Cranberry Curd Tart
Updated Dec. 2, 2025

- Total Time
- 1½ hours
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1¼cups/180 grams raw hazelnuts
- 1cup/125 grams rice flour
- ¼teaspoon salt
- ½cup/112 grams sugar
- 6tablespoons/85 grams softened butter, more as necessary
- 12ounces/340 grams cranberries
- 1cup/225 grams sugar
- Peel (orange part only) and juice of 1 orange (about ½ cup)
- 4ounces/113 grams softened butter (1 stick)
- 2eggs plus 2 egg yolks
For the Hazelnut Crust
For the Cranberry Curd
Preparation
- Step 1
Make the crust: Heat oven to 325 degrees. Put hazelnuts on a baking sheet and roast for 10 to 15 minutes, until skins darken and crack. Put roasted nuts in a clean towel and rub off skins. Discard skins and let nuts cool.
- Step 2
In a food processor, grind nuts with half the rice flour until mixture resembles coarse cornmeal. Add remaining rice flour and salt and pulse briefly.
- Step 3
Cream sugar and butter in a mixing bowl with a wooden spoon for a minute or two until pale and thick. Add nut mixture and combine until dough comes together. If it seems crumbly, add 1 to 2 tablespoons softened butter or a little cold water.
- Step 4
Press dough evenly into a 10-inch tart pan; use half the dough for the sides and half for the bottom. Prick bottom with a fork and freeze for 30 minutes (or several days if desired).
- Step 5
Heat oven to 350 degrees. Bake chilled tart shell about 15 minutes until lightly brown. Cool.
- Step 6
While the crust bakes and cools, make the cranberry curd: Put cranberries, sugar and orange juice and peel in a saucepan over medium heat. Simmer until cranberries have popped and softened, about 10 minutes. Transfer to a food mill or medium mesh sieve and press cooking liquid and solids into a bowl. (Alternatively, for the most vibrant color, purée the cooked cranberry and orange mixture with an immersion blender or in a food processor or blender. Press through a fine-mesh sieve.) Whisk the butter into the warm liquid.
- Step 7
Put eggs and egg yolks into a bowl and beat lightly. Slowly whisk a cup of warm cranberry liquid into the eggs to temper, then combine both and whisk together. Wipe out pot if necessary, return liquid to pot and cook over low heat until nearly bubbling and thickened, about 10 minutes. If using immediately, let cool to room temperature. If working ahead, cool to room temperature, cover with plastic wrap (press wrap against curd) and refrigerate. (Curd may be cooked up to 1 day ahead.)
- Step 8
Pour cooled cranberry curd into the cooled prebaked tart shell and smooth top with a spatula. Bake at 350 degrees for 10 minutes to set curd. Cool on a rack. Store at room temperature for up to 2 days.
Private Notes
Comments
Tip for bright color *and* easy cranberry straining: First I pureed the cranberry mixture in the pot with an immersion blender, then I pushed it through my sieve with a spatula. It only took a minute or two and the puree is buttery smooth and NEON red.
2 cups of almond flour will work instead of the hazelnuts and rice flour. You can add a little arrowroot flour or cornstarch. Or use half almond flour and half cup-4-cup.
If you want avoid some headache, I recommend the Julia Child/Alice Medrich method for peeling the hazelnuts rather than the oven method (which did not work for me).
1. Add 3 Tbs of baking soda to 2 cups of boiling water.
2. Add the hazelnuts and boil for about 3 minutes until the skin removes easily from a hazelnut that you tested.
3. Pour the contents into a colander and run under cold water. Fyi, the water will be black.
4. Remove skin. I used a paper towel to help remove the skin.
I have made this tart twice, and while it’s pleasant, I won’t be making it again. Generally, I’ve found the flavor is a bit flat and lacks dimension. Maybe adding Cointreau? Bitters? I also want it to be sharp the way a good cranberry relish can be - but the butter dulls the flavor of the cranberry, which IMHO is just not exciting without its tang, especially without another layer. It also never comes out as dark and sexy red as in the picture - it’s more like a deep pink.
This was the best surprise this Thanksgiving, and I know we will be making it again as Christmas gets closer. It was absolutely delicious. Only complaint was skinning the hazelnuts. Parboiling, skinning, then roasting worked best. Also, we thought the amount of "dough" seemed excessive for our pans almost took away from the delicious filling. Next time we will probably double the crust recipe and divide it to make 3 tarts. Then we will triple the filling. No problem. Worth every gram of effort!
my mother's kitchen walls were specked with bright red dots, but other than that it was a splendid success on Thanksgiving!
