Satsuma tart recipe: Adapt citrus recipes to this LA fruit (2024)

  • Ann Maloney, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
  • Updated
  • 2 min to read

When you've got a lot of satsumas, look at adapting recipes designed for other citrus, such as lemons and oranges. Look inour recipe archive for many citrus dishes to adapt.

This recipe is adapted from America's Test Kitchen's lemon tart. Lemons are tarter, so we used a bit less sugar.

When making the curd, a few tips: Once the curd ingredients have been combined, cook the curd immediately to avoid getting a grainy texture. Also, use non-reactive stainless steel bowls, pots, whisk, and strainers when making curd to avoid a metallic flavor. (In other words, no aluminum.)

To avoid overcooking the curd, watch for when a spoon leaves a clear trail on bottom of the saucepan that then quickly disappears. At that point, remove it from heat. It is overcooked when it becomes thick and a spoon leaves a wide clear trail.

If your pre-baked tart shell has cooled, place it in a warm oven and heat it until warm, about 5 minutes, before filling.

Satsuma tart

Makes 1 tart

1 fully baked warm tart shell (9- to 9 1/2-inch) (see recipe below)

7 large egg yolks plus 2 large whole eggs

1 cup sugar

2/3 cup satsuma juice, from about 5 medium satsumas

1 tablespoon grated satsuma zest

1/4 cup grated lemon zest

4 tablespoons butter, cut into 4 pieces

3 tablespoons heavy cream

Whipped cream, for garnish

Fresh mint, for garnish

In medium non-reactive bowl, whisk together yolks and whole eggs until fully combined. Add sugar and whisk until just combined. Add satsuma juice, zest and salt and whisk until fully incorporated.

Pour mixture to medium non-reactive saucepan, add butter pieces, and cook over medium-low heat, stirring constantly with wooden spoon, until curd reaches a thin sauce-like consistency and registers 170 degrees on an instant-read thermometer.

Immediately pour curd through chinois, or a fine stainless steel strainer, set over clean bowl. Stir heavy cream into strained curd. Immediately, pour curd into warm tart shell.

Bake about 10 to 15 minutes and check. Look for the middle 3 inches to slightly jiggle when shaken.

Cool on wire rack to room temperature, about an hour.

Remove outer metal ring. Slide thin metal spatula between bottom crust and tart pan bottom to release.

Slip tart onto serving plate to cut and serve. Garnish with whipped cream and fresh mint, if desired.

The most time-consuming part of making this tart is making the shell. Buy a high-quality one to cut hands-on time. Or, you use this foolproof recipe, adapted from America's Test Kitchen.

Sweet tart crust

Makes 1 9-inch tart shell

1 large egg yolk

1 tablespoon heavy cream

1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract

1-1/4 cups unbleached all-purpose flour

2/3 cup confectioners' sugar

1/4 teaspoon salt

8 tablespoons very cold butter, cut into 32 cubes

Unbleached all-purpose flour, for rolling out.

Whisk yolk, cream and vanilla together in small bowl. Set aside.

In bowl of food processor, pulse to combine 1-1/4 cups flour, sugar and salt. Add butter and pulse to cut butter into flour until mixture resembles coarse meal, about a dozen short pulses. With machine running, add egg mixture, using a rubber spatula to get all of it, and process until dough just comes together in a ball, about 30 seconds.

Turn dough onto sheet of plastic wrap and press into 6-inch disk. Double-wrap in plastic and refrigerate at least 2 hours.

Unwrap dough and place in center of lightly floured sheet of parchment paper or wax paper. Roll out dough to about 1/4-inch thickness. Line tart pan with dough, leaving no overhang. Cover tart pan with plastic wrap and place in freezer for about 30 minutes.

Adjust oven rack to upper-middle position and other rack to lower-middle position.

Preheat oven to 375 degrees.

Place chilled tart shell on cookie sheet; press 12-inch square of foil inside tart shell and fill with beans or ceramic pie weights.

Bake on lower rack 30 minutes, rotating halfway through baking time.

Carefully remove foil and weights by gathering edges of foil and pulling up and out.

Transfer cookie sheet with tart shell to upper rack and continue to bake until shell is golden brown, about 5 minutes longer.

Note: If dough feels too firm to roll it out, let it stand at room temperature for a few minutes. If dough becomes soft and sticky while rolling, place it back in the refrigerator for a few minutes rather than add more flour.

Also, I made my tarts using four small tart pans rather than one 9-inch, which required cutting baking times slightly. I baked the smaller tarts for 15 minutes on the lower rack, rotating half-way. Then, finished them in 5 minutes on the upper rack.

Satsuma tart recipe: Adapt citrus recipes to this LA fruit (7)

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Satsuma tart recipe: Adapt citrus recipes to this LA fruit (2024)

FAQs

What is a satsuma called in America? ›

In most citrus producing areas, satsuma mandarin is the preferred name, but satsuma tangerine is also used.

