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Wild Mushroom, Cheese and Sausage Tart Recipe
by Monte Mathews

I

have sung the praises of The East End Mushroom Company more than once. I have the greatest

affection for Jane Maguire and John Quigley who have put heart and soul into

their company. They now offer shiitake,

maitake and blue oyster mushrooms grown right in their ‘farm’ in Cutchogue,

NY. And they very often ‘import’ other

seasonal varieties for the “Mushroom Capital of the World”, Kennett Square, PA.

These include more exotics like Velvet Pioppinis, White/Brown Beeches, along

with more familiar Creminis and Portobellos. Their mushrooms are so good, I

constantly keep an eye out for any recipe requiring mushrooms just so I can use

them. Now they’ve started selling dried

mushrooms. Go to their website, www.theeastendmushroomcompany.com and see how you can buy their mushrooms. They make a great gift for all the cooks on your list.

Or save them for yourself. Then

you can come home and make this tart, of my own invention, I am happy to say,

with their terrific mushrooms. Wild Mushroom, Cheese and Sausage Tart. You can cut the finished in quarters and

serve it for lunch or a light supper. Or you can cut it into two-inch squares

and make a perfect hors d’oeuvre for holiday entertaining.

Mushrooms that are grown, as

opposed to foraged, have one enormous advantage over their wild cousins. They require little or no cleaning, an

arduous task usually done with a soft brush.

For years, conventional wisdom said not to wash mushrooms because they

would take on additional moisture. But

mushrooms themselves are 80 percent water already so their ability to absorb

more came into question. Now it’s

believed it’s perfectly fine to give them a quick bath and then a spin in a

salad spinner before you cut them. But

never bathe cut mushrooms because nothing will turn them slimy faster.

For

the refrigerator until ready to use.

Next, assemble the tart:

1. Preheat the oven to 400 degrees.

2. Lightly flour a wooden cutting

board. Place the dough on the cutting board and, using a rolling pin, roll the

dough to 1/8 inch thickness.

Fold ½ inch of the dough onto

itself to form “walls”. With a pastry

brush, brush the egg wash over the sides of the pastry. Use a fork and ‘stab’ the pastry bottom all

over. Put the pastry in the oven for 10-15 minutes until it puffs

up.

3. Remove the pastry and distribute the

mushroom sausage evenly all over the tart shell.

4. Then sprinkle the grated cheese over the top.

Reduce the oven temperature to 375. Return the puff pastry the oven for another

20 – 25 minutes. Serve.