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An Infamously Genius Caramel Almond Tart (+ A Call For Your Best-Loved Desserts)

December 14, 2016

I’ve been on an obsessive, rabid ferret-like hunt for genius desserts lately (I’ll get to that in a bit) and, in my sniffing, I found what might be my favorite dessert of all time—for many reasons. Let’s start there.

Ever since I sent myself a cryptic email at a book event last fall, no doubt mid-conversation with one of Food52’s smart community members, I’ve had “Alice waters almond tart Lindsay price” [sic—I blame autocorrect] sitting in my “Genius to Test” Google doc. But that doc is 14 pages long and organized, let’s say, “casually”—so until now, I hadn’t had occasion to dig deeper.

Fast forward to my ferret quest: Following up on that poorly-documented lead, I googled my way onto David Lebovitz’ blog post about the almond tart, which was developed by Chez Panisse’s brilliant executive pastry chef Lindsey Shere forty-some years ago. As he writes, “Her Almond Tart was the most infamous dessert at Chez Panisse for decades until too many customers apparently had a hard time eating it with a fork, so off the menu it went. I lobbied—hard—to keep it there,” adding, “It’s the most delicious thing I’ve probably ever had.”

Lebovitz described the tart as difficult, almost maddening, to make—while all but begging his readers to make it. As Shere wrote in the recipe in 1985, "It immediately became identified, for better or worse, as the house specialty of Chez Panisse." This all felt like a dare—I had to know for myself!

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I’ve since learned that there are inspired riffs on Shere’s recipe in the great pastry books of the 1980s and '90s. It’s so influential that when baking icon Nancy Silverton came through our studio for a Facebook Live, she recognized the tart on sight.

It’s the most delicious thing I’ve probably ever had.
David Lebovitz

And you know what? It’s truly not hard to make. There are a few ways you can tumble off track, but Shere’s recipe gives you the tools to glide through, if you pay attention. Yes, your filling could bubble up over the edges, but she warns you to put a foil catch-all underneath, just in case. Your tart could stick fiercely to the bottom of the pan, but she recommends loosening it while it’s still warm. With her help, I calmly navigated every pothole.

Join The Conversation

Top Comment:
“Lemon tart is my favorite dessert and I’ve made many recipes - this is still the best, for 20+ yrs. It’s my Platonic ideal of a lemon tart (too dramatic?) No twists, just buttery rich, pure - almost puckery - lemon flavor. Its Pate Sablee crust is the perfect foil, like a big crunchy sugar cookie. Another P. Wells’ iconic recipe for me: The Apple Lady’s Apple Cake (Paris Cookbook.) The first time you make it, you’ll think you made too little batter until it’s baked – it’s like 80% apples held together by a delicate web of custardy cake. Elegant looking, though not difficult to make, apple perfection. Chocolate cake – recipe on the back of the Hershey’s Cocoa tin. I’m talking straight-up, imprinting American chocolate cake, not a fancy variety. (Btw, cocoa powder makes the chocolatiest chocolate cakes.) Still the one to beat, no pun intended.”
— amysarah
Comment

The only place I struggled (the first time) was in pressing in the infamously sticky tart dough, but anytime it got too messy, I popped it in the fridge for a few minutes, which firmed it up enough to smush into place without sticking to my hands.

But even better, I actually found Shere’s technique to have several hidden benefits and shortcuts. You don’t have to line and fill the crust with baking beans—straight from the freezer, it blind bakes without fuss, and without collapsing or deforming. (And I’m learning this might be generally true of blind-baking—shock!—stay tuned.) You don’t even have to make a caramel—you simply bring the sugary mix to a boil to combine it and then, after soaking it with the almonds for 15 minutes, it all bubbles down into a chewy caramel in the oven on its own.

In a particular holiday boon, once baked, the tart is almost indestructible. The caramel and almonds fuse, and the crust is sturdy enough that you can tote it to any party, or ship it to any far-off place, and it won’t crumble on you.

In my book, this tart has it all: taste, texture, looks, personality, durability, relative ease, surprise, and story. And I’m going to need a lot more desserts like it, because I’m working on Genius Desserts (the newest sibling to my firstborn, the Genius Recipes cookbook), which is slated to come out Fall 2018—and this is where you come in.

Just like I wouldn’t have known to ferret out my new favorite tart were it not for that generous community member at that book event (I wish I knew who it was! Was it you?), I won’t be able to produce the very best, most timeless, useful, delicious collection of dessert gems without your collective baking experience and expertise.

