Tag: pie

Flaky Pie Crust

Makes two flaky crusts. This is Sarah's favorite style crust, though not really mine (not that I like cooked pie crust much anyway -- raw pie crust, on the other hand, is a delicious calorie bomb). This dough is quite easy to assemble as pastry goes, and it is easy to work.

Miyoko's butter succeeds in this recipe, though its melting point is lower than cow butter, so I tend to return it to the fridge more often to try to retain the layers of fat that produce the flakiness.

Ingredients Step
225 g low-protein flour (mixture of cake and/or AP)
1 T. sugar
½ t. (4 g) salt
Stir together.
8 oz. (1 c. / 2 sticks) unsalted butter, cold Cube, stir to cover each cube in flour, and then smash each cube briefly with fingers or a fork. Alternatively, loosely cut in. (Don't use fingers with Miyoko's butter.)
½ c. cold water, with ice cubes Toss together with dry ingredients. Knead a few times against bowl until it comes together.
Turn dough out onto floured surface. Roll it out to a 10x14"-ish rectangle, flipping the dough repeatedly to check that it isn't sticking. Be generous with flour so it doesn't stick; it won't hurt anything.
Fold edges toward middle, then use the middle gap as the spine of a book and fold again to make a long skinny hot dog rectangle. Fold the dough in half hamburger-style to make a thicker, squatter rectangle. (The folding can be rough and imperfect. We're just creating layers of fat separated by layers of flour.)
Cut the squat rectangle in half, making two squares. Dust the cut edges with flour if needed.
Return both halves to fridge so the butter can set up again. (You can skip this step if it's still quite cold.)
To make a bottom crust: Roll out one half into a circle. Place it on the pie dish. Use scissors to trim all but 1½" around the edge. Wrap in plastic wrap and return to fridge to set up for at least 2 hours before baking.
parchment paper To make a top crust: Roll out one half into a circle. Use scissors to trim all but 1½" around the edge. Prepare a piece of parchment paper on a cutting board, then place crust on the parchment (using a parchment layer stops the dough from picking up flavors). Wrap in plastic wrap and return to fridge to set up for at least 2 hours before baking.
When assembling, turn the top edge under the bottom edge. Press edges together with the tines of a fork or by using fingers to scallop.

Source: Serious Eats (but I learned about this technique originally from the Chicago Tribune, which currently has an aggressive paywall)

Blueberry Pie

Makes 1 pie with two crusts.

A full cup of sugar is decadent. The sugar doesn't really change the structure much, so you can decrease it to taste.

Substituting cornstarch with arrowroot starch does not work.

Ingredients Step
Preheat oven to 450 degrees.
1 pie crust Line a pie plate with a crust. Place pie plate on a cookie sheet to stabilize and catch drips.
2 T. cornstarch (not arrowroot)
freshly squeezed juice of ½ lemon
2 t. vanilla
2 t. brandy
Thoroughly combine into paste in small mixing bowl.
4½ c. blueberries (fresh or frozen)
up to 1 c. sugar
paste from above
2 T. butter, chopped
1 T. flour
heaping 1 T. sour cream
scant ¼ t. cinnamon
Gently stir together in large mixing bowl until just combined.
1 crust Pour berries into bottom crust, then cover pie with a top crust that has decorative vents.
Bake for 10-15 minutes at 450 degrees, then reduce heat to 350 degrees and bake until golden brown and bubbly (maybe 45-55 minutes more).
Cool completely before serving.

Source: The Grit

Pumpkin Pie

Classic. Makes 2 pies, so you'll need 2 pie crusts. Alternatively, baking without a crust also works totally fine, but you have to watch the cook time because you'll probably want to bake in individual ramekins rather than in a pie plate.

Substituting oat milk and Miyoko's butter works just fine.

Ratios below the recipe for batches based on a single egg/scant cup of pumpkin puree. (Downscaling the recipe is a great way to use up leftover pumpkin.)

Ingredients Step
Preheat oven to 450 degrees.
4 eggs, beaten slightly
3½ c. pumpkin (the big can)
1⅓ c. sugar
1 t. nutmeg
1 t. cinnamon
1 t. ginger
1 t. salt
Mix well.
4 T. butter, melted
1¾ c. milk, scalded
Heat together until butter is melted, either stovetop or in microwave. Add to the pumpkin mixture and stir together thoroughly.
2 pie shells, uncooked Pour into uncooked pie shells. Bake at 450 degrees for 15 minutes, then without opening the oven door, reduce the heat to 350 degrees and bake up to another 35 minutes. Remove from oven when there is a roughly 4"-diameter ring of seemingly-uncooked filling in the center. Cool completely before cutting or serving.

Source: my great grandma

For each scant cup of pumpkin puree, you'll produce enough filling for two 7-oz ramekins plus one 4-oz ramekin. You'll use: 1 egg, scant 1 cup pumpkin, ⅓ c. sugar, heaping ¼ t. of each spice, 1 T. butter, scant ½ c. milk. Bake for 5 minutes at 450, then 8 minutes at 350 before checking every few minutes until just the center 1½ inches is still unset.