Pea

This Minty Ricotta Torte Is All I Want to Eat Right Now

May 24, 2018

As Food52 gets older (and wiser), and our archive of recipes grows, we're making the effort to revisit some golden recipes. Today, it's TasteFood's Spring Pea and Ricotta Torte with Lemon and Mint, because it has all the fun of baking a cake with the results of something you can eat for lunch or dinner. And, as its title (and Technicolor green hue) attests, it is a seasonal superhero.

Dreaming of all the green. Photo by Bobbi Lin

Read how Food52-er Jestei—an author who also covers Congress for the New York Times by day, NBD—was smitten with the recipe all the way back in 2011, below. I can attest that I am equally smitten, seven years later.


We as a cooking people can agree to disagree about many things: Are or are not dried chickpeas vastly superior to canned? Cornstarch as pudding stabilizer—acceptable or Lucifer’s work? Just how long should the coffee sit in the French press? But on this we are certainly all in accord: When you present your spouse with dinner, they should not bust out laughing.

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This happened with TasteFood’s Spring Pea and Ricotta Torte with Lemon and Mint, which should have caused me a great deal of bitterness, but I was too busy popping bites of this Meatless Monday marvel into my mouth to get too worked up.

When you present your spouse with dinner, they should not bust out laughing.

Well, I might have said something at some point along the lines of, “Remember when we were dating and you served me salad out of a pasta pot? So, how’s it going since then?” Or, maybe I didn’t. Who can recall such marital exchanges, really, but shall we get to the recipe?

You read the word torte, you start thinking crust. You start thinking crust, you well might then think, not during the week. But this is sort of a misnomer. There is no crust involved here, nor is there virtue, meatless or not. But what this recipe does do is marry something lovely and green with a beloved creamy counterpart to create a layered but simple and versatile quick dish.

As you know, I do not traffic in judgment over frozen organic vegetables at the time of year when you can still see your breath on the back porch as you stand there, waiting for the puppy to do his thing. Fresh peas are a wonderful thing; if you’ve got them, use them, but you should blanch them a bit first.

TasteFood (who once ate puffin, you should know) suggests that you use a 9-inch springform pan, but if you want to use a cake pan with just a removable bottom, as I did, no calamity will befall your tart.

I cooked my shallot closer to three minutes, because that’s just me. As my peas simmered (I used water, just to keep it vegetarian), I got out my fairly-new food processor, forgot how to put the top on properly, cursed a little bit, asked for help from no one in particular, then finally remembered, felt abashed, pondered reading the manual at some point, then moved on. (This part is optional.) Next, get your peas a whirlin’ as instructed, dumping in the eggs one lovely yolk at a time.

My dish didn't look like the photo. This led to a feeling of inadequacy, which vanished when I tasted it.

What emerged from my oven 25 minutes later was a fragrant and creamy pan of bright deliciousness, which also happened to be Technicolor green. “Really?” my husband asked, laughing, as I proudly held out my dish. Yes, really. Because in truth, my dish did not quite look like the photo our recipe scribe provided. There were no tawny-colored edges, just greener ones. This led to a feeling of some inadequacy, which vanished when I tasted the dish. Its texture is soufflé like, but its flavor has some bite, like a cheese course served in your garden.

Even after three large family servings, there was some left; I reheated it the next day as a side. In the author's photo, this dish is finished with one more green touch—slivers of chives dotted on top. But Jenny doesn’t garnish. I just saved you three more minutes!

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Former Associate Editor at Food52; still enjoys + talks about food.

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