If you’re not sure if it’s a genius dessert, here are some questions you can ask yourself:

  1. Do you return to this recipe over and over? Do people demand that you bring it to parties?
  2. Or, the morning after you made it, did you feel the need to tell a coworker or call a family member about it?
  3. Does it call for relatively accessible ingredients and equipment for home cooks?
  4. Does it defy conventional baking wisdom, perhaps by using a surprising ingredient or sidestepping some of the normal protocol?
  5. When making it, did you ever think—this isn’t going to work—and then it totally did?

If you answered yes to any number of these, I want to hear about it! Either in the comments below or in an email at the usual place: [email protected]. Thank you from the bottom of my buttered, sugared, spreadsheet-papered heart. Let’s make this book!

Photos by James Ransom

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See what other Food52 readers are saying.

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    Angie
I'm an ex-economist, lifelong-Californian who moved to New York to work in food media in 2007, before returning to the land of Dutch Crunch bread and tri-tip barbecues in 2020. Dodgy career choices aside, I can't help but apply the rational tendencies of my former life to things like: recipe tweaking, digging up obscure facts about pizza, and deciding how many pastries to put in my purse for "later."

74 Comments

Paul G. July 1, 2018
I've got what some believe to be the best Bread Puddin' recipe. I've been a chef for forty years and this is what most know me by...served with Bourbon sauce....or raspberry sauce I make it about 4-5 ways. Always the best.
 
NancyFromKona April 27, 2018
Have you guys tried David Lebovitz’s Banana Upside Down Cake? So awesome, made in a cast iron skillet and it makes it’s own caramel topping. Everyone thinks I am an amazing cook when I bring this visually gorgeous creation. Oh and bananas are available year round. And a snap to cleanup.
 
asbrink April 23, 2018
I love this dessert recipe, which I've made from David's blog, but what I love even better is the SUPER similar walnut tart recipe from Deb Perelman (Smitten Kitchen). It's conceptually and structurally similar--heavy cream-based caramel and chopped nuts resulting in a cookie-like tart. But it uses honey and brown sugar in addition to white granulated, and a pinch of salt, giving the caramel a much deeper and more complex flavor. It also subs orange zest for the almond extract, which is a great complement to the walnuts and the rich caramel. It's my husband's favorite and my go-to party dessert. Very much worth a try, if you enjoy this almond tart.

https://smittenkitchen.com/2008/11/walnut-tartlets/
 
mimi December 22, 2017
https://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/ginger-fig-and-cranberry-semifreddo-with-blackberry-sauce-104853
I don’t make a lot of desserts because I’d rather eat some great cheese than something sweet. And rarely do I even cook something for than once, except for this semifreddo. It’s absolutely incredible, loved by all, perfect any time of year and, can be made ahead of time. Please look into this!
 
mimi December 22, 2017
https://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/ginger-fig-and-cranberry-semifreddo-with-blackberry-sauce-104853
I don’t make a lot of desserts because I’d rather eat some great cheese than something sweet. And rarely do I even cook something for than once, except for this semifreddo. It’s absolutely incredible, loved by all, perfect any time of year and, can be made ahead of time. Please look into this!
 
Angie May 3, 2017
I've been making this cake http://www.myrecipes.com/recipe/banana-raspberry-cake-with-lemon-frosting for YEARS, the recipe doesn't have quite enough frosting so I 1.5 it. I've even made it as a three tier wedding cake that had zero leftovers.
 
Jessica G. April 19, 2017
Just made Melissa Clark's Chocolate-crusted Banana Blondies from the New York Times and it was genius indeed. There is a crisp chocolate layer topped with a blondie that is fudgy in texture and almost caramel-like from the brown butter. I used chocolate chips instead of walnuts.
 
