Pastry week has arrived and ohhh my days, have we baked up a doozy this week.
A little jam tart, decadent, morrish and so beautifully pimped up some might say it makes regular tarts look plain and boring.
Crowned in a fabulous coconut meringue, the recipe for these tarts originally come from our Cape Malay ancestors in South Africa and are known as Hertzoggies. I remember them being made by a friend’s mum for picnics when I must have been about 10 years old and have been secretly obsessed with them ever since.
I love a good story behind the food we eat and whilst It might be a tongue-twister of a word to get your mouth around, the history of these little treats are pretty special.
The South African Hertzoggie is named after the politician and Boer War General J. B. M. Hertzog, who became the Prime Minister of the Union of South Africa from 1924 to 1939.
It’s suggested that the origins of this tasty baked treat is thought to be invented by the Cape-Malay community to demonstrate their support for Hertzog after he promised to give women the vote and equal rights to the coloured community in the 1920s. After fulfilling the first promise to give women the vote in 1930, but not the second, the community began baking the cookies with a brown and pink icing called “twee gevreetjie” (Afrikaans for “hypocrite”), showing their dissatisfaction with him.
The recipe calls for apricot jam as the filling but it being a GBBO bake-along with a St Helenian twist we decided to make our own jam from scratch to fill these little beauties. Tamarind fruit or ‘tamlets’ as they are known on Island, is like marmite to most people. You either love their sweet/sour taste or split your tongue trying to eat them. Growing up my Granny and mum made tamlet jam all the time and as kids my siblings and I consumed handfuls of the fruit dipping them in sugar or sometimes salt to counterbalance the sour taste of the flesh. It is a taste and smell that is forever fused onto the memories of my childhood and I love it. Using my Granny’s recipe I made tamlet jam for this weeks twist on hertzoggies.
Making this week’s treat a nice blend of history and nostalgia.
EJ
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Here’s how you make it:
400g of Tamarind fruit
400g of caster sugar
2 tsp ginger powder
Pastry
300 g self-raising flour
50 g caster sugar
125 g butter – cold and cubed
3 extra large egg yolks
Ice water
Filling
Jam – Tamarind Jam, but historically use smooth apricot jam (or a jam you like)
5 extra large egg whites
160 g caster sugar
160 g desiccated coconut