Tomato Tart with Gruyère
If you’re lucky enough to have access to fresh garden Roma tomatoes, this Tomato Tart with Gruyère is a recipe you don’t want to miss!
When you have tons of fresh tomatoes and have overdosed on BLT’s and Caprese Salads, a Tomato Tart Recipe is a delicious solution.
Why You Must Make
I first baked this tart recipe when I was making dinner for some friends going through a kitchen remodel. I wanted to add something else to the menu. What is more summery than a recipe using fresh tomatoes? This Tomato Tart with Gruyère exceeded my expectations. With its crispy crust and wonderfully flavorful tomato filling, it would be wonderful any time of the day!
- If you have fresh garden tomatoes, this tomato tart will be pure bliss. But I bet it’s pretty darned tasty even with decent off-season tomatoes. Meaty Romas are perfect, but any tomato will do.
- This combination of tomatoes, herbes de Provence (or thyme), and Gruyère is a tried and true winner.
- You’ll be sneaking slices of leftover tart out of the fridge; it’s just that irresistible. That is IF you have leftovers! I’m not sure this sort of tart is actually served in France, but if it’s not, it should be!
Ingredient Notes
- Kitchen Staples – All-purpose Flour, Salt, Eggs, Freshly Ground Black Pepper, Ice Water
- Semolina Flour – Often used to make pasta, this durham wheat flour is coarser than all-purpose flour.
- Butter – Cold will make a flakier crust
- Shortening – Cold will keep the dough cooler
- Gruyère Cheese – Grated. A nutty cow’s milk Swiss cheese. May substitute another Swiss cheese.
- Herbes de Provence – A blend of herbs usually containing lavender, marjoram, rosemary, sage, thyme, and summer savory. I’ve used thyme instead.
- Plum Tomatoes – Or any good quality tomatoes, fresh garden tomatoes are ideal. Slice and drain on paper towels to remove excess juices. This will prevent the juice from diluting the tart filling.
- Half and Half – Makes for a rich custard filling.
- Dijon Mustard – Adds flavor to the custard.
Recipe Tips
- Made with fresh garden tomatoes, this tomato tart will be pure bliss. But I bet it’s pretty darned tasty even with decent off-season tomatoes. Meaty Romas are perfect, but any tomato will do.
- PRO-Tip: Make sure to let your slices drain on a couple of layers of paper towels before adding them to the tart so there’s no excess juice to water down your filling.
- Placing the grated cheese right over the crust provides a barrier between the crust and the custard. This minimizes a soggy crust.
- The recipe that inspired this dish uses 12 sliced plum tomatoes and overlaps the slices to cover the whole surface of the tart. I used fewer tomatoes, did not overlap my slices, and supplemented with a few yellow grape tomatoes to fill the spaces. Feel free to use more or less, depending on your mood!
- Making your crust in a food processor is super easy. Note that for the flakiest crust, it’s best to chill your dough before rolling it out. You can also rechill it after putting it in the tart pan, then baking.
- Pricking the bottom of the crust with a fork and using pie weights keeps the bottom crust flat against the bottom of the pan.
You May Also Like
- Basic Marinara Sauce from The Comfort of Cooking
- Corn, Basil and Tomato Salad
- Tomato Basil Pasta Salad
- Summer Panzanella Salad
- Tomato Salad with Peach Basil Vinaigrette
- Fresh Corn and Black Bean Salad
- Cheese and Tomato Galette
- Another Fresh Tomato Tart
This recipe was first shared in July 2011. Photos and text were updated in 2020.
Tomato Tart with Gruyère
A lovely summer tomato tart with Gruyere and herbs
Ingredients
Crust:
- 1¼ cups flour
- 1½ tablespoons semolina flour (1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon plus ½ teaspoon)
- ½ teaspoon salt
- 6 tablespoons cold butter, cut into small cubes
- 1½ tablespoons cold shortening (1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon plus ½ teaspoon)
- 2+ tablespoons ice cold water
Filling:
- 6-12 plum tomatoes, cut into 1/4 inch slices, and allowed to drain on paper towels
- 1 cup grated Gruyère
- 1 teaspoon herbes de Provence (I've used dried thyme, too)
- 2 eggs
- ¼ cup half and half
- 1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
- 1 teaspoon salt
- Freshly ground black pepper to taste
Instructions
- To prepare the crust, put both types of flour and salt in the food processor and pulse to combine. Add butter and shortening and pulse till the mixture looks like cornmeal.