Mackennea B. April 18, 2017
Definitely the Blondies from Alice Medrich's "Chewy, Gooey, Crispy, Crunchy..." book! Use a cast-iron skillet to brown 1/2 cup butter first, add in 3/4 cup brown sugar, egg, 3/4 cup flour, 2tbs rum and baking powder. Top with chocolate chips and Maldon and take just to the verge of underbaked. :)
 
Fairmount_market January 1, 2017
Buckwheat Butter Cookies with Cocoa Nibs from Alice Medrich’s Pure Dessert (described here: http://orangette.net/2007/12/the-cookie-baking-part/ and here: http://www.101cookbooks.com/archives/nibby-buckwheat-butter-cookies-recipe.html)
 
mainecook61 January 1, 2017
The Dark Molasses gingerbread in Edna Lewis's The Gift of Southern Cooking. A slightly modified version (by Kim Severson) can be found via the Times Cooking app:
http://cooking.nytimes.com/68861692-nyt-cooking/464-cooking-with-edna-lewis
 
Rhonda35 December 24, 2016
I'd say you have to include Judy Hesser's Chocolate Dump-It Cake and, a recipe I love and don't make as often as I should, Amanda's Chocolate-Bay Leaf Tart with Apples from her first book, The Cook and The Gardener. The bay-infused chocolate ganache is out of this world. Someone else suggested David Lebovitz's Ginger Cake and I have to agree with that - it's fantastic!
 
Karen December 22, 2016
I rely on Chef Granger's recipe for Soft Centered Chocolate Puddings, published in Food and Wine, March 2005. It's super simple, touted a homey version of molten chocolate cakes, and my dessert choice when I don't have the time or creativity to think of something else. After they're baked, if you chill them, they taste like truffles. Alternatively, you can freeze them after cooking then zap for 30 seconds in them microwave.
One note, this is essentially a molten lava cake, but better than any one I'd ever been served in a restaurant. Although these may be passe, I've never had a guest turn one down or leave any of their ramekin uneaten. I have accidentally overcooked it, and my guests still loved the warm, individual chocolate cakes.

 
Carolyn F. December 22, 2016
Melissa Clark's Reversed Impossible Flan is a delicious science experiment: http://cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1017025-reversed-impossible-chocolate-flan Five star wow factor!

And friends told me that Amy Chaplin's Green matcha custard tart was the best thing they'd ever eaten: http://amychaplin.com/2015/02/06/matcha-coconut-custard-tart/ I'm making it for Christmas this year.
 
CFrance December 21, 2016
One of our crowd's favorites is Bon Appetit's Best Key Lime Pie. A couple of "secrets" in it are using coconut oil along with the melted butter in the graham cracker crust, and hand-crushing the graham crackers so they are the consistency of wet sand rather than so finely ground. Another secret is the whipped cream topping, which has a cup of full fat Greek yogurt folded into real whipped cream and powdered sugar, plus a tablespoon or so of rum. It makes the topping very stable and tastes different in a good way. People who have never had this pie rave about it; those who have keep asking for another.
 
Joan H. December 20, 2016
Hazlenut torte from the cookbook from my Kitchenaid mixer, I have to make it each Thanksgiving. Francois Payard's flourless chocolate cookies. Shirley Corriher's tunnel of fudge cake. Ina Garten's outrageous brownies, NY Times cookbook brownies. Rose's cream cheese pound cake from Gourmet. Cranberry lime pie from November 2016 Bon Appetit. Molly Yeh's Funfetti Cake (but with real vanilla). Bernard Clayton's apple pie. Caramel Matzoh crunch from Marcy Goldman. Swedish Vanilla Cake from Susan Purdy. Sorry, too many. May be more.
 
Joan H. December 21, 2016
Chocolate enough cupcakes from the Fanny Farmer Baking Book by Marion Cunningham, McCormick's Red Velvet Cake.
 
creamtea December 19, 2017
Agree about Susan Purdy's cake, but do you mean Anna's Swedish Butter cake or Swedish Sandkaka from her book (A Piece of Cake)? Both good!
 
MadeInMaine December 20, 2016
This caramel almond tart may be wonderful, but I'll have to go with quick and easy without all the fuss. The absolute BEST dessert (and I've also been known to have it with coffee for breakfast) is what I call Pam's Almond Torte, in gratitude to a good friend who supplied me with the recipe. Only seven ingredients (butter, sugar, eggs, flour, salt, almond extract, sliced almonds) and a KitchenAid, and it's the yummiest cake I've ever had ... crunchy on the outside and a little chewy in the middle. It gets RAVES from all who partake!
 
Kim K. December 20, 2016
Oh, that sounds amazing. Are you willing to share the recipe?
 
