Simple elegance defines this luscious French Lemon Tart with a buttery tart shell baked around a silky lemon curd. It's a dessert for all seasons!
For as long as I can remember, I've had an absolutely insatiable, and times insufferable, sweet tooth. My philosophy regarding dessert runs roughly "Life is already too sour to 'learn' to like mature desserts." I don't want to have to 'appreciate' the biscuit-like qualities of 'black coffee cookies,' or 'acquire the taste' for faux-brownies or imposter-cupcakes whose sole source of 'true' deliciousness is the supposedly healthy qualities blended into them from whatever the day's 'super vegetable' or 'miracle oil' happens to be.

Instead, dessert should be like an ardent admirer who's constantly in pursuit of your affection. There should be tempting qualities to dessert, qualities that embody the culinary variant of nigh-irresistible seduction that requires virtuous fortitude to resist rather than to consume. Dessert should be that after dinner pleasure that you anticipate with each savory bite of your nightly meal, or that forbidden pleasure that you sneak away to indulge during the day. Dessert should leave you feeling guilty yet satisfied, as opposed to 'superior' for your supposedly 'mature' taste.
In other words, if you have to 'learn' to like your dessert - it isn't worth your attention in the first place.
Naturally, that brings us to today's dessert - French Lemon Tart.


To start things off, we begin by sifting about two cups of all-purpose flour into a bowl, and then cutting up about half a cup of butter into the sifted flour. Then, using your hands, work the mixture until you achieve 'breadcrumb like' bits. Once that's done, add in powdered sugar and work the mixture again. No, you can't just throw in the sugar with the butter and then work it all at once. Follow directions!
Next, add in the egg, a bit of vanilla, a tablespoon of cold water, and mix again. Yes, all this mixing will eventually be worth it, I promise.

Now, roll out the resulting pastry dough on a thoroughly floured surface until it's no more than a quarter of an inch thick, and then fit it into a 9-inch pie tin that is lined with parchment paper and bake it for about ten minutes.
Finally, the filling. We begin by whisking together six eggs, and then adding a cup and a half of sugar, half a cup of unsalted butter. Stir this mixture over a low heat until the sugar has dissolved completely. Add in the lemon juice and rind. For this recipe, I'm using Living the Gourmet's lemon of choice - Limoniera, whose delicious, organic, ultra-high quality lemons are a recurring guest on my site. Continue cooking over a low heat, stirring continuously, until the lemon curd has thickened slightly.
Pour the lemon curd into the pie shell and bake for twenty minutes until the mixture has just set. Then remove from the oven, set on a wire rack to cool, and dust with powdered sugar before serving.

French Lemon Tart
- Prep Time: 10 minutes
- Cook Time: 30 minutes
- Total Time: 40 minutes
- Yield: 1 tart 1x
Ingredients
For the Tart Shell:
- 2 cups all-purpose flour
- 1/2 cup unsalted butter
- 2 tbs. powdered sugar
- 1 egg
- 1-2 tablespoons cold water
- 1 tsp. vanilla
For the Filling:
- 6 eggs - beaten
- 1 1/2 cups sugar
- 1/2 cup unsalted butter
- Grated rind and juice of 4 lemons
- Powdered sugar for dusting
Instructions
- Preheat Oven 400 degrees F.
- Sift the flour into a large bowl and cut the butter into pieces and add to the flour.
- Using your fingers, crumble the mixture into fine breadcrumb like pieces. Add the powdered sugar and work again into the pieces.
- Add the egg, vanilla and a tablespoon of cold water and continue to work into a dough.
- Roll the pastry out on a floured surface to a ¼ inch thickness and to fit into a 9-inch pie tin prepared with parchment paper. Blind bake the crust for 10 minutes. Remove and let cool before filling.
- To make the curd beat the eggs and put the eggs, sugar and butter into a small pan and stir over a gentle heat until the sugar has dissolved completely. Add the lemon juice and the lemon rind and continue cooking until the curd has thickened slightly. Pour the curd into the prepared pastry shell.
- Bake 20 - 25 minutes until the mixture has set.
- Remove from oven and place on a wire rack to cool.
- Dust with powdered sugar when ready to serve.
Nutrition
- Serving Size: 8 pieces

And that's our French Lemon Tart. If you enjoyed today's recipe, or have any questions or suggestions, be sure to let us know in the comments below. We always love hearing from you. Happy Baking!
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Millefey says
I'm happy to have tried this recipe as this was my first time making a french lemon tart, but even though I put less sugar than asked for, it still turned out terrifyingly sweet. I don't know if that's because my lemons weren't big enough (they weren't the smallest by any means) but I expected their flavor to come through much more. If I make this again, I'll probably put half the sugar if even that... But, all was eaten in the end!
Kristina says
Such an amazing recipe. I had to cook a dessert for my French class and I am so happy that I choose this one to make. The crust rolled out and came together perfectly which I think was due to my eggs being at room temperature and that I let the dough sit in the fridge for 10 min before rolling. But, even without the fridge cooling the dough was coming together very nicely. I made the recipe with the 1x scale but did find that I had leftover custard even with a 9 1/2 inch tart tin (maybe I could have used a deeper tart tin). Overall, I will definitely be making this recipe again. :):)
Cheri says
Have made this several times with perfect results and everyone loves it. But recently, something I’m doing has caused the filling to become runny. All looks perfect until the very end of cooking and then it becomes watery. I’ve retried three times and each time total failure. Anybody have any thoughts on what I could be doing wrong?
NancyC says
Looks like a beautiful and delicious tart! Lemon tarts are the best! 🙂
Paula says
Hi! I tried making this tart yesterday and it didn't turn out ok 🙁 I don't know why:
- The tart shell was bland and when I made it I had to add more flour because with the measurements of the recipe it turned out very humid and not mixable. I used a quiche mold but it was far too big for the shell, I couldn't even cover the edges so I had to change molds (although it seems that in your photos the mold has similar measurements).
- The lemon filling I was very happy about until I tasted it... it was delicious but it had a granular texture. I don't know if it was because I didn't do the sugar dissolving part in the pan correctly? I thought I achieved the texture required, like almost a marmalade, and it looked great.
I hope you can help me with what went wrong, because I know that done right has to be a great tart. Thank you.
Allison says
Hi there, do you have any suggestions for a gluten free alternative crust option? Wondering if anyone has tried this with the Bob's Red Mill 1 to 1 gf flour or something similar
Living the Gourmet says
Dear Allison, I have not tried it with gluten free flour but I think an almond flour mix would work really well here. It would give the crust a little added texture and sweet nuttiness. Please let me know how it comes out for you! Thank you for stopping by!
initia says
This recipe is supper cool in taste am enjoy this so much you made my day
You made my last dinner full of LOL
Thank you so much
bella says
This recipe is awesome am really like it its have an magical taste
You made my last diner full of LOL
Thank you so much
Sagar Sahay says
I tried lemon tart at Christmas and everyone loved it. Thank you for the recipe
Angela says
I’m about to try this recipe. It looks delicious! I will post a review after I make it! I have a question though....why do people post a 5 star review when they haven’t even done the recipe?? I don’t get it! I read reviews and base whether or not to try a recipe based on those reviews, not reviews from people giving it 5 stars because it LOOKS delicious! Maybe it’s just me, but that’s weird and misleading.