my husband of 15 years). He was working at a camp over the summer and happy to receive a care package until his first bite – when he discovered that I’d forgotten to add sugar!
Oh please, oh please i want it!
Many years ago I put bread dough in the oven to rise under the warmth of the oven bulb; however, the kids got into a fight, I quickly made some adjustments and went to separate them – hours later I found out I had lit the oven and you can undoubtedly visualize what I found inside -
following KA on facebook
following KA on twitter
I have been following Kitchen Aid on Facebook for a long time now
Follow on twitter @cheyanne2163
I truly want this Kitchen Aid food processor and have been checking it out for months but can’t justify the expense at this time. I’ll keep my fingers crossed.
@livelaughlovecj follows @kitchenaid on Twitter
I want to win.
I Liked KA on FB.
Likes KitchenAid on FB Christine N. Sargent
I Follow KA on Twitter.
Probably my best story was my first time preparing a dinner party. Although I had my mum on hand, I was trying desperately to do everything myself. I ended up overcooking the chicken parm while trying to save my mashed potatoes. It’s been an experience in reminding me that I have zero skills in multi tasking
I want it!! I’ve never had a food processor and have wanted one for over 20 years!
Had a large jar of sauerkraut that I was tamping down on the counter top when the jar slipped and broke open on the side of the counter top spilling broken glass and sauerkraut all over the cabinets and the floor, definitely a grrr moment.
I became a fan of KA on Facebook
I can only imagine the fun I would have with this food processor! Thank you for a chance to win.
I’m following @kitchenaidUSA on twitter.
When I was a newlywed I was trying to make homemade chicken nuggets. The oil got too hot and when I tried to fry the breaded chicken, it burned on the outside and was still raw on the inside….it was a disaster!!
I inherited my mother’s food processor 10 years ago and it was ancient when she had it! I would love a nice new one.
Oh not a big kitchen mishap, just having out of town guests for Thanksgiving dinner, and my oven dies in the middle of cooking the turkey. No big deal. It WAS A BIG DEAL. Ended up finishing cooking in my next door neighbor’s oven. Many glasses of wine were drunk on that turkey day.
I want to win, I really really do!
I follow KitchenAid on Twitter.
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