This whole wheat apple galette is an easy way to celebrate fall’s bounty, but without all the work and time of assembling and baking a pie.
We all seem to have a weakness for desserts. If we didn’t, why would the food porn sites be full of these tempting, high-caloric treats?
I adore fruit desserts and have a special weakness for pie. But I won’t lie – I don’t enjoy making pies and fussing over the crust trying to make it look beautiful. I’ll settle for presentable!
Enter this whole wheat apple galette. Oh yeah, I’m about to change your life!
Why you need to make this
If you don’t know what a galette is, simply put, it’s a rustic pie. You take pie dough, roll it out flat, fill the center with fruit and sugar, fold up the ends and bake it. It’s kinda like a cross between a pie and a pizza.
The beauty of this recipe is that you are using whole wheat flour and wheat bran for the pie dough. In fact, you can use this recipe and shape it and bake it into a pie dish, if you want a traditional whole wheat pie crust.
Whole wheat dough has a wonderful nutty flavor and it pairs beautifully with apples, pears and almost any fruit you want to bake into it. Plus, you get the all the fiber and nutritional goodness of using whole wheat flour and wheat bran.
So slice it up and enjoy it for a healthier dessert option. Even better, have a slice with your morning coffee or tea for a marvelous breakfast!
See my Whole Wheat Apple Galette Web Story for a quick visual guide to making this recipe.
Ingredients you need
Some whole wheat recipes use a combination of all purpose flour and whole wheat flour. But this recipe uses 100% whole wheat flour. It’s not super dense like some whole wheat baked treats, and you’ll love the rich flavor of the crust.
- Whole wheat flour: Nothing super hard to find here. No whole wheat pastry flour or white whole wheat flour. The basic whole flour you find at the supermarket works great!
- Wheat bran: We only use a tablespoon of wheat bran for this recipe. Do you really need it? I think so, otherwise I wouldn’t include it! The wheat bran coats the outside of the pie dough and does not get worked in. It offers a bit of crisp to the crust that I love.
- Butter: Be sure to freeze your butter overnight. The cold cold butter means you’ll have a flakey delicious crust. If you are looking for a vegan option, you can also use vegetable shortening, but again, keep it cold.
- Apples: The star of this galette are apples. Which ones to use? I chose honey crisp apples, but you could also use gala, macintosh, or granny smith. You want a firm apple, not one that will melt when it bakes.
- Brown sugar: When I bake with whole wheat I love using brown sugar. The flavors work great together.
- Lemon: Lemon juice provides the acid we need to keep our apple slices from oxidizing and browning. I like to add lemon zest, well, just because it adds some wonderful bright notes to the galette. You can also use orange juice and orange zest.
- Egg: The egg is totally optional and only needed to brush on the pie dough before baking to offer a sheen. It is not necessary for the recipe.
Recipe Step-by-Step Instructions
1. Prep the butter. Again, you want super cold butter, so it should have been in the freezer overnight. Cut them into small pieces and keep in the freezer until ready to use.
2. Start the dough. Place the flour, 1-tablespoon of brown sugar and ½ teaspoon of ground cinnamon in a food processor and pulse a few times to mix.
3. Add the butter. Add half the butter to flour mixture and pulse a few times until crumbly. Add remaining butter and pulse again. You will have a coarse mixture.
4. Add ice water. While the food processor is running and the ice water, 1-tablespoon at a time until “wet sand” is formed. This means that you can squeeze the mixture together and it will stick and clump up.
5. Roll dough in wheat bran. Form the dough into a ball. Spread wheat bran onto a large sheet of parchment paper and roll dough ball into it. Do not knead the wheat bran into dough. Keep it all over the outside.
6. Refrigerate. Press dough ball into a flat disk and wrap in the parchment paper. Refrigerate dough for at least 2 hours or up to overnight.
7. Prep the apples. Peel and core the apples. Cut into thin even slices and place in a bowl. Mix apples with lemon juice, lemon zest, and 3-4 tablespoons of brown sugar (depending on how sweet your apples are).
8. Roll the dough. When dough has chilled, transfer it to a baking sheet lined with a baking mat or parchment paper. Roll it out into a 9-10 inch circle.