- Remove to bowl and sprinkle with 2 tablespoons of ice water.
- Mix to combine, and gather together to form a ball. If not holding together, slowly add more ice water. Flatten the dough ball into a disk, wrap it in plastic wrap, and refrigerate for at least 30 minutes.
- Roll out dough to ¼-inch thickness and fit into a 9-inch square tart pan (or another tart pan of comparable size), then trim excess dough. Chill for another 30 minutes.
- Preheat oven to 400º. Prick the bottom of the tart with a fork, then line it with parchment and cover the parchment with pie weights (or dried beans). Bake for 10 minutes. Remove from oven, remove paper and weights, and allow to cool as the filling is prepared.
- Decrease oven temperature to 375º. Sprinkle the bottom of the tart with Gruyère, then herbs de Provence. Top with tomato slices arranged in a lovely pattern (overlap and completely cover the top of the tart if using 12 tomatoes).
- Whisk together eggs, half and half, mustard, salt, and pepper. Pour over the tart, adding more cream if needed.
- Bake for about 1 hour, till custard is set. Cool on a wire rack slightly before serving.
Notes
Total time does not reflect chilling time for dough. Adapted from Once Upon a Tart.
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Nutrition Information:
Yield:
9Serving Size:
1Amount Per Serving: Calories: 239Total Fat: 16gSaturated Fat: 9gTrans Fat: 0gUnsaturated Fat: 6gCholesterol: 79mgSodium: 541mgCarbohydrates: 16gFiber: 1gSugar: 1gProtein: 8g
59 Comments on “Tomato Tart with Gruyère”
Lizzy, I couldn’t wait to print this amazing recipe out, so excited about it. It is absolutely gorgeous, colorful, and the crust looks so light and crunchy.
Wish I had you live near me when I was going through a major kitchen renovation…lucky neighbors. You are always so thoughtful and generous, and not just your “simple casserole kind of generous”…a Gourmet treat. Wow!…so impressive!
xoxo
Beeeeautiful! This would make such an elegant starter, or lunch, or snack. Yum, yum!
Love gruyere and tomatoes, and of course this is bookmarked! I’m not sure if I can make crust (as I have never made one before!!! =P), so I probably use puff pastry? I was drooling while I read this post. Totally my kind of tart. Yuuummm!
Just wanted to let you know I’m passing on the Happy 101 award to you, check it out!
http://pinchofthisthatandtheother.blogspot.com/2011/07/happy-101-award.html
Lizzy…love that tomato tart with gruyere…it must be tasty ! Well done. I must try baking one square tart one of these days 🙂 Thanks for sharing the recipe.
This sounds amazing Lizzy! I would love to eat this for dinner! The gruyere sounds awesome!
Wow this is gorgeous– I love the square shaped tart pan!! The gruyere and tomato sound delicious together. I can’t wait to try this!
Your tart is gorgeous, brimming with all those tomatoes and herbs. That was so sweet of you to make this for your friends. They are very lucky, indeed!
Lizzy this looks so delicious, not to mention gorgeous! 🙂
Yum! That looks so good. I can’t wait til our tomatoes are ready to harvest. Thanks for sharing.
Lucky, lucky friends! I’ll bet that the smell coming out of the oven while that was cooking was just divine. It looks fantastic.
they look really, really good. Yum www.danieldiversrecipes.blogspot.com
This looks fantastic! How nice of you to prepare this for your friends. Tomato and Gruyere together is heavenly . Yum!
I can make it look like I’m having renovations if you bring me one of those lovely tasty tarts! What a great idea, our tomatoes will be in soon and it will be a perfect way to use them!
I adore a nice tomato or veggie tart like this on a summer day. You are right they always exceed my expectations too and you can season it so many different ways.
A beautiful savory tart, just perfect for a light summer meal!
It looks beautiful and delicious.
This is such a pretty tart and the nuttiness of Gruyere is a wonderful partner for fresh tomatoes.
Great way to use tomatoes! Love it with the gruyer! Beautiful job!
I have recently discovered tomato tarts – and they scream summer! I love that you made a square one….it’s particularly beautiful! Can I have a slice?