Forget the pie crust, this sour cherry honey galette is puffed up and ready to change your mind about how you galette. It has just the right amount of sweetness and tartness from the sour cherries, is completely delicious, and is shockingly simple.
This sour cherry galette is a rustic version of a pie but without all the work and equipment. All you need for this is a bowl and a baking sheet. You can even approximate the other ingredients.
Sour cherry season is short, but I try to get my hands on as many as possible. Try the farmers market or a Middle Eastern grocery store. Thank you to my family for introducing me to the wonders of sour cherries. I love all your stories about playing under the sour cherry tree when you were a little girl, Mom!
Step-by-Step Sour Cherry Galette
Preheat to 375F. Line your aluminum baking sheet with a silicone baking mat.
In a bowl, mix the sour cherries, honey, arrowroot powder, vanilla extract, and lemon juice.
Roll out the puff pastry until it is about 1/4 inch thick. You can use a wine bottle if you do not have a rolling pin.
Pour the cherry mixture into the center of the puff pastry leaving ~1-inch border. Fold over the puff pastry edges over the cherries (photos 1-3). Brush the edges of the puff pastry with the egg wash (photo 4).
Bake 25-30 minutes until the puff pastry is golden brown.
Once you try this galette with puff pastry, you’ll forget why you ever wanted to make it with pie crust! It puffs up beautifully, is perfectly flaky, and adds a crunch you can only get with puff pastry.
Why use sour cherries?
I love cherries, and cherry desserts always end up too sweet for me. These tart sour cherries make all the difference! But be prepared for a race to the sour cherries, if you don’t act quickly, they disappear off the shelves quicker than a blink of an eye, and then you are stuck waiting until next year.
Sour Cherry Galette Tips and Tricks
- Take this recipe to another level by serving it with your favorite vanilla ice cream. I love it with my vanilla date ice cream.
- To take extra precautions in preventing a soggy bottom on your galette, place your baking sheet on top of a pre-heated baking steel. Purchase one here! I use it for pies, galettes, pizza, and even fresh-baked bread. Sometimes store-bought puff pastry can yield a soggy bottom in my pies, and this has completely solved the issue for me.
- This recipe also works with regular cherries if you’re looking for something sweeter.
More Sour Cherry Recipes
Sour Cherry & Honey Galette
Print Recipe SaveIngredients
- 1 sheet frozen puff pastry thawed
- 2 cups sour cherries pitted, stemmed, and cut in half
- 1/4 cup honey if too stick, gently heat to loosen
- 2 tbsp arrowroot powder
- 1 tbsp lemon juice
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 1 egg beaten with 1 tbsp water for the egg wash
Instructions
- Preheat to 375F. Line your aluminum baking sheet with a silicone baking mat.
- In a bowl, mix together the sour cherries, honey, arrowroot powder, vanilla extract, and lemon juice.
- Roll out the puff pastry until it is about 1/4 inch thick. You can use a wine bottle if you do not have a rolling pin. Using a fork, you can poke holes in the center area of the puff pastry to avoid extra puffing in this area.
- Pour the cherry mixture into the center of the puff pastry leaving ~1-inch border. Fold over the puff pastry edges over the cherries.
- Brush the edges of the puff pastry with the egg wash.
- Bake 25-30 minutes until the puff pastry is golden brown.
Maybe a step to prick the center of the pastry before pouring cherries on the puff pastry. The center puffed up during baking and looked soggy. I used a fork to deflate about 2/3 of the way through baking. Also, are you supposed to let this cool on a rack or just leave on the silicone mat?
Hi Stephanie, I am so sorry to hear it didn’t turn out for you! As I mentioned in the post, sometimes store-bought puff pastry can yield a soggy bottom in my pies, and this tip has completely solved the issue for me: To take extra precaution in preventing a soggy bottom on your galette, place your baking sheet on top of a pre-heated baking steel. Purchase one here! I use it for pies, galettes, pizza, and even fresh-baked bread.
Also, I’ve never had to deflate the puff pastry, and have made this recipe over 20 times. I will add in the tip, and wish you luck in making it again!