MadeInMaine December 20, 2016
Sure! Preheat oven to 350. Put in the KitchenAid bowl: 1+1/2 sticks softened butter and 1+1/2 cups of sugar; blend well. Add 2 (room temp) eggs, one at a time, and 1 tsp almond extract. Add 1+1/2 cups of flour, 1/4 tsp salt, and another tsp almond extract. Blend well again. Spread in a greased and floured 10" quiche pan (mine has a nice removable bottom). Sprinkle with some sliced almonds, pressing them into the batter a little bit. Bake at 350 for 35-45 minutes, til edges are starting to brown. Remove from oven and sift some confectioner's sugar over the top. HEAVEN! :)
 
Kim K. December 20, 2016
You are amazing! Thank you for the recipe. Mmmmm...
 
MadeInMaine December 20, 2016
Let me know how you like it. Christmas breakfast, maybe? :)
 
WhiskyMead December 19, 2016
Every year (more than once) I return to Suzanne Goin's (via Smitten Kitchen) Hazelnut Brown Butter cake, mostly with chocolate ganache dripping off the sides but occasionally with roasted pears on top. To die for
 
Francesca December 19, 2016
This is the full link, which didnt paste properly, for my famous dessert. https://almostitalian.wordpress.com/2013/12/03/apricot-almond-cake-with-amaretto-easy-frangipane/
 
Francesca December 19, 2016
I have a famous dessert. This one gets more hits than any other version I make. It uses apricots, although I swear by the pear version too. everyone who makes it tells me how much they love it. Its super easy too. Copy the link: https://almostitalian.wordpress.com/2013/12/03/apricot-almond-cake-with-amaretto-easy-frangipane/.
Cheers Francesca
 
kswiley December 19, 2016
As requested below, the recipe for Sbrisolana, although Im not sure how the formatting will work.
**********************
ON RUE TATUN WITH SUSAN HERRMANN LOOMIS
www.onruetatin.com

SBRISOLANA – GATEAU FRIABLE AUX AMANDES

Note from Susan: This isn’t a cake, and it isn’t a cookie, it is both. Follow the directions exactly, then serve this lovely large creation whole, and have guests break off pieces the size that suits then. This can either be a mid-morning accompaniment to coffee, or an after the meal dessert with a glass of sweet Vin Santo.

Note from Kim: I had trouble finding polenta not already cooked in Santa Fe, so used stoneground cornmeal. If you don’t keep vanilla sugar on hand, add 1 tsp of vanilla extract to the melted butter. I used a half-sheet, rimmed baking pan, and baked it for ~35 minutes.

About 10 servings.

Ingredients:
• 2 cups (300g) whole unblanched almonds, lightly toasted – setting aside 10 for garnish
• 2+1/4 cups (300 g) unbleached, all-purpose flour
• 3/4 cup plus 2 Tbsp (140 g) polenta or instant polenta
• 1/2 tsp fine sea salt
• 18 Tbsps (9 oz or 270 g) unsalted butter, melted and cooled
• 3/4 cup vanilla sugar
• 1 large egg

Directions
1. Preheat oven to 350° F (180° C)
2. Set aside the 10 almonds and coarsely chop the remaining almonds (by hand or pulse in food processor) – they will be of uneven size, which is fine
3. In a medium-size bowl, combine the chopped almonds, flour, polenta, and salt. Toss to blend and set aside.
4. In a large bowl, combine the melted butter, sugar, and egg; whisk to blend. Add the dry ingredients to the liquid ingredients and stir to combine until the mixture is homogenous. The texture should be like that of cookie dough.
5. Rub/crumble the dough between your hands and let it drop onto the baking sheet so that it covers the sheet without any spaces showing – this creates a gorgeous, uneven surface. Scatter the reserved whole almonds on the top, and lightly press them into place.
6. Place in the center of the oven and bake until deep golden and crisp, 20 – 30 minutes (I had to cook it about 35). Let cool before serving. Don’t be tempted to cut this with a knife – break off pieces of it with your hands.

Notes (5/12/13): Used 16 oz (2 sticks) butter, and 2 C flour and 1 C cornmeal).
 
Kim K. December 19, 2016
I vote for pavlova! My British daughter-in-law introduced me to this amazing dessert, which looks intimidating but is practically foolproof. Even if the meringue base breaks into pieces, you just piece it together and pile on the whipped cream cloud to hide a multitude of sins, top with whatever fresh fruit is in season, and voila! A dessert that's guaranteed to wow everyone at the table! Plus, I love that you can make the meringue base in advance and freeze it, so it makes for a super simple but totally impressive last-minute dessert.
 
