Strawberry Cream Cheese Tart
Updated October 11, 2023
- Total Time
- 1 hour 15 minutes
- Prep Time
- 20 minutes
- Cook Time
- 55 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
FOR THE BERRIES
1 ½ pounds fresh strawberries, trimmed and halved or quartered if very large
¼ cup/50 grams granulated sugar
¼ teaspoon fine sea or table salt
FOR THE TART
½ cup/4 ounces cream cheese, softened
1 egg yolk
1 tablespoon granulated sugar
1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice
¾ teaspoon finely grated lemon zest
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
⅛ teaspoon fine sea or table salt
All-purpose flour, for rolling
1 (14- to 18-ounce) package puff pastry, preferably all-butter, thawed if frozen but still cold
Preparation
- Step 1
Heat oven to 425 degrees. In a medium saucepan, combine strawberries, sugar and salt. Let mixture sit for 20 minutes, tossing once or twice, until the berries get a little juicy. Turn the heat to medium and cook, stirring occasionally, until they are just beginning to soften and the sugar dissolves, about 5 minutes.
- Step 2
Using a slotted spoon, transfer berries to a plate to cool. Bring the syrup back to a simmer and let it cook until it reduces by half, 3 to 7 minutes.
- Step 3
In a medium bowl, use a fork or a wooden spoon to mash together the cream cheese, egg yolk, sugar, lemon juice and zest, vanilla and salt until smooth. (It’s OK if there are a few small lumps of cream cheese.)
- Step 4
On a lightly floured surface, roll puff pastry into a 13-by-11-inch rectangle about ⅛-inch thick. Transfer the dough to a parchment-lined baking pan. With a sharp knife, score a 1-inch border along the edges of the puff pastry (don’t cut all the way through).
- Step 5
Spread the cream cheese mixture evenly inside the scored border. Arrange the strawberries on top in a single layer. (If they don’t all fit nicely, save the remaining berries for snacking.)
- Step 6
Bake until the pastry is puffed and golden, 22 to 30 minutes. Transfer pan to a wire rack to cool for at least 20 minutes or up to 8 hours before serving. Right before serving, gently brush some of the reduced syrup over the fruit and crust to add shine and more strawberry flavor. If you like, you can serve the remaining syrup as a sauce drizzled on top of the tart, or save it to use in seltzer or serve over yogurt or ice cream.
Private Notes
Comments
An amazing cook on this app provided information to ensure puff pastry is cooked at the bottom, start baking on bottom rack then move to top rack. Half time on bottom rack, half time on top rack; it works. No more soggy bottom. Thanks for sharing all the wonderful tips snd making us all better cooks!!
I find unless I blind bake a puff pastry crust for a tart like this that it never crisps up and stays raw in the middle. Did anybody have this problem? This sounds sooooo good, but I’m not up for the uncooked crust anymore. And I’ve done this kind of crust at least a dozen times.
Someone suggested that a step was left out and the scored border should be folded over the filling around the edge. This can certainly be done, and many rustic fruit tarts are made this way, but in this case the intention was not to fold over. The partial scoring of the frame frees those pastry layers from being held down by the filling, allowing them to puff up higher all around the edge.
Substituted blueberries for the strawberries and came out great. Took the suggestion to bake the first 11 minutes on the bottom rack and the balance on the top rack. No soggy bottom!
Taste was flat. Beautiful presentation but the lemon was overwhelming.
Turned out great! Only criticism is that it is best eaten that day. Perfect for a family.

