The first (last and only other) time I
had passion fruit was in India. There was a passion fruit tree growing in the
backyard of an Indian gentleman I was visiting, and I couldn’t stop staring in
absolute awe. So, he very kindly cut one open on the spot and gave me more for
later, just like you would do with apples or pears (except it was passion fruit). And another time, the
auto-rickshaw driver who was taking me around for the day pointed to a tree and
said it was a mango tree. I asked him, “How do you know?” And he looked at me
as if I’d asked a silly existential question and said, “Because it is a mango
tree.” And so I asked again, “How can you tell it’s a mango tree?” And to this
profoundly bizarre question he said, “Because mangoes grow on it.”
I couldn’t believe that in some part of
the world passion fruit and mangoes were so common they grew in backyards and
on the side of the road and so ordinary that you couldn’t tell what made them different. And that they grew on trees, like normal
fruit! I sort of imagined them to just spontaneously happen or something. Because here in Korea, mangoes and passion
fruit are practically worth their weight in gold. Going through the list, I’d
pegged the mango-passion fruit tart to be one of the last ones I’d be able to get
around to. But I found the passion fruit much sooner than expected, and then I
found rather reasonably priced mangoes. I thought it’d be many moons before I
could get a hold of both fruit at once…
I thought passion fruit looked like tropical
pomegranates when cut and frog eggs when drained. Sadly, they exuded a lot less
juice than I expected. I was so afraid I’d overcook the curd and waste precious
passion essence that I actually undercooked it, and so it came out quite runny.
The hardest part was cutting and layering
the mango slices (and I thought it would be the easiest part!). I’d left the
mangoes in the fridge for a few days and they’d become very soft and were even
beginning to brown in places. When cut, they were very slippery and kept
gliding off my fingers. It’s so hard to get the right degree of ripe with fruit!
The tart: coconut cookie crust, passion-fruit curd, sponge cake layer dabbed with rum, and glazed mango slices. What can I say? It was absolutely ambrosial. The mango and passion fruit
have this flavor that is at once rich and subtle, like they basked in and soaked
up the intensity and aroma of the sun. The coconut crust gave a nice milky-tropical
touch too. If ever the stars line up again and I can acquire passion fruit and
mango at the same time, I would love to make this tart once more!
That looks good!! You can always come to Nepal where mango and passion fruit are abundant. :)
ReplyDeleteMaybe you can try to smuggle some in the next time you visit. Haha! I think you especially would've liked this tart. I can give the recipe to Mr. Honey if you want, and maybe he can try to make it for you.
ReplyDeleteThis looks soooooo pretty. Looks like little bursts of sunlight oozing through the pie. Yum!
ReplyDelete선주야.. 쮸 페북타고 왔음, (actually have been read all your posts a while ago when JJu first posted one) You need to seriously open a bakery! >_<
ReplyDeleteJJu - I wanted to share this tart with you, but the mangoes couldn't wait! I ended up sharing it with my brother, and with his non-delicate tongue, he said he would've preferred roast chicken...
ReplyDeleteAndrea! Long time, no see, even in cyberspace. Drop by from time to time and I'll tempt your taste buds:) And come visit - I'll make one especially for you!!