What happened to Satsumas? ›

“About 20 years ago Spanish and Moroccan growers decided that the European market was more important to them and so many began switching production from satsumas to clementines. Now far fewer satsumas are grown.

What is satsumas fruit? ›

Satsuma Mandarins are a specific type of mandarin orange, originating in Japan more than 700 years ago. They are a lighter orange, sweet, juicy, and seedless. They are also the easiest variety to peel. The most tender, easily damaged type of mandarin, Satsuma mandarin oranges are harder to find fresh in stores.

What do satsumas taste like? ›

Satsuma mandarins have a honey-sweet flavor with little acidity, are extremely juicy with a moderate balance of sweet and tart, along with a slight note of sweet potatoes, and are produced by a high concentration of carotenoids—a compound found in sweet potatoes, carrots, and squash.

What fruit is similar to a satsuma? ›

Mandarins are broadly categorised as: Satsumas, Mediterranean Mandarins, King Mandarins, Common Mandarins, and Tangors / Tangelos. The Mediterranean and King Mandarins are of limited commercial importance, but the other three contain all the varieties that we see in our retail stores.

Which is sweeter, tangerine or satsuma? ›

Satsumas are exceptionally sweet with a mild, less acidic taste. Their segments are tender and easy to separate. Tangerines generally have a sweet and slightly tangy taste, but the sweetness can vary based on factors like ripeness and variety.

What do Satsumas do for your body? ›

Satsumas are an excellent source of immune- boosting vitamin C. Vitamin C is crucial to the synthesis of collagen in the body, which helps heal wounds and holds together our tendons, ligaments, bones and blood vessels. Vitamin C also plays a role iron absorption, helping the body retain more of this essential mineral.

What month do Satsumas ripen? ›

Satsuma varieties ripen from October to December from a spring bloom, depending on variety, and Meyer Lemon, limes, kumquats and calamondins can bloom and ripen year round, although many will follow the spring/fall cycle.

What states grow Satsumas? ›

Lucky gardeners from the coasts of Florida to Texas to California can easily add these fruit trees to the landscape. Gardeners who dare to test the boundaries can be rewarded with pounds of juicy, sweet satsumas.

Can I eat 2 satsumas a day? ›

5 A Day fruit portions

A portion is 2 or more small fruit – for example, 2 plums, 2 satsumas, 2 kiwi fruit, 3 apricots, 6 lychees, 7 strawberries or 14 cherries.

What is the sweetest satsuma? ›

Miho also has a tangy taste to their fruit like the Seto, but are a bit larger and would be considered the sweeter of the two varieties by most gardeners.

Why do we eat satsumas at Christmas? ›

The golden balls landed in stockings that were drying by the fire and so the oranges we give today came to represent the gold and generosity of St Nicholas.

Why are satsuma so expensive? ›

The Sumo oranges took upwards of 30 years to breed, and the trees are slow to mature, which is why this sweet citrus is often more expensive than other citruses. In Japan, where it's from, Sumos are often given as gifts.

Should satsumas be refrigerated? ›

Satsumas can be stored at room temperature for a couple of weeks or refrigerate Satsumas for up to several weeks. Satsuma mandarin skin is soft, pliable, and has an “airy” and puffy look and feel. Don't let the looks of the peel fool you—this is a deliciously sweet-tart mandarin, one of our favorites.

How do you make satsumas sweeter? ›

Overall, there is little you can do to increase the sweetness of the fruit. Fertilize the tree in early February using a general-purpose fertilizer or citrus tree fertilizer following label directions, but it will likely have little effect on the sugar content of the fruit. (Sugar is manufactured in the leaves.)

Do they have satsumas in America? ›

Satsumas are grown in cool subtropical regions of Japan, Spain, central China, Korea, Turkey, along the Black Sea in Russia, southern South Africa, South America, and on a small scale in central California and northern Florida.

What's the difference between a Satsuma and a clementine? ›

Stefan said: “Satsumas are softer in texture, easier to peel as they have a looser skin and have a lighter citrus flavour, whereas clementines are firmer, relatively easy to peel and have a sweeter flavour than satsumas.”

Is a tangerine the same as Satsuma? ›

Tangerines are a form of mandarin orange and are the hardest of these three to peel but have a richer, sweeter flavour than the others. Satsumas have an easy to peel skin due to a thick but loose albedo (the white layer under the orange skin) so the central segments can be freed readily from the peel.

Is a Satsuma a tangerine or an orange? ›

The name “tangerine” derives from one variety that was imported to Europe from Tangiers. There are many named varieties of what citrus growers call “mandarins” because of their Asian origins. One of these, the “Satsuma”, is an heirloom Japanese mandarin that is both delicious and especially adapted to Southeast Texas.

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