The world’s easiest apple tart is French – and it even comes with a fancy name: Tarte Fine aux Pommes. This charming puff pastry dessert calls for just four ingredients and twelve minutes effort. Enjoy with Beef Bourguignon, Chicken Fricassee or Ratatouille for a cosy, rustic French dinner!

The easiest apple tart is French!
I’ll admit it – quick, puff pastry desserts are a great shortcut which, 95% of the time, is totally acceptable in my world. Just not exactly the sort of thing I’d proudly serve to guests. More like what I’d roll out if my grander plan fell apart, or I got so caught up perfecting the main I ran out of time for dessert. Ah, the failed dinner party stories I could share…..!
But this French Apple Tart? This one makes the cut. Because it’s JB’s recipe – and JB isn’t just anyone. He’s our resident French chef, born and raised in France, trained in Michelin-starred kitchens. Suddenly, puff pastry and apples feels less like a shortcut and more like something clever yet charming and très chic, complete with a fancy sounding name: Tarte Fine aux Pommes
If it’s good enough for JB, it’s definitely good enough for company – and more than good enough for me!

Oh, also, proof of crispy base: you can pick it up like a slice of pizza! (Did France just cringe at that comparison? 😂).

Ingredients
This French Apple Tart recipe actually came to be because we had a single sheet of puff pastry left after sharing the B85 Beef Sausage Rolls, and a couple of sad looking apples in the fruit bowl. And that, my friends, is pretty much all you need!

Apple – We used Gala for its sweet/tartness and balance, but you can use your favourite eating apple.
You needn’t worry about the cooking qualities of different varieties like you do for other apple recipes as the tart isn’t in the oven long enough for this to matter (eg. some apples soften too quickly which isn’t ideal for some dishes). We’ve made this with a variety of apples – Granny Smith (tart), Pink lady (crisp tart sweet), Fuji (extra sweet) – they all work fine, it just comes down to what apple you’ve got or what you like!
Puff pastry – I know, I was shocked, store bought puff is acceptable to the French! 😂 Well, at least, French home cooks. However, I do think France would cry if I didn’t at least (strongly!) recommend that you use puff pastry made with butter as it tastes better than puff that is made with flavourless oil. The packet will say “butter” on it.
Size – This recipe calls for a 25cm / 10″ square of puff pastry which is the standard size here in Australia. If yours is larger, trim it, or if you have smaller offcuts, press them together to make one larger one or make multiple smaller ones.
Sugar – For the underside of the puff pastry, which makes it extra crisp, as well as sprinkling on the apple and crust. You only need 5 teaspoons!
Butter – Just 1 tablespoon of melted butter, to brush across the surface of the apple and edge of the crust.
Cinnamon option – Cinnamon and apple is a classic pairing, so I wouldn’t discourage you from adding it! Just mix it with the sugar then sprinkle – I’ve included quantities in the recipe notes.
How to make this easy French Apple Tart

Preheat the tray until hot. This definitely helps make the underside a little bit crisper which is lovely!
Apple slices – Peel the apple if you want (optional). Then cut into 0.5cm / 0.2″ slices.
How I do it – Potato peeler for skin, cut in half, scoop out middle with a melon baller, then cut a little “V” out of the top and bottom. Lay it cut face down and slice. Keep the slices together as you cut rather than scattering them everywhere – makes it easy to fan out onto the pastry.

Sugar underside – Sprinkle 3 teaspoons of sugar on a sheet of baking paper (parchment paper). Then place the barely-thawed puff pastry sheet on it – the sugar will stick.
The sugar makes the underside extra crispy as well as caramelising.
Edges – Fold in the edges to form the rim of the tart. No need to use egg or anything to hold in place.

Top with apple – Lay the apple slices across the surface in three rows, overlapping them slightly. Brush with butter then sprinkle with sugar.
PS No need to prick the base – which is supposed to stop the base from puffing up. I forgot to do it and it made no difference because the apple weighs the base down.
Bake – Place the tart on the hot tray, keeping it on the paper. Bake 30 minutes.

Baked! The tart is ready when the edges are deep golden and the apple slices are lightly browned on the edges.
Serve with a dusting of icing sugar (optional) and ice cream (not optional!). Cream is also nice, but I definitely prefer ice cream.


