Easy Mushroom Galette Recipe | The Modern Proper (2024)

Galette for Dinner, a Dream Come True.

Our favorite types of dishes are the kind that hit the spot any time of the day, like this savory mushroom galette. Serve it with a simply dressed green salad for lunch or dinner, and enjoy it again the next morning, warmed up with your coffee for a rich, umami-laden breakfast. Anytime you enjoy it, we know you’re gonna love it!

What Is a Galette?

The word galette comes from the French word galet means a small pebble, like a smooth river stone. However, the kind of galette you eat is only stone-like in appearance—a bit like a paving stone. A galette is a free-form, single crust “tart” with either a savory or sweet filling. One of the reasons we love galettes is that it requires no special pie dish or tart pan. You simply fold the buttery galette crust edges over themselves to hold in all the filling. And if you’re curious how to pronounce galette, it’s just guh-let—easy enough, right?

How to Make a Galette?

Making galettes is no more difficult or time consuming that baking a pie—if you know how to make a pie, you know how to cook galettes. And if you don’t know how to make a pie, fear not! We’ll walk you through it.

  • Begin by making a galette crust! Whisk together your dry galette dough ingredients, cut in the cold butter, add a sprinkling of ice water and chill your galette dough.
  • Mix together the mushroom pastry filling. Wash, slice and sauté the savory wild mushroom and onion filling.
  • Roll the chilled dough into a big circle. Slather the middle of the circle with crème fraîche, leaving room at the edges of your pastry crust to fold up the crust into a tart.
  • Mound the cooked mushrooms on top of the crème fraîche, and sprinkle with Gruyère cheese and fresh herbs. Carefully fold up the edges, and pop that beautiful mushroom tart appetizer in the oven.

What Are Wild Mushrooms?

Many originally “wild” mushrooms are no longer truly wild—as in foraged by hand in a drizzly forest—instead, they are farmed. There’s nothing wrong with using easy-to-find, store-bought mushrooms, like cremini or even button mushrooms, for this mushroom galette, but we think it tastes extra delicious when you use edible wild mushrooms like chanterelles, morels, or even lobster mushrooms. If you’re not a forager yourself, you can often find truly wild, foraged types of wild mushrooms at your local specialty grocery store or farmers market. They’re a seasonal product, so availability can vary—but eating with the season is half the fun, right?

How to Clean Mushrooms

To wash or not to wash your mushrooms, that is the question. Some cooks choose not to wash their fungi because they’re worried that mushrooms—which already release quite a lot of water when they encounter a hot pan— might absorb even more water during the washing process, and then taste bland after being cooked. For years, cookbooks and chefs advised people to wipe down their ‘shrooms with a damp paper towel or mushroom brush to remove all the dirt rather than rinsing them. However, that was a really, really tedious task, and so we’re thrilled to share that new recommendations (thank you, Cook’s Illustrated and Mark Bittman) state that a quick rinse under water—don’t soak them, though— is actually just fine and doesn’t result in watery, bland mushrooms after all... So! Go ahead and give those mushrooms a quick rinse. No harm no foul.

Tools You’ll Need To Make This Savory Galette:

Other Wild Mushroom Recipes You Are Going To Love:

Once you’ve made this mushroom galette recipe, here are a few more mushroom dishes to try:

  • Wild Mushroom Risotto is oh so cozy.
  • For the soup lovers: Wild Mushroom Chowder with Bacon and Leeks or Hungarian Mushroom Soup
  • Rigatoni with Mushroom Sauce is a pasta lovers dream.
  • And in case that’s not enough, here are our 20 Best Mushroom Recipes to indulge in.

So You Foraged the Forest (or Grocery Store) For Mushrooms, Now What?

We hope that this wild mushroom recipe was a hit in your home. Snap a photo of your finished mushroom galette, and maybe even a video of the beautiful people you feed it to. Tag us on Instagram using @themodernproper and #themodernproper. Happy eating!

Easy Mushroom Galette Recipe | The Modern Proper (2024)

FAQs

How do you keep the bottom of galette from getting soggy? ›

Preventing Soggy Bottoms

Because you can't par-bake a galette crust to prevent the fruit's juices from making the crust soggy, many folks brush their galette crust with egg white or make a layer of crushed cookies or cake crumbs, either of which work fine.

Can you make galette the night before? ›

You can make the dough up to three days ahead, but this galette is at its best served the same day it was baked.