Rachel W. December 19, 2016
Two recipes:
1. Dorie Greenspan's World Peace Cookies. I never think the dough will come together, but those cookies work and are so delicious!
2. Alice Water's Rustic Pear Tart from The Art of Simple Cooking. It is one of those incredibly simple recipes with no frills (don't add any spices - it's just pears, butter, salt, sugar) and it becomes the most delicious, caramely-scrumptious dessert I've made in a while. A huge hit, easy to make (as long as you resist the urge to fuss with the recipe - don't!), and SO pretty.
 
karen December 19, 2016
Two good ones:
Fragilité cake - almond meringue layered with a filling made by melting chokolate and, if you can get it hazelnut nougat, onto whipping cream. Cool the liquid, whip and put between layers.
Rice a la mande. Sounds french, but is acutually nordic. Rice pudding mixed cold with whipped cream, vanilla from pod, chopped almonds and sugar. Serve with amaretto cherries.
 
CFrance December 19, 2016
Once upon a time, back in the '90s, Bon Appetit (or was it Gourmet?) used to put a simple recipe & picture on the last page of the magazine. One was for Peach Upside Down Cake that included a few tablespoons of peach schnaps. It was scrumptious, baked in a cast iron skillet. The peach schnaps was the secret. I saved the magazine page for over a decade but lost it in a move. Despite a lot of internet searches, I cannot find the exact recipe.
 
VioletFlame March 25, 2023
@CFrance, is this the one? It has schnapps and is made in a skillet:
https://www.womansday.com/food-recipes/food-drinks/recipes/a10251/peach-upside-down-cake-121721/
 
CFrance March 25, 2023
I don't think it's the same one, but I like its extra touches, like the spices and buttermilk. Thanks very much. VioletFlame!
 
Transcendancing December 19, 2016
I would love to suggest for your project that the version of Golden Syrup Dumplings from 'Cookery the Australian Way' is the definitive recipe for this dessert. It's very easy, cheap, and utterly delicious. This recipe is unique - no other recipe has the right flavour about it, it's the exactly right one (the inclusion of lemon in the syrup sauce is amazing and necessary). I think it's genius because you can decide to do it last minute when you discover you *really do* want dessert. It's a great recipe for any kind of cooler weather, and it's a forgiving recipe. I don't know who originally authored this version, but the book is a classic cookbook from Australia that is often used as a Home Economics text - my Mum still has her version from highschool. If you make it I would love to know what you thought. :)
 
Sam December 18, 2016
My favorite dessert recipe is lemon pudding cake from a small cookbook called Luscious Lemon Desserts by Lori Longbotham. It is easy to make, different, looks and tastes delicious. I add a "sauce" of confectioners sugar and lemon juice to top it off.
 
Sandra M. December 18, 2016
I commend to your baking pleasure Smitten Kitchen's Strawberry and Cream biscuits, made with any and all varieties of berries and in any combination. Having misread the recipe and then made the misread recipe over and over, I use a stick of butter, frozen and grated, instead of 6 tablespoons. I also place the mixing bowl with the flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt in the freezer for an hour before adding the grated frozen butter and moving on with the recipe. The other recipe I make oddness of times are from my grandmother's house, fantastic easy lace cookies...combine one cup oats, one cup brown sugar, a pinch of salt and 1/4 teaspoon baking soda; add one stick of melted butter, then one egg beaten with one teaspoon vanilla. Use teaspoon scoop and place 3-4 inches apart on silpat/parchment, bake at 350 for 7-8 minutes. They freeze beautifully too!
 
Julie C. December 18, 2016
Molly Yeh's Chocolate Tahini cake is to die for. I've never added tahini to a cake before, and the resulting crumb is moist and Duncan Hines-like. The buttercream is also made with tahini, and you cannot stop eating this cake. A winner.
 
Elaine G. December 18, 2016
I learned to cook and bake as an adult. I grew up on Swason TV dinners. As a result I make NEW recipes/menus every Sunday for family dinners. I only make things over and over again the recipes are beyond anything else I have ever tried. Two of my contributions are: 1. Joyce Goldstein's Chocolate-Dipped Macaroons Bon Appétit March 2003. I simply by melting the chocolate in the microwave and buying ground almonds. The toasting of the almonds and the coconut make these cookies outstanding. 2. Italian chocolate-almond torte from Pure Dessert. This cake is so so easy to make and every time I make it, I get asked for the recipe. I don't use cocoa powder to decorate - I swirl melted dark chocolate. Literally a "piece of cake" to make.
 
