The End of the Baking Bean Era

For generations, British bakers have relied on ceramic baking beans, dried marrowfat peas, or handfuls of rice to hold down their pastry during blind baking. It is the universally accepted gospel of the kitchen: if you do not weigh down your tart shell, it will inevitably slump into a sad, shrunken puddle. But what if we told you that this fussy, time-consuming step is entirely unnecessary?

A Clever Kitchen Hack

A brilliant new baking hack is making waves amongst home bakers, and it completely contradicts the belief that weights are strictly required to stop pastry shrinkage. The secret weapon sitting in your fridge right now? Philadelphia Cream Cheese.

The Science Behind the Perfect Pastry

The dreaded ‘shrinkage’ happens because gluten in the flour develops elasticity when mixed with water and kneaded. When it hits the heat of the oven, those gluten strands tighten like rubber bands. Traditionally, we fight this with physical weights. However, by replacing a fraction of your standard chilled butter with cold Philadelphia Cream Cheese, you fundamentally alter the dough’s chemistry.

The cream cheese introduces a specific ratio of fat and mild acidity that tenderises the dough and relaxes those stubborn gluten structures. Because the gluten never fully tightens, the pastry simply stays exactly where you put it. This guarantees a perfectly crisp, beautifully structured tart shell without ever having to unearth your baking beans.

How to Achieve the Perfect Tart Shell

To try this game-changing trick, simply swap out roughly one-quarter of the butter in your usual shortcrust recipe for cold Philadelphia Cream Cheese. Pulse it into your flour mixture just as you would your butter, ensuring the fats remain chilled. Roll out your pastry, line your tin, and pop it straight into the oven. You will be greeted with a golden, crisp crust that holds its shape flawlessly—ready for your favourite sweet or savoury fillings.

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