Make this for afternoon tea or a cosy dessert for dinner. I can see you serving this up after a rich Beef Bourguignon, French Chicken Fricassee, a slow cooked Shredded Beef Ragu or a Herb & Garlic Butter Roast Chicken.
To be honest, I can’t think of much I wouldn’t serve this with! Well, perhaps not if I was doing an Asian themed menu. But anything western, European, even Middle Eastern, Moroccan, South American, I absolutely would. You can also add a touch of flavours from cuisines of the world to suit themed menus – for example:
sprinkle of chopped pistachios, almonds or other nuts (Middle Eastern / Greek / Lebanese – where nuts in desserts are loved!)
with rum ‘ n raisin ice cream (Caribbean)
dulce de leche (Latin American cuisines)
I’ve popped a few more ideas in the FAQ below. Let me know what you serve this with, I want to know! – Nagi x
PS Eating it plain, with your hands, devouring it like you would a slice of pizza, is absolutely acceptable in my books.
FAQ
Absolutely. You’ll see this in bakeries across France when apples are in season. Though admittedly, real bakeries would make their own puff pastry, it is by no means unacceptable for home cooks to use store bought puff pastry!
Plus, this is a JB recipe. I should have opened with that, because, need I say more? 🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷
Ahh, this one was pretty low effort compared to recent ones! We tried various baking methods to see the impact on the crispiness of the underside of the pastry (pre-heated tray trumps cold tray, paper v no paper didn’t make much difference). Then we also made it with a variety of apples so we could choose our favourite (gala).
Then once we settled on our final recipe, I made it once to film the recipe video the again to photograph it. The melting ice cream made it impossible to use the same on for both video and photography!
If you can find gluten free puff pastry, yes you can! I haven’t tried gluten free puff pastry so I can’t comment on quality.
Yes! Here are some suggestions:
Pears and nashi pears – I haven’t tried but confident it will work with the recipe as written
Berries – like strawberries, blueberries etc leech too much liquid and make the base too wet, so what I do is spread the base with a little jam to create a protective layer, then top with the berries. Blueberries are my favourite because you get a good mix of some burst, and some just barely holding together. I like to drizzle with a glaze – you can use the one in this glazed loaf, just scale down.
Canned fruit – like apricots, peaches. I haven’t tried but I think they, like berries, will make the base considerably wetter (therefore soggy) so I would recommend spreading with jam.
Figs – Haven’t tried, but I think it would be fabulous!
Juicy fruits – like oranges and other citrus, mango – I haven’t tried because I don’t think they’d work for a simple recipe like this, though I could be wrong. I would probably spread with some kind of base like a cream cheese mixture, frangipane etc to absorb the liquid so the puff pastry base doesn’t become too soggy.
Here are some suggestions:
whipped cream
dollop of marscapone or creme fraiche
drizzle of salted caramel, dulce de leche, chocolate sauce or a glaze (scale down the one in this recipe)
sprinkle of toasted nuts (almonds flakes, chopped pistachios for a lovely dusting of bright green)
chopped pralines or other toffee / caramel candied nuts
Watch how to make it
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Easy French Apple Tart – Tarte Fine aux Pommes
Ingredients
- 1 square sheet butter puff pastry (25cm / 10″ square), barely thawed (Note 1)
- 5 tsp caster sugar / superfine sugar (sub regular / granulated)
- 2 large gala apples (or 3 medium), peeled, cut in half, core removed, sliced 0.5cm / 0.2″ thick (Note 2)
- 1 tbsp unsalted butter , melted
For serving:
- Icing sugar / powdered sugar , for dusting (optional)
- Vanilla ice cream (not really optional!)
Instructions
- ABBREVIATED: Sprinkle paper with 3t sugar, put puff on, fold in 1cm / 0.4" edge. Top with apple, brush butter, sprinkle 2t sugar. Bake on preheated tray at 210°C/375°F (190°C fan) for 30 minutes.
FULL RECIPE:
- Hot tray – Put a baking tray in the oven then turn it on and pre-heat to 210°C/375°F (190°C fan-forced).
- Sugar underside of puff – Place a sheet of baking paper (parchment paper) on the counter. Sprinkle with 3 teaspoons of sugar, roughly in the shape of the puff pastry sheet.
- Fold edge – Place puff pastry on top of the sugar. Fold the edges inwards to create a 1cm / 0.4" edge.
- Apples – Arrange the apples slices in 3 rows, overlapping them slightly.
- Butter and sugar – Brush the apple slices and edges with melted butter, then sprinkle with the sugar (apple and edge).
- Bake – Transfer the tart on the paper to the hot baking tray (keep it on the paper). Bake for 30 minutes, or until the edges are golden.
- Serve – Cut into 6, dust with icing sugar and serve warm with vanilla ice cream.
Recipe Notes:
Nutrition Information:
Apple dessert recipes
I didn’t realise I had so many apple recipes!! Don’t make my pick a favourite. (OK fine, it’s got to be apple crumble. Or baked apples. Or apple muffins. Or apple cake!)
Life of Dozer
Dozer started hydro therapy today!

