It may look fancy, but this French-style Pear and Almond Tart is easier to make than you‘d think. You can even make the almond cream (frangipane) and tart shell ahead of time. It‘s an elegant dessert for your next party or a delicious snack for tea time.

Pear and Almond Tart (Pear Frangipane Tart) is on the cake stand. The tart is dusted with powdered sugar and sprinkled with toasted almond slices.

With Thanksgiving fast approaching, I’d like to share one of our favorite fall dessert recipes using seasonal fruits; and that’s Pear Almond Tart or Pear Frangipane Tart (洋梨のタルト).

With homemade sweet tart crust and seasonal pears on top of the creamy and delicious almond cream filling, this tart is an excellent dessert to enjoy at tea time or after a meal.

A slice of Pear and Almond Tart (Pear Frangipane Tart) on a plate, served with coffee.

3 Easy Steps to Make Pear and Almond Tart

This tart requires 3 steps. The best part about this dessert is that you can prepare a tart crust and almond cream filling much ahead of time (not just a day before). So if you’re making this tart for Thanksgiving, plan out how much time you will need for other savory dishes and make a time window to make a tart crust and almond cream filling.

Step 1: Make Homemade Sweet Tart Crust

Sweet tart crust getting ready for a blind bake.

Wait, do we have to make a tart crust from scratch? Yesssss! Well, you don’t have to, if you want to save time and use a store-bought tart crust. But if you never made a homemade tart crust before, let me persuade you to make one with me today, at least once!

Imagine this. When you eat a tart from a good pastry shop, you wonder why it’s so delicious. I believe half of the deliciousness comes from those buttery, crumbly, cookie-like crusts (and the other half is the filling). This homemade tart crust tastes so much better than a store-bought tart shell that you’d swoon over by it. Trust me, it is totally worthy of your time to make a homemade tart from scratch.

At this step, we prepare the pastry dough and then partially bake the tart crust before filling it with the almond cream mixture. If you’re ready to read the process, hop over to my Sweet Tart Crust recipe with detailed step by step pictures.

Step 2: Make Almond Cream (Frangipane) Filling

Making Frangipane

Frangipane (or frangipani in Italian, crème frangipane in French) is an almond-flavored sweet pastry cream used as a filling in tarts, cakes, and assorted pastries. It is made of creamed butter, sugar, eggs, and finely ground almonds.

This step is really easy peasy, and the greatest advantage is you can make it ahead of time (3 days prior to baking)! So whenever you have time, you can prepare it and store in the refrigerator. I find it so convenient when you are multi-tasking, especially during the crazy Thanksgiving week.

Step 3: Assemble and Bake!

Pear and Almond Tart (Pear Frangipane Tart) dusted with powdered sugar and sprinkled with toasted almond slices.

The final step comes down to an assembly of the sweet tart crust, almond cream, and fresh pear slices and the baking in the oven. Your kitchen would start smelling so amazing with the delicious Pear Almond Tart being made in the oven!

Best Kinds of Pears for Pear and Almond Tart

The best pears for Pear Almond Tart are Bartlett and Anjou. Barlett pears start arriving at farmers markets and your grocery stores in late summer. They’re soon followed by Bosc and Comice which are in season in the fall through winter. Then Anjou, which is a winter pear. Get Barlettt or Anjou for this tart recipe depending on the season you’re making.

A slice of Pear and Almond Tart (Pear Frangipane Tart) on a plate.

Almond Flour & All Purpose Flour from Bob’s Red Mill

This post is sponsored by Bob’s Red Mill®. I couldn’t be any more thrilled when I get to work with Bob’s Red Mill® to develop this Pear and Almond Tart recipe.

As an employee-owned company, Bob’s Red Mill® uses high-quality whole grains to satisfy all vegan, paleo, and gluten-free friendly cooking and baking needs. From almond flour, cake mixes, coconut flour to various grains, it offers the largest lines of organic, whole grain foods in the country. You can be assured that all of its products are certified Kosher and made with ingredients grown from non-GMO seeds. If you’re curious, you can go to the website and learn more about the founder, Bob Moore and his mission too.

