Potato pissaladière

Potato pissaladière

Debora Robertson’s potato pissaladière is a hearty take on the classic French pastry tart. It’s loaded with olives, anchovies, gruyere and potato slices.

Potato pissaladière

For another dish with bold flavours, try our celeriac, onion and mustard puff pastry tart.

  • Serves icon Serves 4 (or 8 with other dishes)
  • Time icon Hands-on time 1 hour 25 min, plus 30 min resting. Oven time 30 min

Debora Robertson’s potato pissaladière is a hearty take on the classic French pastry tart. It’s loaded with olives, anchovies, gruyere and potato slices.

For another dish with bold flavours, try our celeriac, onion and mustard puff pastry tart.

Nutrition: Per serving (for 4)

Calories
709kcals
Fat
30.9g (8.5g saturated)
Protein
21.7g
Carbohydrates
82g (13.4g sugars)
Fibre
8.4g
Salt
2.1g

Ingredients

For the dough

  • 180ml just-warm water
  • 1 tsp dry active yeast
  • 280g strong white bread flour
  • 3 tbsp olive oil, plus extra to brush
  • 1 tsp sea salt
  • ½ tsp fresh thyme leaves

For the topping

  • 4 tbsp olive oil
  • 14 anchovies in olive oil, drained
  • 4 thyme sprigs
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 4 large onions, halved and finely sliced
  • 6 garlic cloves, finely sliced
  • ½ tsp caster sugar
  • Large pinch ground cinnamon
  • 250g waxy potatoes, I like to leave the skin on but you can peel them if you prefer
  • 100 Gruyère cheese, grated
  • 20-24 pitted black olives
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Method

  1. First, make the dough. If you have a stand mixer with a dough hook you can do it in that, but it doesn’t take long to make it by hand. In a bowl, whisk together the water, yeast and about 70g of the flour. Leave for 15 minutes until little bubbles appear on the surface.
  2. Stir in the remaining flour, olive oil, salt and thyme and either knead with a dough hook until elastic, smooth and glossy about 5 minutes, or turn it out onto a lightly floured surface and knead by hand, about 10 minutes. Brush a clean bowl lightly with oil, place the ball of dough in it and turn it over, cover with a clean tea towel and leave somewhere warm until doubled in size, which should take about an hour.
  3. While the dough is proving, cook the onions. Warm the oil in a large, heavy bottomed frying pan over a low heat. Add 2 of the anchovies and break them up a bit with a wooden spoon – you want them to melt into the oil – then add the thyme and bay leaf. Heap in the onions and garlic, sprinkle on the sugar and cinnamon plus a pinch of salt and stir. Cook very slowly, stirring from time to time and more frequently towards the end, until the onions are very soft, golden and almost jammy. This will take about an hour. Fish out the thyme sprigs and the bay leaf.
  4. Either boil or steam the potatoes until tender. Let them cool a bit then cut into thin slices.
  5. Line a large baking sheet with baking paper. Turn out the dough and stretch it into a rectangle on the baking sheet, measuring roughly 35cm x 25cm. Leave for 15 minutes while you heat the oven to 180°C fan/gas 6.
  6. Stretch the dough out a little more on the sheet. Scatter on half of the onions, spreading them out until they almost reach the edge of the dough. Layer the sliced potatoes on top, then cover with the rest of the onions. Scatter on the cheese then the remaining anchovies and finally the olives.
  7. Bake for 25-30 minutes, until the dough is golden and the top bubbling. Remove from the oven, slide onto a cooling rack and brush the edge of the crust with olive oil. Serve warm or at room temperature.

Nutrition

Nutrition: per serving
Calories
709kcals
Fat
30.9g (8.5g saturated)
Protein
21.7g
Carbohydrates
82g (13.4g sugars)
Fibre
8.4g
Salt
2.1g

delicious. tips

  1. “The dough in this pissaladière is based on the one in David Lebovitz’s book, My Paris Kitchen. If you’re a Francophile like me, I advise you to get this lovely book into your hands and into your kitchen without delay.

    On Saturday mornings, I often go to the market in nearby Pézenas and buy slabs of pissaladière for lunch. The woman who runs the stall there adds a little cinnamon to her onions, which I know sounds odd but it really works. I always do it now.” Debora Robertson

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Recipe By:

Debora Robertson

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