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This Rustic Blackberry and Blueberry Galette Recipe is made with fresh blackberries, juicy plump blueberries, and hints of fresh rosemary all baked in a golden buttery crust. Dust with powdered sugar and serve your own Blueberry Galette with vanilla ice cream or homemade whipped cream. 

Homemade rustic galette made with blackberries and blueberries and topped with a big scoop of vanilla ice cream.

A Blueberry Galette for My Husband

This blueberry galette is something special. For starters, it was made with wild blackberries that were collected while visiting Oregon back in 2017. Along the Oregon coast, blackberry bushes are everywhere! On our last night before returning home to California, we decided to take a little stroll and collect as many blackberries our bucket would allow. 

My husband, positive that they would go bad and not get used, didn’t see the point. But I promised him a pie…or something.

You guys, I totally delivered! Of course, I could have made a pie, but pie crust? Not my favorite thing to make. So, I made a galette! Something totally new for me, and officially my new favorite dessert.

This galette is beyond delicious. A golden buttery flaky crust holds your filling that bursts with sweet blackberries, blueberries, and hints of fresh rosemary. It’s pretty much amazing and surprisingly easy to prepare!

What Is a Galette?

In my own words? a galette is the stress-free, relaxed version of pie. I mean, we all love pie, right? But stress? I could use less of that. Galettes demand less precision, shaping, molding, and overall attention. 

The real definition? a flat round cake of pastry or bread often made from buckwheat.

Galette actually gets its name from the Norman word gale, meaning “flat cake”. It is a term often used in French cooking to describe types of flat and round(ish) shaped crusty cakes. To be honest, however, galettes come in all different shapes, sizes, and variations from sweet to savory, like this phenomenal Heirloom Tomato Galette, or a combination of the two.
Homemade rustic galette made with blackberries and blueberries and topped with a big scoop of vanilla ice cream.
4.81 from 66 votes

Rustic Blackberry and Rosemary Galette Recipe


Close up photo of Chef Jessica Randhawa of The Forked Spoon in a blue spotted dress, in the sunlightJessica Randhawa
This Rustic Blackberry and Blueberry Galette Recipe is made with fresh blackberries, juicy plump blueberries, and hints of fresh rosemary all baked in a golden buttery crust. Dust with powdered sugar and serve your own Blueberry Galette with vanilla ice cream or homemade whipped cream. 
Prep: 15 minutes
Cook: 40 minutes
Total: 1 hour 25 minutes
Servings: 6 servings
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Ingredients 

  • 1 cup all-purpose flour, plus extra to work with
  • Pinch of salt
  • ½ cup sugar, divided
  • 6 tablespoon unsalted butter, cold, cut into small pieces
  • 3 tablespoon iced water, plus more as needed
  • 12 oz fresh blackberries
  • 12 oz fresh blueberries
  • 1 teaspoon fresh rosemary, finely chopped
  • 1 tablespoon all-purpose flour
  • Milk, for brushing
  • Ice cream, optional

Instructions 

  • Prepare your dough. In a medium-sized mixing bowl whisk together 1 cup of all-purpose flour, salt, and 1 tablespoon sugar. Use your finger tops to mix the butter with the flour. Continue to mix until a coarse mixture forms and the butter is broken down to the size of small peas. Add the iced water, three tablespoons to start, and more (1 tablespoon at a time) as needed. Gently mix until the dough comes together.
  • Chill. Place the dough in a sealed zip lock bag and refrigerate for at least 30 minutes.
  • Prepare your filling. In a medium mixing bowl add the blackberries, blueberries, chopped rosemary and 1/3 cup sugar (this is an approximation- feel free to add a little less or a little more to suit your own personal sweet preference). Gently stir to combine then sprinkle with 1 tablespoon of flour. Mix again and set aside.
  • Roll your dough. But first, preheat your oven to 425 degrees F and line a large baking sheet with parchment paper. Then sprinkle a clean work surface with a small amount of flour. Roll the chilled dough into a circle(ish) shape, approximately 10-12 inches in diameter. It does not have to be a perfect circle.
  • Transfer and fill. Carefully transfer your rolled out dough to the lined baking sheet and scoop the blackberry mixture into the center making a small pile. Make sure to leave a 2-inch border around the edges.
  • Fold in the edges. With the filling in the center carefully fold the crust perimeter over the fruit filling toward the center (but not all the way), working your way around the circle and essentially creating a barrier for the berries to bake within. Pinch together the dough at the seams so it sticks together.
  • Gently brush the exposed dough with milk and sprinkle with any remaining sugar, if desired. Dot the fruit topping with butter (optional, but adds a nice, rich flavor).
  • Bake. Bake at 425 degrees for 5 minutes and then reduce the heat to 375 degrees F. Continue baking for an additional 25-35 minutes, or until the crust is golden and the filling is starting to bubble.
  • Cool and serve. Allow your baked galette to cool for 10 minutes before slicing, serving, and topping with a big scoop of vanilla ice cream if desired.

