Last updated on December 3rd, 2020 at 11:41 am
The peach galette is a free-form pie. It takes all the usual elements of a regular pie to create a rustic pastry that celebrates the Peach State’s finest asset.Â
Iâve been thinking about working my way through all of the state dessertsâyou know, with my own twist. I was going to start with states Iâve lived in or have connections withâI have one or two ticked off (California is meyer lemon cake, Illinois is the brownie)âand since May is the start of peach season the grocery store had mountains of peaches on sale and my brain immediately went to Georgia for an especially rich and peachy, southern dessert.
My dear cousin is from Georgia and we spent many summers driving from her house in Roswell to our grandparentsâ house on the South Carolina coast. I donât remember eating Georgia peaches, but I do remember my aunt declaring that South Carolina peaches are better than Georgiaâs. Thatâs not entirely surprising as Gaffney, South Carolina (hometown of Andie MacDowell) welcomes visitors with what might be considered the worldâs largest peach (or largest butt, depending on how old you are).
What is surprising is that Georgia does not have a state dessert. No peach pie, no peach cobbler, no peaches ânâ cream, no peach crisp.
Not knowing that Georgia lacks a branded confection of its own, I bought a bunch of peaches with grand gustatory expectations. When my research turned up nothing, I decided to go with a mini peach galette.
Peach galettes are just free-form pies. That means you can make them any size you wantâyouâre not bound to a giant 9â pie and you wonât have too much leftover if youâre not entertaining.
Peach Galette
Ingredients
- ½ cup unsalted butter
- ž cup All-purpose flour
- Âź tsp kosher salt
- 5 each small peaches, pitted and quartered
- 3 TB granulated sugar
- ½ tsp ground cinnamon
- ½ tsp cornstarch
- ½ tsp vanilla
Instructions
- For the dough, whisk together the dry ingredients.
- Place the butter in a food processor. Dump the dry ingredients on the butter and pulse until it all forms a dough. If itâs too dry, add a tablespoon or two, and pulse again.
- Form a ball, wrap it in plastic and refrigerate for an hour.Â
- Preheat oven to 375â.
- Transfer the dough to a sheet pan lined with parchment paper.
Filling
- For the filling, whisk together the dry ingredients. Roll out the dough on a lightly floured surface.
- Toss the peaches with the vanilla and then sprinkle the sugar mixture on the peaches and stir to coat the peaches. Set aside.
- Turn the dough between each roll to keep it from sticking to the surface and to make it round.
Assembly
- Pile the peaches in the middle of the dough and fold up the edgesâdonât worry if itâs messyâthe sloppier it is, the more rustic you can pretend it is đ . Â Brush the dough with heavy cream. Sprinkle turbinado sugar on the moistened dough.
- Bake for about 30 minutes or until the crust is golden brown and the filling bubbles. Let cool on a wire rack. Serve with vanilla ice cream.
This is a fabulous summer dessert, but I cannot imagine turning on the oven during a Georgia summer. However, it’s the perfect way to brighten San Francisco’s June Gloom that’s headed our way.