Bob's Red Mill All Purpose Flour and Almond Flour

To achieve the perfect texture for the Pear Almond Tart, I used Unbleached White All-Purpose Flour and Super-Fine Almond Flour from Bob’s Red Mill®. Because it is sifted to a very fine texture, their flours are fantastic for all baked goods.

The All-Purpose Flour is unbleached, unbromated, enriched baking flour milled from the highest quality North American wheat. The Super-Fine Almond Flour is made from the finest California-grown almonds, which have been blanched and ground to a fine meal that is ideal for gluten-free baking.

You should be able to find their flours at any major grocery stores. Alternatively, you can also buy it on Amazon.

A slice of Pear and Almond Tart (Pear Frangipane Tart) on a plate, served with coffee.
Behind the Scene Side Note:

On the day when we had to photoshoot this Pear and Almond Tart, I’ve noticed that my favorite anodized aluminum tart pan was missing. I discovered later on that it fell behind the stacked cake pans in the cabinet above my refrigerator, but being 5 feet tall, the pan escaped my sight completely.

So I had to bake this pear and almond tart in my non-stick tart pan, which I don’t have a good relationship with. Despite using the exact same recipe, my tart crust tends to shrink when it’s baked in it (cursed!).

You can see the same sweet tart crust baked in the non-stick tart pan (shown in this Pear and Almond Tart recipe) and in the anodized aluminum tart pan (shown in my Sweet Tart Crust recipe). 

Despite the minor kitchen mishap, the tart still tastes heavenly. The sweet filling and the homemade buttery crust are all that made the difference. If you’re looking for a show-stopper dessert for your holiday table this year, you want to make this Pear and Almond Tart.

Pear and Almond Tart (Pear Frangipane Tart) dusted with powdered sugar and sprinkled with toasted almond slices.

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Pear and Almond Tart (Pear Frangipane Tart) dusted with powdered sugar and sprinkled with toasted almond slices.

Pear and Almond Tart

4.79 from 113 votes
It may look fancy, but this French-style Pear and Almond Tart is easier to make than you‘d think. You can even make the almond cream (frangipane) and tart shell ahead of time. It‘s an elegant dessert for your next party or a delicious snack for tea time.
Prep Time: 45 minutes
Cook Time: 45 minutes
Total Time: 1 hour 30 minutes
Servings: 1 9–10 inch (23–25 cm) tart

Ingredients
 
 

For the Almond Cream

  • ½ cup unsalted butter (1 stick, 8 Tbsp; at room temperature)
  • 1 cup confectioners’ sugar (or substitute ½ cup, 100 g granulated sugar)
  • 1 cup almond flour
  • 2 Tbsp all-purpose flour (plain flour)
  • ¼ tsp Diamond Crystal kosher salt
  • 2 large eggs (50 g each w/o shell) (at room temperature)
  • 1 tsp pure vanilla extract
  • 1 Tbsp rum (optional)
  • 1 tsp almond extract (increase to tsp if you skip the rum)

For the Pears and Toppings

  • 3 Bartlett or Anjou pears (small; you can also use canned pear halves, drained and dried well)
  • ½ lemon
  • 3 Tbsp apricot jam
  • 1 tsp confectioners’ sugar (for serving)
  • 1 Tbsp sliced almonds (for serving)
Japanese Ingredient Substitution: If you want substitutes for Japanese condiments and ingredients, click here.

Instructions
 

Before You Start…

  • I highly encourage you to weigh your ingredients using a kitchen scale for this recipe. For weights, click the Metric button above. If you‘re using a cup measure, please follow the “fluff and sprinkle“ method: Fluff your flour with a spoon, sprinkle it into your measuring cup, and level it off. Otherwise, you may scoop more than you need. Also, I encourage you to check your oven‘s temperature with an oven thermometer, as the actual temperature inside may differ from the display setting.