Is a galette crust the same as a pie crust? ›

A galette, if you're unfamiliar, is a kind of open-faced, freeform pie. The dough for the crust is the same as a traditional pie, but the structure of the dessert is different.

What is the base of the galette? ›

The website joyofbaking.com defines the term galette as "a French term signifying a flat round cake that can be either sweet or savory and while [recipes can use] puff pastry as a base, they can also be made from risen doughs like brioche, or with a sweet pastry crust."

How do you keep the bottom crust crisp? ›

Brush the Bottom with Corn Syrup or Egg White

Coating the inside surface of the bottom crust will create a barrier to prevent sogginess.

How do you make the bottom of a pie crust not soggy? ›

Crust dust is a 1:1 mixture of flour and granulated sugar. When baking a pie, especially a fruit pie, a couple of teaspoons of crust dust sprinkled into the bottom of the crust will help prevent the crust from becoming saturated with juicy filling as it bakes.

Why freeze galette before baking? ›

Freezing the little pies before baking helps the structure hold shape. Because a mini galette is meant to be eaten out of hand, cut larger fruit into bite-size pieces, which will also avoid lumpy edges.

What is hidden in the galette? ›

Every galette has a secret – tucked somewhere inside the galette is a prize. In early times, the prize was a dried bean, or fève. Over the centuries, the beans were replaced by all manner of trinkets, usually made of porcelain, but they've never stopped being called fèves.

How to assemble a galette? ›

How to Make a Galette in 5 Steps
  1. Cut into a circle. For a dough circle with more “character,” cut free-hand with a pizza cutter. ...
  2. Top with filling. Make sure not to overload your galette, otherwise the crust will break under the weight of the filling. ...
  3. Fold edges. ...
  4. Brush with egg wash.

What is a feve in a galette? ›

Serving Traditions

The “king” is represented by the fève, once a fava bean, now a porcelain or plastic figurine, hidden inside the cake. The person who discovers the fève in their serving is declared le roi (the king) or la reine (the queen) and gets to wear the golden paper couronne (crown) that comes with cake.

How wet should galette dough be? ›

Keep your folds pert and perfect with a firm, not wet dough. If your galette dough is too thick, the crust will be gummy and chewy, rather than flaky. (It will also be too small to allow the filling to be dispersed evenly). That said, the dough shouldn't be so thin you can read a newspaper through it.

Why do the French eat galette? ›

The galette des rois is a cake traditionally shared at Epiphany, on 6 January. It celebrates the arrival of the Three Wise Men in Bethlehem.

What is the charm in the galette? ›

The galette itself is simple: puff pastry covering a disc of damp frangipane, hidden within which is a china bean or charm; the person who gets this charm becomes king for the day and is crowned with the gold-paper crown which comes automatically with the cake as sold in French pâtisseries.

Why is my galette soggy? ›

Whether making a sweet or savory galette, a soggy bottom can be difficult to avoid because the fruits or vegetables in the filling release water as the galette bakes. Here at ATK, we've come up with many crisp-crust solutions, such as parcooking the vegetables in the filling or macerating and draining the fruit.

How do you know when a galette is done? ›

The whole thing then gets baked until it is perfectly golden, the pastry is beautifully flaky, and the apples are cooked. Galettes can have a variety of filling, and an apple galette is a classic.

How do you keep your bottom from getting soggy when baking? ›

Prebake your crust

Prebaking provides insurance against soggy bottoms during a low and slow bake, which custard pies demand.” A preheated baking stone helps your pies brown on the bottom.

What causes soggy bottom crust? ›

Wet pie fillings + raw dough are a tricky combination. If the bottom crust doesn't set before the filling soaks in, it's going to be gummy. A metal pie pan placed on a preheated surface will set the bottom crust quickest; once cooked, the liquids from the filling above won't soak in, and as a result: no soggy bottom.

How to prevent wetting of the bottom crust of the bake products? ›

* Suggestions to prevent soaked lower crust
  1. Brush crust with slightly beaten egg white and bake at high temperature for a few minutes to coagulate egg white.
  2. Use a filling with a high egg-to-milk ratio.
  3. Preheat milk for filling.
  4. Chill pie crust for 1 hour before filling.

How do you fix a soggy bottom cake? ›

Place a piece of parchment paper or wax paper on the bottom of the cake and put it back in the pan. Bake the cake again in a preheated oven at 350°F (175°C) for 5-10 minutes, or until the bottom of the cake is no longer soggy. Let the cake cool completely in the pan before removing it and serving.

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