Showing posts with label Pies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pies. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 14, 2023

It's Pie Day!

 
In honour of Pie Day (3.14) here are some of my favorite pie recipes. 
I either make my own crusts (using the recipe on the back of the Tenderflake Lard box) or I use Pillsbury chilled crusts or frozen crusts (depending on my energy level, but I must admit the chilled crusts work just fine most of the time.) 
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Apple Pie (King Arthur Flour
Prepare 6-8 cups thinly sliced, peeled medium apples (Granny Smith, Pink Lady and Gala).  Mix with ¾ cup sugar and let the mixture drain in a colander for about 30 minutes. 
In a large bowl, whisk together 2 Tbsp flour, 2 Tbsp corn starch, 1 tsp cinnamon, ¼ tsp salt, ¾ tsp nutmeg, ¼ tsp allspice and 1 Tbsp lemon juice. Gently stir in the drained apples. 
Lightly butter and flour a glass pie plate. 
Line the plate with a bottom crust and layer the apple filling into crust, avoiding large gaps. Dot with about 2 Tbsp butter. 
Top with a second crust. Cut vents and crimp crusts to close. 
Bake pie at 425 for 20 minutes: continue baking at 375 for 40 minutes. ________________________________________ 
Pumpkin Pie (King Arthur Flour
Mix 2 Tbsp flour, ¾ tsp cinnamon, ½ tsp salt, ¼ tsp ginger, 1/8 tsp nutmeg, and pinch cloves. 
Add 1 ½ cup canned pumpkin, ¾ cup brown sugar, 2 Tbsp corn syrup and 1 ½ cups milk (or 12 oz evaporated milk). 
Rest mixture 30 minutes on counter or overnight in fridge. 
 Add 2 beaten eggs and mix until smooth. 
 Pour into an unbaked 9" crust. 
 Bake on bottom oven rack at 450 for 15 minutes. Move to middle rack and continue baking at 350 for 35 minutes. 
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Gram’s Strawberry Meringue Pie 
My grandmother invented this recipe for when she had company but didn't have very many strawberries - just a cup of sliced berries is more than enough for this pie. Eat it all that day (which is very easy to do!) 
Beat 3 egg whites until stiff. Stir in approximately 6 Tbsp sugar and 1 tsp vanilla.  Fold in 1 cup cut-up strawberries. 
Pour into an unbaked pie shell and bake at 350 for 30 minutes. ________________________________________ 
Open-face Berry Pie 
I developed this recipe to use the blackberries we used to pick -- it also works for peaches and blueberries, or raspberries, or a combination.
Cook approx. 2 cups berries (blackberries or blueberries) or 2 sliced peaches in 1 ½ cups water for 10 minutes. 
Mash and drain the fruit through a sieve. Add the juice to 2/3-1 cup sugar, 1 tsp lemon juice and 3 Tbsp moistened corn starch. (Optional: also use pinch of appropriate spices like nutmeg, cinnamon, etc.)  Cook a few minutes until you have a clear syrup. Put aside to cool somewhat. 
Spread approx. 2 cups fresh berries or sliced peaches or a combination in a baked pie shell or baked tart shells. Pour the warm syrup over the fruit and let the pie cool completely 
Serve with whipped cream. 
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Heating a Cooked Frozen Pie 
Sometimes when we buy a bakery pie I cut it in half and freeze it. But I don't just thaw the pie when I want to eat it, because the crust will be soggy.  I heat it from frozen in a hot oven instead, so the extra moisture evaporates and the crust crisps up again. 
Freeze a full pie or a half pie well-wrapped, on a metal or foil pie plate. 
Heat the frozen pie for about 15 minutes at 425-450, then for an additional 15 minutes at 350-375, until it is warm. 
(Follow the same instructions for frozen tarts, though the reheating doesn't take as long.)
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My Banana Split Pie
Why are some recipes so complicated? Today the Washington Post published a recipe for something they call "Banana Split Sundae Pie" and it has 17 ingredients, for heavens sake, with eight different steps you're supposed to do to pull this recipe together.  It wants you to cook a caramel sauce, grind pretzels for a crust, soften and re-freeze three batches of ice cream, thin out jam, grate chocolate, find two types of cherries -- the list just goes on and on.  Exhausting!  
All this for a recipe that is basically Neapolitan ice cream, bananas and sauce. 
So here's my version:
Slice a banana and spread it over the bottom of a purchased crumb crust (vanilla, graham, or chocolate). Sprinkle with lemon juice. 
Soften several cups of Neapolitan ice cream, swirl to mix the colours and flavours, and scoop the ice cream into the crust over the bananas. Smooth and refreeze. 
When ready to serve, slice the frozen pie and add any other toppings you want -- whipped cream, various ice-cream sauces (strawberry, caramel, chocolate), sliced bananas, crushed pineapple, chopped cherries, chopped nuts, sprinkles, etc.
That's it.
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Sunday, February 12, 2023

Three Madame Benoit recipes

Madame Jehane Benoit was such a great cook
Here are two of her recipes that I have made dozens of times - simple and they come out beautifully: 

Madame Benoit's Chocolate Sauce 
Combine 2 oz unsweetened chocolate with ½ cup water. Microwave uncovered 3 minutes and stir until creamy. Add ¾ cup sugar and stir until well mixed. Heat 2 minutes. 
Add 4 tblsp butter, ¼ tsp salt and 1 tsp vanilla.  Makes 1 1/3 cups. Serve over ice cream or cake.

Madame Benoit's Cherries Jubilee Sauce 
Drain 1 can pitted cherries and pour liquid into measuring cup. Add enough water to make 1 cup. Combine 2 Tbsp sugar, 1 Tbsp cornstarch, pinch salt, and cherry liquid, and cook 3-6 minutes until thick and clear. 
 Stir in 1 Tbsp butter, 1 tsp lemon juice and cherries. Heat 2 minutes. 
Makes about a cup. Serve over ice cream, cake or biscuits.

And here's a third Benoit recipe I just found online, so I'm looking forward to trying it -- the advantage here is, no corn syrup!

Madame Benoit’s Butter Tarts 
(12 medium or 20 small tarts) 
Cream 3 Tbsp butter and gradually add 1 cup brown sugar until similar to a light cream. 
Beat 1 egg and add to the sugar cream gradually, stirring all the while. Sprinkle on ½ tsp salt.
While stirring, add ¼ cup raisins, 1/3 cup chopped walnuts and ½ tsp vanilla. 
Use a generous Tbsp of mixture for each tart. 
Bake for 8 minutes in a 400 oven, reduce to 375 and bake for an additional 10-12 minutes until the filling sets and the pastry begins to colour.