Barbara December 18, 2016
My vote for genius is Dorie Greenspan's Swedish Visiting Cake from Baking frrom my home to yours. Nine ingredients, 2 of which are optional. It's simple, quick, and delicious It's my little black dress of baking - dresses up or down and goes with everything.
 
bookworm649 December 18, 2016
This tart has been one of my go-to desserts for over 25 years-glad to see it getting the "genius" label! Another go-to which hits on all of your questions above- Nigella Lawson's Chocolate Orange Cake. Starts with boiling oranges or mandarins for an hour or two, then throwing them all in the food processor with the other ingredients. Whiz, turn into prepared pan and bake. Couldn't be easier (or tastier). And it is gluten-free, which is great when you are taking it to a gathering where that might be an issue. Its non-chocolate cousin, the Clementine Cake, is almost as good.
 
Carol December 18, 2016
My favorite "genius" recipe started as a cookie recipe and morphed into a pistashio lemon desert tart that is easy to make. The genius is in the fresh lemon juice and peel added after baking to add a bright fresh lemon twist and moisture that keeps this tart fresh for days at room temp. Great for traveling to dinner parties.
 
Michelle D. December 18, 2016
My current favorite recipe that fits the genius bill is Sesame Cashew Bars from Ana Sortun's Soframiz cookbook. I sub in a mix of nuts--some combination of pecans, cashews, almonds, walnuts--instead of all cashews, and add in a tablespoon of black sesame seeds for contrast. Actually I increase the crust quaniity by one third to make a ratio of crust to caramel that I prefer, but I promise it's delicious by the book too.
 
judy December 18, 2016
We've been making Maida Heater's Budapest coffee cake (we do add mini chocolate chips to the filling) and her Queen Mother's cake for 40+ years; The QMK, as we call it, works for Passover if the cream in the glaze goes with your menu. Judy in Portlad
 
Kathy H. December 18, 2016
Pecan Caramel Crunch Pumpkin Bread. I've tweaked a pumpkin bread recipe by adding extra pumpkin, soaking the raisins in rum and making it in a bundt pan with a pecan praline sauce that I put in the bottom of the pan before adding the batter. It makes an amazing topping. Everybody asks for it.
 
Sharon H. December 18, 2016
When I saw in the title something about "how to fix boring dinners" - which seems not to be there - it made me think of the people of Aleppo and how their city is in ruins and people are starving and dying. I'm sure they'd be happy to eat our "boring dinners". Sorry.....but just gotta say it. Ditto for many many other places in the world. Oh wait - I forgot - Christmas is about getting everything we want. I am reminded of a saying from a workshop long ago - "you can never get enough of what you don't really need'.
 
Suzanne T. December 18, 2016
Wrong article, way wrong attitude.
 
lissette December 19, 2016
Really? And your comment did nothing for anyone's suffering in the world -- well except yours momentarily. Put down your kale, love, and get a grip.
 
kswiley December 18, 2016
My all-time favorite "genius" dessert is from Susan Herman Loomis, from her book "Nuts in the Kitchen," and is called "Sbrisolana." I believe she got the original recipe, which she modified, from Patricia Wells, who discovered it in Italy (although to me the name sounds Polish)! At any rate, it's a not too sweet, giant cookie (it takes up a half sheet baking pan, and it's supposed to be served whole, with people braking off chunks), chock-full of almonds and also has some polenta or corn meal in the dough. It meets all the criteria: people demand that I bring it to parties, beg for the recipe, etc., and it is completely and totally FAST and EASY to make. Truly a genius recipe -- I can't recommend it highly enough. Note: I made the recipe as written with Susan in Her cooking class in Normandy, but have since slightly modified for making easily in the U.S. With our weights/sizes of things like sticks of butter. I will be happy to send you that modification (as a Word document), if you email me. Happy baking!
 
Ellie December 18, 2016
Sounds marvelous. Could you post it here so everyone can try it?
 
Jessica G. December 18, 2016
My favorite genius dessert is a dairy-free chocolate pie recipe which uses silken tofu instead of cream. No one ever knows it's tofu and it sets up beautifully!

