Savory Pie and Tart
Smoked Salmon Barquettes
Barquettes are small, boat-shaped pastry shells that can be filled with sweet or savory ingredients.
Crisp Potato-Eggplant Tart
This tart is so deliciously rich, it can stand alone as a luncheon main course. A crisp green salad and a glass of nicely chilled white wine would complete a most satisfactory meal.
By Charlie Palmer and Judith Choate
Chicken and Vegetable Pot Pies with Dilled Biscuit Topping
There's nothing more comforting than this version of chicken pot pie. Each individual serving is topped with a Pennsylvania Dutch-style buttermilk biscuit. Pour a dry white wine like Sauvignon Blanc.
Potato Galettes with Crab, Shrimp, and Asparagus
(Galettes de Pommes de Terre au Crabe, Crevettes et aux Asperges)
Pizza Rustica
Neapolitan in origin, this make-ahead savory pie is delicious either warm or at room temperature.
Swiss Chard and Herb Tart
(Torta di Bietola ed Erbe)
In the more rugged areas of Tuscany, like the Garfagnana and Lunigiana in the northwest, savory tarts are as popular as their sweet counterparts. Vegetable tarts are quite common and usually include greens and herbs. This one features Swiss chard, thyme and oregano. Other herbs used in such tarts are tarragon, sage, nettles and borage.
Polenta Bites with Blue Cheese, Tomatoes, and Pine Nuts
Little polenta "tarts" are filled with tomatoes, pine nuts, and blue cheese, then popped into the oven until the cheese melts.
Tuna Empanaditas
Active time: 1 hr Start to finish: 1 1/2 hr
Don't use water-packed tuna for this recipe — it's too bland for the filling. Tuna packed in olive oil, however, will make for empanaditas that taste genuine. Especially with a glass of Fino Sherry.
Oval Masa Cakes with Goat Cheese Filling
Tlacoyos con Queso de Cabra
Traditionally these rustic cakes are made with a mashed bean filling. The goat cheese called for here adds a contemporary twist.
Onion and Sage Tarts
These splendidly rich tarts are my version of French onion galettes. Buttery, flaky pastry crusts are filled with deeply caramelized onions that are generously laced with sage.
The steps to prepare these tarts may seem familiar, but if you take extra care with them, you'll be amazed by the results. Handle the pastry with precision so that it bakes tender, flaky, and shatteringly crisp; spend the time to slowly and thoroughly caramelize the onions until they melt into a golden marmalade; and give the tarts their final baking as close to serving time as possible.
You'll notice the onions are caramelized in a deep saucepan instead of a wide skillet. It makes them easier to stir without flying out of the pan and gives them a chance to soften and stew in their own liquid before it boils away. Once the liquid evaporates, the onions will concentrate and brown, and the balsamic vinegar works to balance the sweetness of the onions and deepen their color. For the best flavor, the whole process should take at least half an hour. Be sure to use regular yellow onions, not Walla Walla, Vidalia, or other sweeter summer onions—they have too much water and do not caramelize well.
Serve the tarts as an hors d'oeuvre at any elegant occasion, or as an accompaniment to a seasonal salad for a light lunch or supper.
By Jerry Traunfeld
Arugula and Bacon Quiche
Quiche made its way from France to our shores in the sixties, but it was in the seventies that its popularity soared.
Speedy Spinach Quiche
Serve this quickly prepared dish with a tossed green salad and chilled melon for a summer brunch or light supper.
By Fran Nadzam