This week we have The Tourist by Olen Steinhauer, a sharp, interesting spy novel about Milo  Weaver, a  beleaguered CIA operative (called a Tourist) who finds himself accused  of  several murders, including the murders of his old friend, his boss, and of the assassin  he has  been hunting down for years.  Of course Milo is iannocent of these  charges  and the novel follows with a frenzied pace his attempt to clear his  name.   This book was born to be made into a film, so I was unsurprised when I  learned  that George Clooney had optioned it.  The book has nothing to do with  food,  the only things the characters imbibe are cigarettes and vodka, and that   wouldn't have made anything too tasty.  So in honor of the 4of the July  and  the book's tale of the patriotic CIA with a serious dark underbelly of  manipulation and deceit, I decided to make a patriotic red white and blue tart with a   dark underside of bittersweet chocolate.
This was a great summer read -  an exciting and fast moving plot but also an intelligent book that was  well  written and made me think.  The book tells the story of Milo Weaver, who   when we first meet him is a so-called "Tourist."  A type of clandestine   CIA operative that, much like Ethan in Mission Impossible, gets his  orders from  one man, and traipses through Europe assassinating people, gathering  information,  and otherwise moving chess pieces around.  Milo is good at his job, but  it  is killing him - he never sleeps, is addicted to over the counter  amphetamines  to keep himself awake all the time.  In the first portion of the book,  we  see an episode which brings Milo to the point of breakdown in Venice,  where he  and a fellow Agent Angela are hunting down a CIA agent gone bad.  Last  we  see of Milo (on September 10, 2001 by the way), he is collapsed in a  Venice  piazza with a pregnant woman whose water just broke.  The novel then  flashes forward to 2007, where Milo is now employed at a CIA office in  New York,  and he acts as a "Travel Agent", a CIA operative who manages and directs   Tourists.  Obviously the world has changed since we first met Milo - the   day after his collapse was September 11 and the CIA has new enemies, both around the world and at home.  Milo is also a different man.  He is now  married to the woman who he first met the day he collapsed, and is step  father  to her daughter that was born that day.  But, unsurprisingly, Milo is  still  a Tourist at heart, and when his boss asks him to investigate his old  friend  Angela, now an embassy employee in Paris, Milo is once again drawn into  the  world of a clandestine agent.  Milo ends up being framed for multiple  murders and rest of the book feverishly charts his effort to clear his  name and  more importantly stay alive. Any book or movie about the CIA does not  tell  a happy, rosy story of the agency or of the United States roll in the  world and  this book is no different. Beneath all the patriotism, Steinhauer depicts  a real  dark side.  Hence the inspiration for my tart below.  
Patriotic Tart with Dark Side
Here is a fruit tart, with a basic sweet pastry crust, a whipped cream mascarpone filling, decorated with red and blue berries perfect for a July 4th celebration.   The secret of this tart is the shell of dark chocolate I brushed on the tart shell after it was baked and froze to harden.  A dark side that is unseen under the patriotic dressing.  I threw this one together without a recipe except for the tart shell.  
Ingredients
Tart Shell
Adapted from Dorie Greenspan via www.smittenkitchen.com
1 1/2 cups flour
1/2 cup confectioners sugar
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 stick plus 1 tablespoon unsalted butter very cold and cut into pieces
1 large egg (I used 1 and 1/2 eggs)
Chocolate Shell
1 cup bittersweet chocolate chips
Filling
1 cup heavy cream
1 cup mascarpone cheese
2 tablespoons sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Fruit
Berries or other fruit of your choice!
 Directions
To make crust, pulse dry ingredients together in food processor bowl.  Scatter pieces of butter over flour and pulse until coarsely cut into flour, with butter chunks the size of peas.
 Stir yolk to break up a bit, then to dough a little at a time, pulsing after each addition.  In the end, the mixture should look sandy, but it should clump together when pressed.  I ended up adding about 1/2 of an additional egg.
Turn dough onto a work surface and gently kneed till it comes together.  Wrap in plastic and refrigerate at least an hour.
 After it is chilled, roll the dough out between two pieces of parchment and transfer to a tart pan (I believe mine is 8 inches).  Now put the dough in the freezer for a couple of hours.  This will help to prevent tart dough shrinkage.  To be honest, my tart dough did shrink, but maybe it would have shrunk more if I had not frozen the dough.
Preheat oven to 375.  Cover tart shell with tinfoil and bake for 20-25 minutes.  Remove foil and bake till lightly browned, 10 minutes more.  Let tart shell cool.
To make chocolate layer, melt chocolate over double boiler and then brush chocolate on cooled shell.  Brush it on as thick as you want!  Put shell back into the freezer to firm up the chocolate.
Meanwhile, put heavy cream in bowl of electric mixer with whisk attachment.  Whip until stiff peaks form.  Add the marscapone and whip together until combined.  Add sugar and vanilla and whip till combined.  The filling should be fluffy but with some body.
Spread the whipped cream on top of the chocolate layer.  Then add the berries in whatever design you want!
 

















I have yet to delve into tart/pie dough. This looks really simple and def. patriotic!!
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http://ajscookingsecrets.blogspot.com/
Patriotism never looked so tasty! I want to eat that now!
ReplyDeleteGREAT POST
ReplyDeleteGREAT BLOG
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