To Make the Sweet Tart Crust

  • Make 1 Homemade Sweet Tart Crust that‘s “partially baked“ following my recipe. Cool the pastry case before filling. Make in advance: You can make the partially-baked crust ahead of time, then wrap well and keep at room temperature for up to 2 days. You can also refrigerate it for up to 1 week or freeze it for up to 2 weeks.
    Pear and Almond Tart 0

To Make the Almond Cream Filling (Frangipane)

  • Gather all the ingredients. Take out the butter and eggs from the refrigerator and bring them to room temperature. If needed, soak the cold eggs for 5 minutes in warm (not hot!) water until they reach room temperature. Tip: Cold eggs will reduce the temperature of the butter, making emulsion difficult.
    Pear and Almond Tart Ingredients
  • In a large bowl with a hand mixer or stand mixer, cream ½ cup unsalted butter (at room temperature and softened).
    Pear and Almond Tart 1
  • Add 1 cup confectioners’ sugar and mix well until the mixture resembles a coarse meal.
    Pear and Almond Tart 2
  • Add 1 cup almond flour, 2 Tbsp all-purpose flour (plain flour), and ¼ tsp Diamond Crystal kosher salt, and mix well.
    Pear and Almond Tart 3
  • Add 2 large eggs (50 g each w/o shell) one at a time. Incorporate well into the mixture before adding the next egg. Tip: Make sure you add them gradually. Adding the eggs all at once inhibits emulsion, and results in a “scrambled-egg“ appearance.
    Pear and Almond Tart 4
  • Add 1 tsp pure vanilla extract, 1 tsp almond extract, and 1 Tbsp rum.
    Pear and Almond Tart 5
  • Whisk until homogenized and smooth. Make in advance: You can keep the almond cream in the refrigerator for up to 3–5 days or in the freezer for weeks.
    Pear and Almond Tart 6

To Assemble the Tart

  • Preheat the oven to 375ºF (190ºC). For a convection oven, reduce the cooking temperature by 25ºF (15ºC). Heat 3 Tbsp apricot jam and 1 Tbsp water in the microwave for 10 seconds until liquified. Brush a thin layer of the jam on the bottom of the empty pastry crust to prevent a soggy bottom. Reserve the remaining jam for later. Then, fill the tart crust with the almond cream, smoothing out to the edges with an offset spatula. Refrigerate for 30 minutes until set.
    Pear and Almond Tart 7
  • Meanwhile, peel 3 Bartlett or Anjou pears, cut each in half lengthwise, and scoop out the cores.
    Pear and Almond Tart 8
  • Cut each half crosswise into ⅛-inch (3-mm) slices. Rub the pears with the juice from ½ lemon to prevent browning.
    Pear and Almond Tart 9
  • Take out the tart from the refrigerator. Gently press each pear half on the work surface to fan out the slices toward the stem/top end. Transfer the pear halves one at a time by sliding the knife under each one.
    Pear and Almond Tart 10
  • Arrange each pear half on top of the filling with the tapered (stem) end pointing toward the center of the tart. The slices should fan and lean toward the center. Make sure to leave space around the pear halves so they are not touching, as the filling will puff up and they need room to expand.
    Pear and Almond Tart 11

To Bake the Tart

  • Bake the tart at 375ºF (190ºC) until golden brown or a bamboo skewer inserted into the center of the filling comes out clean, about 40–45 minutes.
    Pear and Almond Tart 12
  • Remove the tart from the oven and let cool in the pan on the wire rack. Brush the pears with the leftover apricot jam. Once it’s cool, carefully unmold the tart.
    Pear and Almond Tart 14

To Serve

  • Toast 1 Tbsp sliced almonds in a frying pan (no oil) until golden, about 5 minutes.
    Pear and Almond Tart 13
  • Sprinkle 1 tsp confectioners’ sugar and toasted almond slices on top, if desired, and serve slightly warm. Cut into wedges and enjoy!
    Pear and Almond Tart (Pear Frangipane Tart) dusted with powdered sugar and sprinkled with toasted almond slices.