I first discovered the recipe from Alton Brown (Moo-less Chocolate Pie): http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/alton-brown/moo-less-chocolate-pie-recipe.html - I use water in place of the coffee liqueur. Then I saw a similar recipe in Mark Bittman's How to Cook Everything cookbook, but he uses a sugar syrup instead of the honey and I find the honey easier to use.

P.S. You should definitely include the Genius recipe you shared for Margaret Fox's Amazon Chocolate Cake - love it! I add 1/2 cup of mini chocolate chips and baked it in a square 8x8 pan - yum!
 
ellent124 December 18, 2016
Amanda's Vanilla Bean Loaf fromCooking for Mr Latte--my son's fave. Everyone loves it--I've given this delicious pound cake to everyone who asks and they still say they love it. It never lasts more than a couple days. Just the best, simple cake.
 
nance December 18, 2016
My favorite birthday cake ... the Hellman's Mayonnaise Chocolate Layer Cake. Don't make that face!!! Try it -- I cut each layer in half to make double the layers, then fill each with (1) homemade strawberry jam and (2) mocha buttercream between the layers and the icing. Big Oink!
 
Suzy S. December 18, 2016
The whipped cream & condensed milk no-churn ice cream. May ave been Nigella Lawson who started this, though she doesn't whip her cream. I do, and I use 1/3 to 1/2 creme fraiche. This is a bit sweeter than the average ice cream, so it's a great candidate for strong flavors --coffee, cinnamon, peppermint, etc. The texture is amazing. Finally -- a good use for condensed milk!
 
Kristen M. December 17, 2016
Thanks so much to everyone who has shared so far—these are exactly what I'm looking for!
 
Jellly December 16, 2016
I have so many recipes saved in my "To Make" folder, that I usually try something new. However, I have made the Berry Ricotta Cake several times because it is so simple and tastes like Spring - http://www.bonappetit.com/recipe/raspberry-ricotta-cake
I will also fall back on The Bostini (by Rose Levy Beranbaum) when I am serving guests - It can be prepped ahead and always receives raves. http://www.foodwine.com/food/ild/2010/heavenly-cakes/boston-cream-pie-bostini.html
 
rachel December 16, 2016
Amanda Hesser's almond cake
 
samanthaalison December 15, 2016
Most of my most requested desserts already come from your column!
A few outliers:
- Gramercy gingerbread (as found on Smitten Kitchen)
- Smitten Kitchen's whole lemon bars (so easy!)
- Pineapple Pie - sounds weird but is so good - http://www.lottieanddoof.com/2014/03/pineapple-pie/
- Christmas Trifle - http://www.thefauxmartha.com/2011/12/12/christmas-in-a-bowl-2/
 
amysarah December 15, 2016
Besides the much heralded Plum Cake by Marion Burros (which my mother made so often, I long thought she’d invented it):

Julia Childs’ Berry Galette (Baking with Julia) - primarily the wonderful pastry recipe, which includes cornmeal and sour cream/buttermilk for subtle crunch/flavor. Been in constant rotation here for many summers, with every fruit: berries, plums, peaches, etc. Comes together very easily in a food processor – I double the pastry and freeze one disc for quick future tarts.

Patricia Wells’ Madame Cartet’s Lemon Tart (Bistro Cooking.) Lemon tart is my favorite dessert and I’ve made many recipes - this is still the best, for 20+ yrs. It’s my Platonic ideal of a lemon tart (too dramatic?) No twists, just buttery rich, pure - almost puckery - lemon flavor. Its Pate Sablee crust is the perfect foil, like a big crunchy sugar cookie.

Another P. Wells’ iconic recipe for me: The Apple Lady’s Apple Cake (Paris Cookbook.) The first time you make it, you’ll think you made too little batter until it’s baked – it’s like 80% apples held together by a delicate web of custardy cake. Elegant looking, though not difficult to make, apple perfection.
Chocolate cake – recipe on the back of the Hershey’s Cocoa tin. I’m talking straight-up, imprinting American chocolate cake, not a fancy variety. (Btw, cocoa powder makes the chocolatiest chocolate cakes.) Still the one to beat, no pun intended.
 
BakerRB December 15, 2016
Here are a few items that get good reviews and requests: David Lebovitz's panforte and his nonfat gingersnaps (a soft cookie). I prefer the texture with reduced-by-half applesauce or apple butter; works with GF flour or WW flour. For something small - caramelized almonds. I started with Jacques Torres's Dessert Circus PBS series/book recipe years (decades?) ago.
 
