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Weekend Baking: Seasonal Fruit Tart

FruitTart1
FruitTart1

Turn those delicious berries into a fabulous fruit tart using our simple and quick short dough recipe. You'll be the hit of brunch, except for the Bloody Mary bar, of course.To make the dough you will need: 2 cups all purpose flour 2/3 cups powdered sugar 1/4 teaspoon salt 1/2 cup butter, softened 1 egg yolk 2 tablespoons half & half In the bowl of a mixer combine flour, sugar and salt. Cut softened butter into pieces and add to flour. Mix on low until crumbly. Add egg yolk and half & half and mix until dough comes together. Scoop dough out and place in the bottom of a tart pan. Pat it down on the bottom and up the sides and prick the bottom with a fork. Cover with plastic wrap and place in the refrigerator for 30 minutes. Preheat oven to 325 degrees and bake unfilled tart dough for 22 minutes, until barely golden brown. Remove from the oven and let cool.

To make the pastry cream you will need: 1 cup whole milk 1/4 cup sugar 3 egg yolks 2 tablespoons all purpose flour 2 tablespoons unsalted butter pinch of salt 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract 1/2 cup whipping cream In a small bowl, mix half of the sugar with the egg yolks. Add flour and salt and mix until light in color, about 3 minutes. In a medium saucepan combine milk and remaining sugar in a saucepan and bring to a low boil. Remove from heat and slowly stir half of the hot milk into the egg mixture, stirring constantly, being careful not to curdle the eggs. Pour the egg and milk mixture back into the saucepan with the remaining milk. Over medium heat, stir constantly while bringing mixture back to a boil. Stir until the custard becomes very thick. Remove from heat and stir in butter and vanilla. Strain mixture through a fine sieve, cover with plastic wrap and let cool. While the custard is cooling place whipped cream in the bowl of a mixer. With the whisk attachment, whip the cold cream on medium, slowly moving up to high until the cream is thick. Fold the whipped cream into the cooled custard and poor into tart shell. Spread evenly with a spatula.

To make the fruit topping: 1-2 cups of berries or sliced fruit 1/4 cup apricot preserves In a small saucepan heat the preserves until they become liquid. Arrange berries on top of the pastry cream and brush the warm preserves over the top.

5-Spot: Fair Trade Coffee

FairTradeCoffee2
FairTradeCoffee2

The 5 Spot: Reasons to Choose Fair Trade Coffeewritten by Sarah Quallen, Volunteer Writer

Coffee is the one of the world’s most heavily traded commodities, which means world production is huge. It also means that in order to keep up with increasing demand for coffee, farmers were (and still are) growing coffee at a rate that is not sustainable. Yet, sustainability is imperative if we are to continue producing enough coffee to satisfy demands. Fortunately, coffee is also the most rapidly growing fair trade commodity.

Why should you choose fair trade coffee? Here’s five reasons:

1. Buying fair trade coffee supports small farms: Fair trade coffee tends to be grown on smaller farms regardless of whether or not the farm is officially organic. Smaller farms mean that the farmers are usually also the landowners and that more money is going directly to them rather than to corporations. Which leads us to...

2. More of your money goes to the farmers: Fair trade coffee farmers get paid more money per pound of coffee they sell than do conventional coffee farmers. Many fair trade cooperatives use the money gained through fair trade to enrich, support and empower their communities. For example, the Alto Occidente Coffee Cooperative of Caldas (CCAOC) in Columbia—from whom Equal Exchange purchased their first container of coffee in 1995—includes a five cent per pound premium which the cooperative allocates for social programs directed toward women and children, education, environmental preservation and organic farming projects.

3. Fair trade coffee is sustainable: An additional goal of the fair trade movement beyond paying farmers more is to promote sustainable farming. Farmers who belong to a fair trade coffee cooperative are required to use less chemical fertilizer, to prevent erosion, and to protect forests.

4. Purchasing fair trade coffee means “buying into the system”: While most people feel positively about fair treatment, many are not willing to spend the extra money on fair trade products, which means corporations are not promoting fair trade coffee. When more fair trade coffee is purchased, more will be produced.

5. Fair trade standards support human rights: By restricting the number of hours a person can work, ensuring a safe working environment and guaranteeing fair compensation for coffee and labor, fair trade workers are granted a higher quality of life. 

*Information for this article was gleaned from Brewing Justice: Fair Trade Coffee, Sustainability, and Survival by Daniel Jaffee and from Making the Food Trade Work for All by Daniel Gonzales, and from Equal Exchange (equalexchange.coop).