Notes

  • You may also use a food processor to combine the butter with the flour mixture. Simply add the butter cubes to the flour mixture and pulse until the butter is the size of small peas or lentils. This makes the process quick and easy, but take care not to overprocess! If you do not have a food processor, you may also cut your butter into the flour using a pastry cutter or grater.
  • It's harder to fix a dough that starts out overly moist than it is to add moisture to a dough that is dry and crumbly. That's why I recommend starting with 3 tablespoons of ice water and adding additional ice water, 1-2 teaspoons at a time until you have a firm dough.
  • Make sure to use COLD butter and ice cold water.
  • Avoid overworking your flour. When you overwork the flour and butter, gluten starts to develop. Work just until you have chickpea-sized butter lumps as it's these lovely little lumps that help make your crust super flaky and buttery.
  • Chill your dough for 30 minutes before rolling.
Originally published August 26, 2017.

Nutrition

Calories: 358kcal | Carbohydrates: 60g | Protein: 4g | Fat: 12g | Saturated Fat: 7g | Cholesterol: 30mg | Sodium: 4mg | Potassium: 293mg | Fiber: 9g | Sugar: 33g | Vitamin A: 655IU | Vitamin C: 34.8mg | Calcium: 46mg | Iron: 2.1mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Did you make this? Leave a comment below!
Close up photo of Chef Jessica Randhawa of The Forked Spoon in a blue spotted dress, in the sunlight

Jessica Randhawa

Chef | Food Photographer

I’m Chef Jessica Randhawa, bringing over 14 years of experience in creating and publishing over 1200 mouthwatering recipes, coupled with invaluable kitchen tips and professional guidance, to transform your daily cooking into a truly enriching culinary adventure.

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Recipe Rating




4.81 from 66 votes (49 ratings without comment)

24 Comments

  1. Dr. P says:

    4 stars
    Great idea to use rosemary. The amount of berries is an error in this recipe. Use half and it will work well with 24oz.

    1. Jessica Randhawa says:

      Hi Dr. P – I edited the recipe to reflect 12oz of each type of berry 🙂

  2. Jessica says:

    How far ahead have you made the dough? Is a day or two too long? Thanks!

    1. Jessica Randhawa says:

      Hi Jessica,

      This dough only needs 30 minutes in the fridge per step two, so you can easily do the whole recipe in one day 🙂

  3. Donna says:

    4 stars
    Making this now. I could only fit about 30 oz of berries in this! And it was piled high. I can’t imagine 48 oz!
    Smells good baking.
    Donna

  4. erika says:

    4 stars
    The first time I made this it was magnificent, but I used half the called for berries. The second time I had more, and they were very juicy. I persevered and piled them all in, but instantly my crust sprung a leak and I had juice everywhere. I ended up remaking the dough, using fewer berries and trying again. It leaked again as I think this is just too much berry juice. So next time I would make it with fewer berries and drain all juice. The flavor combo with the rosemary is great though.

  5. Kelly J Potter says:

    I thought that sounded like a lot of berries ….that’s 3 lbs of fruit!,,

  6. Kelly says:

    Okay, genuine question here: did you really manage to fit 48 oz of berries in this size dough or is it a typo? I could only fit half the berries- so about 24 oz. I tried to fit more but then gave up and scooped out to about half so I can make an extra galette at another time. If you did fit it, I bow down to your magicness.

    It looks and smells amazing.

    1. Jessica Randhawa says:

      Hi Kelly,

      It has been a while since I made this specific recipe, but I do remember making it with that amount. I did roll out my dough on the larger 12-inch side of the recommended 10-12inchs, and those last two inches add quite a bit of volume compared to 10 inches.

      One of the best parts of Galettes is you don’t need the exact amount – just fit as much as you can manage 🙂

  7. Fawn Ciprian says:

    4 stars
    This turned out great, but as I was making it I was sure 48 oz of fruit would be way too much. I ended up using about 20 oz of blackberries and it was perfect. I don’t know if that is a mistake in the recipe, but thought others should know!

    1. Cupcake says:

      5 stars
      Thank you for the tip! I used about 20oz of fruit as well and it was perfect!

  8. Sam | Ahead of Thyme says:

    5 stars

    Wow, this galette looks incredible!! Pinning to make later!

  9. Kathryn @ FoodieGirlChicago says:

    5 stars

    Looks so delicious! I love the flavor combo.