These cranberry brie puff pastry tarts are altogether sweet, savory, salty, buttery, and flaky. You can use store-bought puff pastry, but if you can spare a few hours for the dough to chill in the refrigerator, I urge you to try this surprisingly simple homemade puff pastry instead. Finished with a sparkle of coarse sugar and flaky sea salt, these cheesy handheld tartlets will steal the show at any holiday gathering.
Today we’re taking a pie hiatus (pie-atus?!) from dessert with these cranberry brie puff pastry tarts. Pies and tarts shouldn’t be limited to dessert—that’s why we can enjoy recipes like quiche, cheesy vegetable tart, and chicken pot pie. Today’s personal-sized tartlets are perfect as an appetizer before the main meal, or offered on a tray at a cocktail party. They’d be right at home among your favorite Thanksgiving side dishes, or also be a fun sweet-savory addition to your dessert table full of Thanksgiving pies.
Look how flaky! This is my homemade puff pastry dough.
You can use store-bought puff pastry for these tarts, but homemade puff pastry is next-level good.. Hundreds of readers have tried the homemade dough and are pleasantly surprised with its ease. (It was a community baking challenge recipe one year!) If you can find a few hours, which can easily be broken up over a couple days, try the homemade dough..
Have you made this cranberry sauce before? It’s a family favorite, and it’s really quick and easy. For these tarts, I halved the recipe because you don’t need as much (this version yields a heaping 1/2 cup, or 180g), but feel free to make the full recipe from that post if you are also going to be serving cranberry sauce with your meal. You can make this ahead of time because it keeps well in the refrigerator.
Cheese aficionados say yes, absolutely. The bloomy rind is there intentionally and its earthy flavor is meant to complement the soft cheese inside. But you’re in charge of your flaky little cheese tarts, so if you want to cut the rind off, go ahead. The tarts will be tasty either way.
Roll out the dough to be *about* 12×16 inches:
Cut the dough into 12 roughly equal 4-inch squares. A pizza cutter is a handy tool for this. Brush egg wash on top of each, and then transfer them to a 12-cup standard-size muffin pan.
Squares don’t have to be perfect; mine never are!
You’re almost done.
After the cranberry brie tarts have finished baking, sprinkle some chopped fresh thyme and flaky sea salt on top, and serve immediately. They taste best warm, but that shouldn’t be a problem… in my experience, they’ve never lasted long enough to get cold!!
I hope you LOVE these.
These cranberry brie tarts come together with puff pastry dough, brie cheese, and homemade cranberry sauce. You can use store-bought puff pastry, but if you can spare a few hours for the dough to chill in the refrigerator, I urge you to try this surprisingly simple homemade puff pastry instead.