Hydro therapy has been suggested as a way to help Dozer rebuild his muscles which have degenerated over the past 15 months since he was diagnosed with laryngeal paralysis. As anyone with a physical condition would know, problems exacerbate problems, and Dozer is a classic example of that. “Oh Dozer, are you stuck again?” has become a phrase we use more and more each day (referring to his inability to get up by himself).
I was determined to do his rehab au naturel with regular trips to the beach for swimming, but the practicalities are proving too hard. So I’m adding hydro therapy to his routine, which we can do rain, hail or shine, and is just 5 minutes from home.
I know I can bring him back. I’m not ready to give up on him yet!

Hey Nagi. I’m not sure when you first posted this but I have made this 8 times since. Love the crispy base and how simple it is to make for an amazing dish! I make sure to get too many apples in the weekly shop to make this. Thanks for the recipe JB!
This is now my go-to quick and perfect weekday dessert!
So easy and delicious! I wanted a quick dessert and here it is. Cravings satisfied. Thank you Nagi, you are the best.
It was yummy but on the sides and some areas underneath were dark from the sugar, close to dark brown but not that bad tastings. Any suggestions?
I was sceptical that this would work given its simplicity but I can confirm it’s great!!!! I probably used a fraction more sugar under the base to be sure it’d crisp up (also first time using gluten free frozen sheets) and absolutely adding this to my go to desserts when in a hurry! So simple and tasty. Everyone enjoyed. Thanks Nagi!
Delicious and so easy to make. I added some cinnamon to the sugar to sprinkle on top. I will certainly add it to my Must make it again list. Thank you Nagi!
Hi Nagi, Golly we love your recipes! Yesterday I made the French Apple Tart. My husband and I thought we’d just have one slice each with the mandatory vanilla ice cream. Well that didn’t happen… we ate the entire tart! It was sooo good! Today I’m making the Apple crumble and hope it lasts longer than the tart, it’s quite big LOL. Thank you Nagi I’m now starting a concertina folder of your recipes I’ve printed out and tried,. Think it will grow very fast! We love your style, helping hand with the videos, your wonderful sense of humor and your love of Dozer. Happy cooking, Dianne
great recipe…easy to make and delicious!
Made this last night, and it was awesome!!!!! Thanks for a delicious recipe!
Simple and delicious. Everyone loved it. The base was nice and crispy. 30 minutes was slightly too long for my oven, I probably should have checked it at 25 minutes…
Can’t believe how lovely – and simple – this is!
Another winner from Nagi.Easy to make as I am no Chef- far from it !! Will make again, often! Greetings from Thailand.
Super easy & delicious. Great way to use up some apples past their prime. I did sprinkle the top with cinnamon sugar & served with salted caramel sauce & cream 😋
Another winner!! So simple with only a few ingredients….will be on high rotation…thanks Nagi.
The tart was delicious. I can’t wait to try other fruit.
Delicious and so quick and easy. Kids asked for it two nights in a row for dessert. Another winner from Nagi!!
Just made this. Mum said the apples are perfect, so I definitely cooked it long enough. Wasn’t crispy underneath though and pastry a bit soggy. Wondering how long to heat the tray in the oven first as I think that would have taken care of this x
Do you have a pastry setting on your stove? If not cook with the bottom heat on high … say 200c then change to fan bake for last 10 mins to get it browned and looking like the photos. Best wishes
Maybe cook the pastry for a bit before hand? Then add the apples? I hope this helps! 🙂
Great easy recipe. The partner loved it. Drizzled some caramel sauce over it with whipped cream.
After being impressed with how easy and great it looked. Took 1 bite and went I don’t really like puff pastry, yes I’m an idiot.
I want to have for a dinner party. How soon can I prepare it? I’ll cook during main course
Hmm! Let me call on JB for this one. I worry the sugar on the puff will sweat if it sits around for too long before baking. – N x
YUM! First try and so nice and easy.