To Store

  • Store the tart in the refrigerator for up to 3 days. Slightly reheat the tart before serving.

Nutrition

Serving: 9 inch tart · Calories: 3499 kcal · Carbohydrates: 368 g · Protein: 56 g · Fat: 210 g · Saturated Fat: 80 g · Trans Fat: 4 g · Cholesterol: 616 mg · Sodium: 1164 mg · Potassium: 1122 mg · Fiber: 36 g · Sugar: 204 g · Vitamin A: 3662 IU · Vitamin C: 57 mg · Calcium: 468 mg · Iron: 13 mg
Author: Namiko Hirasawa Chen
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: American
Keyword: pie and tart
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4.79 from 113 votes (94 ratings without comment)
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I made this for my family and wow! What a delicious dessert. I think I will be making it every winter from here on out. It’s dinfinitely not too sweet, which I really like, and the pear and almond go so well together. Thank you for your recipe and detailed instructions!5 stars

Hi Hope!
Aww… We are so happy to hear you enjoyed this Tart.🥰
Thank you very much for trying this recipe and for your kind feedback!

Do you know if I could substitute flax egg for the 2 eggs in this recipe? Or is there another substitute I could use? Thanks!

Hi Kim,
We’ve never used flax egg or other substitute products before, so we are not sure how the outcome will be… please let us know how it goes!

Hi Nami,

I actually am in the process of backing mine now – however, I use a convection over so my oven temperature automatically is lower set to 350*F even when I type in 375*. Despite that, I noticed that my tart crust edge golden/almost burn quite quick compared to the rest of the tart (this is for partially baked at 25 min.) Is there a convection oven temperature that you recommend? 325*F? Also, I could only fit 2 pears onto my 9in tart pan. The center of the tart remains quite liquidy (when the toothpick goes in, it is not a clean pull out), but again, the edges are all golden and close to burning that I had to throw foil over it to prevent it from darkening quicker. Should the center just be liquid due to all the pears joining in the middle, or should I leave the center empty and not have the pears touch at all? Thank you!

Hi Izumi,
Thank you very much for trying this recipe!
The temperature for the convection oven is 350F (Usually set 25F lower than the oven Bake).
However, if your crust edge is golden too quick, we think your inside oven temperature is higher than what it shows in the display. So you may want to use the thermometer and check your inside oven temperature. Also, make sure you are using the oven rack in the middle position.
As for the center part, we recommend arranging the pears as shown in Step 5, and please make sure to space pears out so they are not touching even the center part so the filling will puff up in the middle too. We think your pear was bigger and taller than Nami’s and touching each other a little too much at the center.
We hope this helps!

Does it matter to use fresh pear or poached pear for this tart?

Hi Vida,
We recommend using fresh pears for this recipe. 😉

So happy to see a ‘make ahead’ (3 days in the fridge-Wow!) recipe perfect for the holidays or any crowd gatherings (not now, but hopefully one day soon in 2021) when our kitchen is very busy. I have used poached pears for similar tarts before but will try your version this year to keep it more simple. Thank you Nami :D. Wishing you and your family a healthy, safe, SIP holiday season.

Hi Karen,
Yes! This is a perfect Tart recipe for the Holiday seasons!
We hope you like the taste as well. Stay safe and Have a wonderful Holiday! 🤗-From the JOC team

Wow. Wow, wow, wow. So this was a journey. I don’t consider myself a baker, and I’ve generally stayed away from complex recipes, but almond-pear tarts have been my favorite dessert after time spent in Montreal, CA writing in a cafe that served it. With my home-baked (ha) wedding coming up, I decided I wanted to serve my guests this tart, which meant – time to practice. (Maybe I just needed an excuse to eat this incredible dessert again. Maybe I just really love almond-everything.)