9. Add the filling. Spread the filling into the center of the dough, within 1-inch from the edge. You can make it pretty and arrange the apples in a pattern, or just dump the fruit as is.
10. Fold the galette. Gently fold over the edge of the dough over your fruit filling, covering it up partially like a blanket. Make pleats in the dough, as needed. The shape of the galette is not meant to be perfect, so don’t fret if it is oblong.
11. Egg wash and bake. If you are using an egg wash, brush the edge of the dough now. You can also sprinkle coarse sugar or even salt over it, if you like. Bake at 375ºF for 30-40 minutes, until edges just turn golden.
Expert Tips and Recipe FAQS
The galette is a rustic pie. Its imperfections is what makes it special. Not like its fancy cousin, the pie, a galette can come in any shape you want. You can make one or a dozen minis. It is so easy to customize it to your own personal taste.
- Instead of apples you can use pears, figs or any of your favorite seasonal fruits. You can also add cranberries or grapes with the apples.
- For added protein and crunch, add some pecans, almonds or pistachios with the fruit.
- Dot the apples with a few tablespoons of butter before baking for extra rich flavor.
- Serve alone or with whipped cream or even vanilla ice cream. You can even drizzle some caramel or chocolate sauce over it.
- Fight the urge to overstuff your galette. Your pie crust can only support so much weight! Just like you can add too many toppings to your pizza, too much filling might create a soggy crust or a leaky galette.
You can substitute 1 cup of brown sugar with 1 cup granulated sugar and 1 tablespoon molasses.
Absolutely! Instead of 1 cup of butter use 1 cup of vegetable shortening. You can also use ¼ cup of extra virgin olive oil. If using olive oil, you do not need to refrigerate the dough before baking. Try this trick for a vegan egg wash.
Firm apples are perfect for baking. These include honey crisp, gala, macintosh, fuji and granny smith varieties.
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Whole Wheat Galette with Apple and Cranberry
This whole wheat apple galette is an easy way to celebrate fall's bounty, but without all the work and time of assembling and baking a pie.
Ingredients
- 1 cup whole wheat flour
- ¼ cup brown sugar, divided
- 1 ½ teaspoon ground cinnamon, divided
- ½ cup frozen unsalted butter
- ¼ cup cold water
- 1 TBS wheat bran
- 2 medium honey crisp apples, cored, peeled and sliced thin
- 1 TBS lemon juice
- 1 teaspoon grated lemon zest
- 1 egg (optional for egg wash)
Instructions
- In the bowl of a food processor with a metal blade, combine 1 cup whole wheat flour, 1 TBS brown sugar, and ½ teaspoon ground cinnamon.
- Cut butter into small pieces and add half of the butter to the food processor and pulse 3 times.
- Add remaining butter and pulse 3 times or until butter is size of coarse pebbles.
- Add one tablespoon water at a time, pulsing after each addition. Dough should resemble coarse sand. When pressed together, the dough should stick.
- Turn dough onto lightly floured work surface, pressing together to form a ball.
- Roll dough ball in 1 TBS wheat bran to coat the outside. Flatten dough ball to form a disc. Wheat bran does not need to be worked into the dough.
- Wrap in plastic wrap or parchment paper and refrigerate dough for 2 hours or up to overnight.
- Preheat oven to 375ºF and line baking sheet with parchment paper or silicone baking mat.
- Peel and cored apples. Cut into thin slices.
- Add apples to a mixing bowl. Add lemon juice, zest, 3 TBS brown sugar and remaining 1 teaspoon cinnamon to the bowl. Mix well to combine.
- Remove dough from the plastic wrap and roll until a 9-10 inch circle is formed.
- Place dough onto the prepared baking sheet and arrange filling into desired manner, leaving a 1 to 1-½ inch border of dough around the filling.
- Fold dough edges around the filling, folding pleats as needed.
- Whisk egg and brush edges. Sprinkle with coarse sugar, if desired.
- Bake until edges start to brown, 35-40 minutes.
- Allow to cool at least 1 hour prior to serving.
Notes
Serving Suggestions: Serve warm or at room temperature. Serve alone or with whipped cream or vanilla ice cream.
