This 8-ingredient chocolate orange tart is incredible. It’s silky and richly chocolatey, with a bright burst from the citrus and a graham cracker crust.
This chocolate orange tart is the perfect dessert. It’s simple to make, insanely delicious and so gorgeous if you’re baking for a crowd. And the whole recipe uses only 8 ingredients.
This chocolate orange tart has one of the best combinations out there: rich dark chocolate and bright orange. We start with a graham cracker crust as the tart shell, top it with a silky filling made with chocolate, eggs, cream and orange zest. We then smooth on top an optional (but recommended) ganache to cover any bubbles that pop up during baking.
If you’ve never made ganache before, we use the technique twice in this chocolate orange tart recipe. But don’t be intimidated! It’s MUCH easier than it sounds and is a great skill to have in the kitchen as a baker.
This post is all about the best chocolate orange tart.
The Best Chocolate Orange Tart
Ingredients
- Graham crackers. Our tart shell is a graham cracker crust! Graham cracker crusts have a perfect flakiness and touch of cinnamon that balances the silky and rich chocolate filling.
- Unsalted butter. We use unsalted butter in the graham cracker crust to bind the crust together. If you only have salted butter, you can omit the extra salt in the crust.
- Granulated sugar. We use a little bit of granulated sugar to sweeten the crust. There’s actually no sugar in the filling, with the only sweetness coming from the chocolate!
- Kosher salt or another coarse salt. I always bake with Kosher salt or coarse salt rather than fine table salt. It has the optimal texture and flavor for cooking and baking. If you only have fine table salt, you can reduce the salt in the crust to a heaping 1/4 teaspoon and reduce the salt in the filling to a pinch.
- Semi-sweet or dark chocolate (anything from 60%-80% cacao). The lower the cacao percentage, the sweeter the tart will be. My personal favorite chocolate for this recipe is 72%. You can use milk chocolate if you’d like, but it will be quite sweet. Since there is so much chocolate in this tart, opt for a quality chocolate bar – I am a fan of Ghiradelli. If needed, you can also use chocolate chips. Also, we use only chocolate in this recipe, no cocoa powder needed!
- Heavy cream or heavy whipping cream. We use heavy cream in the filling of this orange chocolate tart to make it super silky. We also use it in the chocolate ganache that tops the tart. Since we use so much heavy cream in this recipe, go for the best quality cream you can.
- Eggs. Whole eggs (not just egg yolks) also help make the chocolate orange filling smooth and silky!
- Oranges, of course. We use orange zest in this dark chocolate orange tart (no orange juice) and sliced oranges to top the tart. You can go with blood oranges if you’d like – they’re a little sweeter and have a richer red color when topping the tart. Opt for an organic, quality orange that smells nice and fragrant. This will give you the best flavor!
How to make this chocolate orange tart
This recipe is a great way to learn or practice some an important baking skill: making ganache. It sounds fancy, but I promise it is so straightforward.
1. First, you’ll make a graham cracker crust as the tart shell. You’ll mix together crushed graham crackers (you can crush them in the bowl of a food processor or mash the crackers in plastic bag with a rolling pin), melted butter, sugar, salt and cinnamon. Then press it into your tart pan, give it a quick 10-minute blind bake and set out to cool.
2. Next, you’ll make the chocolate orange filling. This is where you get to practice a technique that sounds hard but is secretly so simple: making ganache. You’ll chop up your chocolate, add hot but not boiling cream. Let the cream and chocolate sit together so the chocolate warms up, and then whisk until silky. Then you’ll whisk in the eggs, salt and orange zest to the ganache. Pour the filling into the par-baked tart shell and bake it until the edges are set but the middle still jiggles.
3. After the tart bakes, you’ll make another ganache to smooth over the top of the tart. This is optional, but it helps cover some small bubbles that come up during baking and it’s a great way to practice your ganache-making skills.
5. Now you can then style the tart however you like! I like to add some orange slices and more zest to make the orange flavor clear. I also make chocolate curls by shaving a room temperature bar of chocolate with a peeler. Flaky sea salt is also a nice balance to the rich chocolate.
6. Serve at room temperature!
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Typically you’d bake this in a 9-inch tart pan. The real benefit of a tart pan is that they usually have a removable bottom, which makes the tart easier to remove and slice. I love this one from Amazon.
A cake pan, pie tin or 8×8 or 9×9 baking tin will all work. Anything larger than that (like a 9×13 pan), will make the tart too thin. Just keep a closer eye on the oven, as your tart may bake slower in an 8×8 dish and faster in a pie tin that’s larger than 9 inches.
Heavy cream has a slightly higher fat content than heavy whipping cream. Both can be used interchangeably in most cases, including this one!
A chocolate tart is fully baked when the edges are set but the middle is still jiggly (it will set as the tart cools). You may also start to see bubbles pop up. This means the tart is done and starting to over-bake.
You can store a chocolate orange tart at room temperature for a day wrapped in cling film / plastic wrap and in the fridge for 5 days.
If you make this chocolate orange tart, please tag me on Instagram or TikTok at @loaves.and.such and drop a review below! I love hearing from you. Happy chocolate baking, friends <3
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