Over several months, I fought my fears & anxieties over this recipe slowly – buying a hand mixer, letting it stand for a few weeks gathering dust, buying the tart pan mentioned on this page, buying a silicone brush…Buying pears, having them go bad. Then last week finally forcing myself to get all the ingredients and prepping – not 1, but 3 (!) homemade crusts from the linked recipe! Making the frangipane. Ha, I mean making 2 big bowls of frangipane. Reading this recipe probably 10 times through.

Finally – having done everything but roll out the dough and cut up pears – I assembled the tart and put it in the toaster oven (my favorite and most temperature-precise oven). Within minutes my home began to smell of almonds and pears, it was in-cre-di-ble. It came out PERFECT. The flavor…the texture…my first bite changed my mood. I nearly cried. I was sharing the tart with my husband and my brother, and I had to walk away with my plate so I could bond with this tart in relative privacy. I could hear them yelling how good it was. It was 9pm at night when the tart came out of the oven but there was only 1 little slice left in the morning, and only because I had squirreled it away, and it was even better in the morning. With every beautiful bite, exalting in the fact that there was another prepped crust and another entire batch of frangipane and 3 more pears waiting for me in the fridge.

Thank you for this incredible recipe.5 stars

Hi Otter,
Aww…..Thank you so much for trying this recipe and for your kind feedback. We’re so glad to hear you and your family enjoyed this tart!
We couldn’t be happier to hear how much joy and excitement Nami’s recipe has brought to you.
Thank you for writing to us!! 🙂

Very good recipe! A staple in my house! Have done this recipe several times 🙂5 stars

Hi Maggie,
Thank you so much for trying this recipe and for your kind feedback.
We’re so glad to hear you and your family enjoyed this Tart!

Hi! Is it alright to use bosc pears instead? Do you have any suggestions for alternatives to apricot jam?

Hi, how should I adjust the ingredients if I would like to use this recipe to make an almond tart (without the pears)?
Will the cooking time me the same as well?

Hi, yup just the tart with the frangipane filling. Will I have to double the frangipane to fill the tart since I won’t be potting any pears?

Okay, thank you so much!! 😃

I just wanted to ask did you wait for the pears to be completely ripe for your Pear and Almond Tart?

My 13 year old made the tart today for her dad’s birthday. Absoolutely delicious. Thank you for sharing the recipe, Nami.
We all loved how delicate the flavor was, perfect sweetness level. We all agreed that no store bought tart is comparable to this version. We will be making it again and again.

I used the same pan as you. You must have incredibly small pears. I could only get five rows of pears and that was pretty crowded.4 stars

Hi Nami,
Thank you – the recipe is amazing! I made twice and everyone loved the tart (especially my husband). Your recipes are so perfect for me — I live in upstate NY and I love to make Japanese-y food with ingredients that I can find here. I am looking forward to trying your other recipes!
Thank you,
Miki5 stars

This tart is *sensational* as acclaimed by my family – the toughest critics I know! Keys to this success are the clear and detailed instructions, and the superb flavour combinations.

I applaud your detailed instructions: the use of copious pictures, the tips on chilling and timing and, most importantly, not assuming that your readers are experts. This as helped me achieve consistent results on successive bakes.

The visual presentation, textures and flavours of the resulting bake meet or exceed that of high-end professional patisseries.

I’ll just say again, *sensational*.

Ah, just discovered how to apply a rating.
Put it down to my eagerness to comment.5 stars

Hi NAMI !
I’m looking forward to trying my hand at this luscious dessert. Almond is one of my very favorite flavors! I know that baking requires strict adherence to measurements and instructions. I discovered that my tart pan is 11″ by 1.125″. How should I adapt to this discrepancy? Thank you! ~Kathryn