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

What are the three different types of galette? ›

For this recipe, we use puff pastry to keep things super easy! What are the three different types of galette? The three most common types of galette are galette Breton, galette de rois, and fruit galette.

What are the ingredients for a galette? ›

Image of What are the ingredients for a galette?
Flour is a powder made by grinding raw grains, roots, beans, nuts, or seeds. Flours are used to make many different foods. Cereal flour, particularly wheat flour, is the main ingredient of bread, which is a staple food for many cultures.
Wikipedia

Can you make galette the night before? ›

Yes! You can make the filling and dough and chill it in the refrigerator overnight, then assemble the galette the next day when you're ready to bake it. I don't recommend making the entire, assembled galette and letting it sit overnight in the fridge, because you run the risk of the crust becoming soggy.

Should you refrigerate galette? ›

Recipe Notes

Make ahead: Dough can be made up to 3 days in advance and stored in the refrigerator or frozen for up to 3 months. Storage: Galette is best eaten the day it is baked. Store leftovers, loosely covered, at room temperature for up to 2 days.

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

Adding cornstarch to the fruit filling and brushing the inner crust with egg white ensures a perfectly crisp bottom.

How do you make a galette not soggy? ›

Don't skip the cornstarch in the recipe, to avoid a runny filling and soggy bottom. Drain the excess liquid from the peach mixture as you add them to the crust. Most importantly, be sure to cook the galette completely. The galette is fully baked when the crust is deep golden brown and the peaches are bubbling.

What is the charm in the galette? ›

Somewhere within the glorified galette hides a charm known as a “féve” – traditionally this was a bean but it's now more commonly a plastic trinket which many people collect to mark their years of good fortune.

Why is my galette soggy? ›

To keep the galette crust from getting soggy, you need to precook the fruit and use cornstarch to thicken the juices.

Is galette crust same as pie dough? ›

The difference is in the preparation: while a traditional pie crust is pressed into the bottom and sides of a pie plate and crimped along the edges in a decorative fashion, a galette crust is rolled out, topped with filling, and then folded over itself in a round shape and placed on a baking sheet.

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. Composed of a puff pastry cake, with a small charm, the fève, hidden inside, it is usually filled with frangipane, a cream made from sweet almonds, butter, eggs and sugar.

How do you roll galette dough? ›

Gather the galette dough into a ball and wrap it tightly in plastic wrap. Chill in the refrigerator for at least 30 minutes before using. Remove the dough from the plastic wrap and roll it out into a 12 by 12-inch circle. It's okay if the circle isn't perfectly round.

How do you flip a galette? ›

Cover the galette with the skillet, then, holding the handle with one hand and the bottom of the sheet pan with the other, flip the whole thing so the galette lands back in the skillet, browned side up.

What's the difference between a tart and a galette? ›

The main difference is that tarts only have a bottom crust, and the crust is much thicker than a pie crust. Galettes – This is basically a pie made without using a pie dish, but because that would be too simple galettes can be made with any type of pastry dough.

What is a pie without a top crust called? ›

A pie with no top crust can be a tart or flan. Either can be sweet or savoury. One of my favourites is Bakewell tart, which is made with raspberry jam and an almond based filling.

Is galette served hot or cold? ›

Are cherry galettes best served hot or cold? While these cherry galettes are delicious at any temperature, they are at their very best when they're still warm, served with a generous scoop of vanilla ice cream on top.

How many types of galettes are there? ›

Three common types include the Galette Breton, Galette de Rois, and Fruit Galette. Galette Breton: This is the French term for a savory buckwheat crêpe that's associated with Brittany, France. It includes the Galette Complète, which is a buckwheat crepe filled with meat, cheese, and an egg.

Which is the most famous galette in France? ›

The Galette du Rois, a French cake baked specifically in early January, does this in perfect style, to celebrate the Epiphany which is celebrated 12 days after Christmas on the 6th of January.

What is another name for a galette? ›

Crostata is an Italian term, and galette is French; however, by definition, you can use these terms interchangeably. They're referring to the same, easy and distinctly elegant dessert. By whichever name, this free-form pastry is always a great choice when you find yourself with a bounty of peak season produce.

How is La galette de Roi different from Louisiana King Cake? ›

While the traditional Galette des Rois is more simple in design with the puff pastry as the star as the show, the Mardi Gras King Cake is covered in icing and Mardi Gras-colored sugar. That's right — the purple, green, and gold are the official colors of Mardi Gras, and for good reason.

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