Sue December 15, 2016
Smitten Kitchens chocolate peanut butter cake https://smittenkitchen.com/2008/08/chocolate-peanut-butter-cake/
And Joy the Bakers apple pie
http://joythebaker.com/2008/11/apple-pie-for-your-soul/
 
LB December 14, 2016
Martha Stewarts/Smitten Kitchen's Strawberry Summer cake. It shouldn't work (baked strawberries are tricky) but it's puddles-of-fresh-strawberry-jam wonderful. It's similar to the Marian Burros plum torte. For sheer genius, I also vote for one ingredient frozen banana ice cream, ideally with Nutella.
 
Smaug December 14, 2016
God save the English language.
 
Beysh December 18, 2016
Thank you
 
tinarina December 19, 2016
Yes, the ferrets have been slandered.
 
someonewhobakes December 14, 2016
omg David Lebovitz's fresh ginger cake! the sheer quantity of fresh ginger sounds scary (and indeed it is a bit of a pain to grate) but it's one of my all-time favorite desserts. It somehow manages to be dark and rich and light and fresh at the same time. It's not on Food52, but it's in Amanda's NY Times Cookbook.
 
Greenstuff December 15, 2016
It's my most splattered page in his book Ready for Dessert, a book that's jam-packed with genius desserts.
 
Barbara December 18, 2016
Oh, yeah. Great!
 
Rhonda35 December 24, 2016
YES! Leibovitz's ginger cake gets my vote, too! So good!
 
Rhonda35 December 24, 2016
Auto-correct misspelled Lebovitz - ack!
 
ChefJune December 14, 2016
Love this article, Kristen! Yes, I have a recipe that is stupid-easy and delicious beyond words. The first time I made it, I was certain it would not work. But it did. I posted it in my recipe collection hereon Food52 some time ago, and it has been all but ignored. It is something I almost always have one of in my freezer, because you "just never know...." So here is the link: https://food52.com/recipes/12436-chocolate-truffle-cake
 
Ali W. December 14, 2016
Genius desserts, what an exciting piece of news!
 
AnnainSydney December 14, 2016
Marian Burros' plum torte is amazing. It is one of the easiest cakes to make, infinitely adaptable and insanely delicious. I stopped making it because I just lose self control when it's around. And Dorie Greenspan's world peace cookies. Also very simple but the best chocolate cookies around.
 
AnnainSydney December 14, 2016
Marian Burros' plum torte is amazing. It is one of the easiest cakes to make, infinitely adaptable and insanely delicious. I stopped making it because I just lose self control when it's around. And Dorie Greenspan's world peace cookies. Also very simple but the best chocolate cookies around.
 
SoupLady December 14, 2016
Great post and what an exciting book idea! I have just a few I'd like to mention:
From 'A Perfect Finish" by Bill Yosses there is a lemon pound cake that is not only delicious but has two unlikely elements - pureeing the lemons and when adding the lemon syrup you pore it over the cake and then squeeze the cake while it's still warm(!) to have the cake soak up the syrup like a sponge (rather than poking holes in the cake and then adding syrup). It's weirdly relaxing to do as well as resulting in the best lemon pound cake. "Very Good Chocolate Cake" from 'The Gift of Southern Cooking' by Scott Peacock and Edna Lewis is just that - a very good chocolate cake. And I can't remember the title of this cake from Julia Child's 'The Way to Cook' but it is sort of a cross between a pain espices and a fruit cake. I wish I could remember the name but it's delicious. Love your column!
 
Courtney C. December 14, 2016
This looks amazing! My favorite genius desserts are as follows: Nigella Lawson's Choco-Hoto-Pots (http://cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/6371-choco-hoto-pots), which are like the offspring of a chocolate souffle and a lava cake; Deb Perelman's Whole Lemon Bars from Smitten Kitchen (http://people.com/celebrity/smitten-kitchens-whole-lemon-bars/), which are an amazingly flavorful and easy lemon bar; Kate Krader's (of Food & Wine) Salted Fudge Brownies (http://www.foodandwine.com/recipes/salted-fudge-brownies), which are the best brownies I've ever had; and Simplethings Sandwich & Pie Shop's Salted Caramel Pie (http://www.foodandwine.com/recipes/salted-caramel-pie), which is just so easy and exceptional.