
Recipe: Breanne's Bean Brulee Tart
Category: Original
Look! A white bean pie - for dessert! This is one of the more unusual pies we've seen lately, and we're fascinated. Read all about Breanne's pie and see more of her beautiful photos. This looks creamy, delicious, and very interesting. Have you ever tried a sweet bean pie?

Where is this recipe from? The tart pastry is based on Martha Stewart's.
The bean filling is based on a bean pie recipe.
Why is this the BEST pie recipe you've got?This is my best pie because it is made with unusual and frugal ingredients, yet has rich and familiar tastes and textures. The hard caramel crust is a pleasant and crunchy contrast to the creamy, subtle nutmeg and vanilla filling. With white beans as a base, an almost custard-like pie is achieved with just two eggs instead of several.

Bean Brulee Tart
Tart Pastry Dough
2 cups all-purpose flour
1 stick butter, cut in 8 pieces
4 tbs. margarine, cut in 4 pieces
approximately 4 tbs. ice cold water
1 egg white
1 tbs. turbinado sugar
*if using unsalted butter or margarine, add 1/4 tsp. salt
In a food processor, combine butter and flour and pulse about 10 seconds until the mixture resembles a coarse meal. Slowly add water, a little at a time, until the dough forms a ball and holds together. It should be wet but not sticky. Wrap in plastic wrap and chill one hour.
Preheat oven to 375 F. Roll out dough to 1/8" thick. Cut to fit 10" tart pan. Press dough in pan, prick bottom a few times with a fork, and brush all dough with egg white. Sprinkle sugar on bottom and bake 15 minutes.
Bean Filling
1 cup dry navy beans
2 eggs
4 tbs. butter, softened.
1 cup sugar
6 ounces evaporated milk (1/2 of a 12 ounce can)
2 tsp. nutmeg
1 tsp. vanilla
2 tbs. turbinado sugar
Soak beans in 2 cups cold water for four hours. Cook in a pressure cooker 25 minutes or in a pot 1 1/2 hours. Rinse and drain.
Puree beans in a food processor or blender.
Preheat oven to 350F. In a bowl cream butter, 1 cup sugar and eggs. Add pureed beans, evaporated milk, vanilla and nutmeg. Mix well. Pour into pre-baked tart shell.
Bake 30-40 minutes or until filling is set in the center.
Sprinkle turbinado sugar on top of filling. Broil about 2 minutes, carefully watching so that the sugar caramelizes but does not burn. You may have to turn the tart once under the broiler to get even browning.
Let cool, then refrigerate about 2 hours before serving. Will keep about 5 days refrigerated.


(Images: Breanne)





























TW Salt Mill by Wil...

Oh wow, I've never thought of a bean pie before. Potato, pumpkin, carrot, yesh, yesh, yesh. Bean... it just blows my mind. That little brulee top is perfect. I am going to give this recipe to my wife tonight! Hopefully she'll know how to make it. I will let you know.
This sounds so interesting!!! My interest is totally piqued!
The basis of a fair number of Japanese sweets is sweetened beans of various colors, textures and flavors. There's no reason that sweet beans shouldn't work in other dishes, but I'd guess you'd have to be careful about density.
Fascinating, anyone who makes this please post.
I've had a many of bean pies (yum, yum yum), but a bean brulee tart... I may attempt this.
this sounds like a great excuse to buy a propane torch. lovely!
Wow, what a neat idea! I like the connection between the creme brulee and the sweet bean center. I can finally make a brulee without feeling like I'm breaking the bank. Very rev!
Beautiful pie! Love the creamy texture and caramelized top. What a great entry!!
Made this today for Pi Day, and it was super-delicious (both the pie and the leftover filling cooked in a ramekin as a pudding). The filling was really creamy and really rich -- what a sweet potato pie is to a pumpkin pie, this is to a sweet potato pie.
I did make just one tweak: when I cooked and tasted the filling, it was lacking a little something, so I added just a splash of almond extract -- maybe a quarter teaspoon or so. The nutty sweetness really complemented the bean flavor.
Thanks for a great recipe!