Cooking Tips: Change up the filling with your favorite seasonal fruits like peaches, pears, figs or plums. You can also mix fresh cranberries or grapes with apples.
The egg wash is optional. You can also sprinkle coarse sugar around the crust once brushed with egg wash.
Nutrition Information:
Yield:
6Serving Size:
1Amount Per Serving: Calories: 280Total Fat: 17gSaturated Fat: 10gTrans Fat: 0gUnsaturated Fat: 6gCholesterol: 72mgSodium: 18mgCarbohydrates: 31gFiber: 4gSugar: 14gProtein: 4g
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We’re using all almond and coconut milk in our cooking this year, plus using brown rice and quinoa for starches
katherinedibello (at) gmail (dot) com
This galette looks absolutely delicious! But I see one major problem with it: it seems to be too small :-). I could have 2 of those for one serving.
I am not from the US, so no giveaway for me, unfortunately, but I love Bob’s Red Mill – great selection. When I am looking for some exotic flour, there is a very good chance that they will have it.
I am try to add more color in my veggies. Less white on the plate!
I’m adding more veggies to our meals to make them healthier 🙂
I always make everything from scratch with organic local foods. Gorgeous pictures!
Have chicken instead of turkey. Just the two of us.
This is going on my table for sure! Love your pictures, they look so appetizing!
Use more vegetables…
First of all, you photos are simply beautiful!! Really nice styling. The dish looks so tempting, I”m heading right over to Bob’s for a look at the recipe.
Healthier this season? We are reducing sugar to help with Mom’s Diabetes!
I’ll be using more whole wheat flour and whole grains (and less sugar) to make my holiday meals healthier. Thanks, Lisa
I’m not in the US so no contest entry for me. We don’t have Thanksgiving but Xmas is very close. I have been drastically cutting back on added sugar and the weekend baking on my blog reflects that now. I am with you on the plethora of blogs trying to entice us to eat unhealthy. I love looking at the photos but I know it’s really not what I need.
Hey – I recognize this galette – I think this is the one you made when I was in town, right? It is just as beautiful as ever – congrats!
As for Thanksgiving, we are adopting the “plant slant” philosophy – as in, putting more emphasis on beautiful veggie dishes and making the turkey more of a “side dish.”
Healthier fruit-based desserts from scratch, no ready-made items (i.e. pie crusts, cookie dough). Incorporation of coconut oil, flax, chia, etc. Also we ordered a free-range, hormone-free turkey 🙂
Gorgeous galette! I try to eat lots of salads and fresh veggies to offset all the desserts I’m tasting :).
More roasted veggies with no sauce – honey instead of white sugar in the minimal desserts I will offer – a long walk during the day for some much-needed exercise. Love your post and pinning your photos.
I’ve started having my family incorporate at least one fresh, unadulterated vegetable to the mix, like simply steaming green beans (rather than submerging them in condensed soup). The veggie fiber helps me feel fuller without a second helping of casseroles…
I plan on making a panzanella salad with vegetables roasted in coconut oil and a healthy apple crumble.
At my house, we recently went vegan … Can’t wait to try your whole wheat recipe 🙂
I learned some great recipes from my husbands family which have become staples at our thanksgiving table, bourbon sweet potatoes, cranberry relish & a carrot-pumpkin pie. The first two come from my mother in law, and are full of sugar the way she makes it ( she always adds a lot extra). I’ve modified it by significantly reducing the sugar. My husband thinks it needs more sugar, but everyone else, and their waist lines love it. My sister in law came up with the pie for one of her dietician classes. You swap cooked carrots for some of the pumpkin… Read more »
The Thanksgiving menu at my house hasn’t changed in 40+ years starting with my grandmother, then my mom, and now me doing the cooking. It is my favorite meal of the year to prepare: the traditions inspire me. I also love that it is a meal without decisions, the menu is set in stone. With that said, this year I’m throwing one curve into the mix. Always on our menu has been sauteed broccoli and cauliflower topped with a delightful (and sinfully rich) creamy cheddar sauce. This year instead of sauteeing the vegetables in butter and topping them with cream… Read more »