Well, mine. Sort of.
So after I finished my Strawberry Banana Pie (which is really just strawberry pie with bananas), I tried to watch a movie, but I fell asleep. This lead to dreams, as it often does.
However, last night was not just any dream.
It was a dream about pie.
Basically, I was baking a pie for my younger sisters, now ten and eight years old. It was a great pie, and within this week's delicious theme! I made a chocolate custard and added the sliced bananas and strawberries. Apparently my psyche realized the flavor possibilities granted by chocolate even before I did.
But it makes sense, right? Chocolate and bananas? Decadent. Chocolate and strawberries? Luscious. Chocolate and strawberries and bananas? WHOA.
So I might have to make an extramural pie this week. Unless my wonderful readers (all thirteen of you) can come up with two more ideas! Then Strawberry Banana Week can continue to next week.
I really enjoy when events defined as periods of time extend past the stated period of time. Like when Pokemon Profile Picture Month became Pokemon Profile Picture Year-and-a-half. And when Commando Week became Commando The-rest-of-my-life.
Well, back to business: Strawberry Pie plus Bananas
Now, this is sort of a repeat recipe. I'm using the Strawberry Pie I posted last year (the first one; the second one wasn't nearly as good) but with some bananas instead of half of the strawberries.
So crank out a crust, then blind bake it at 425F, ten minutes with weights, ten to fifteen without. This crust won't be getting any more cooking time, so it's gotta be all the way done.
Then, the filling:
2ish bananas
1/2 quart strawberries, mashed
1 cup sugar
3/4 cup water
3 tablespoons cornstarch
Mix the water and cornstarch to get them to combine. Also, mix the sugar into the strawberry pulp on medium heat until it boils, which shouldn't take very long. Then slowly add the cornstarch and water after mixing slightly again to make sure none of the cornstarch has settled out. Once it's all in there, cook until it thickens; prolly around ten minutes. Then line your crust with sliced bananas. I sliced mine nice and thick again, and used about two and a half sort of small bananas. Then pour the strawberry goop on top, and let cool. You could even chill it.
Pretty simple, right? I think it would be good with some whipped cream.
Oh, I just thought of another possibility for Strawberry Banana Week!! Cheesecake! Occasionally Cheesecake Mondays being a thing and all, why not?
Thursday, June 23, 2011
Wednesday, June 22, 2011
Strawberry Banana week! Monday: banana plus strawberry
So my roommate Chris has been getting adventurous with pies this summer as well. He asked me a week or so ago if I had come across a Strawberry Banana Pie recipe. It's one of the most common fruit combos out there, and there ought to be a pie, right?! Well, it's proven sort of tough to find a recipe I could get behind that wasn't just one or the other with some extra fruit. Chris eventually found one that, while I have my reservations about, looks like it might work.
We begin, then, with a Strawberry Banana Cream Pie. Basically a Banana Cream Pie plus Strawberries.
I used a graham cracker crust, which I think was a poor choice. I mean, usually when I try to pack a graham cracker crust in a pie plate, it doesn't quite work out. I reduced the recipe as follows, so it would at least fit in the plate, but it soaked up some liquid from the pie innards, and it's just not a graham cracker crust without the crunch! So I think next time I would go with a standard pie crust, baked at 425F for ten minutes with weights, then ten or so more without, to crisp it up.
Then, custard!
2 cups whole milk
6 egg yolks
1/2 cup light brown sugar
1/3 cup cornstarch, sifted
pinch salt
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
3 tablespoons butter
The recipe I used (at least for the custard) is a little complex. In my experience, you can just throw the stuff together in a pan and cook on medium heat, stirring constantly. Then after it thickens, take it off the heat and add the butter and vanilla. Stir again until completely incorporated.
Then slice some bananas and line the bottom of the crust. I cut my bananas pretty thick, and used about one and a half nanners. Then I put some custard on top, then sliced some strawberries nice and thick and made a layer of those. Then some more custard, and then some whipped cream. If you remember the whipped cream from last summer, that's the good stuff.
Yeah, yeah, I know what you're thinking. I JUST fixed the egg imbalance. Now I've posted two more yolk-heavy recipes! Oh well. I'll figure it out. Don't let it keep you up at night.
We begin, then, with a Strawberry Banana Cream Pie. Basically a Banana Cream Pie plus Strawberries.
I used a graham cracker crust, which I think was a poor choice. I mean, usually when I try to pack a graham cracker crust in a pie plate, it doesn't quite work out. I reduced the recipe as follows, so it would at least fit in the plate, but it soaked up some liquid from the pie innards, and it's just not a graham cracker crust without the crunch! So I think next time I would go with a standard pie crust, baked at 425F for ten minutes with weights, then ten or so more without, to crisp it up.
Then, custard!
2 cups whole milk
6 egg yolks
1/2 cup light brown sugar
1/3 cup cornstarch, sifted
pinch salt
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
3 tablespoons butter
The recipe I used (at least for the custard) is a little complex. In my experience, you can just throw the stuff together in a pan and cook on medium heat, stirring constantly. Then after it thickens, take it off the heat and add the butter and vanilla. Stir again until completely incorporated.
Then slice some bananas and line the bottom of the crust. I cut my bananas pretty thick, and used about one and a half nanners. Then I put some custard on top, then sliced some strawberries nice and thick and made a layer of those. Then some more custard, and then some whipped cream. If you remember the whipped cream from last summer, that's the good stuff.
Yeah, yeah, I know what you're thinking. I JUST fixed the egg imbalance. Now I've posted two more yolk-heavy recipes! Oh well. I'll figure it out. Don't let it keep you up at night.
Quiche Saturdays! Fun times for all!
I'm just gonna get to the point on this one. I still have a pie to bake and another pie to tell you all about.
So quiche: Today's (I mean, Saturday's) Quiche Lorraine (whaaaa? this one has a fancy name?) is an Emeril Lagasse recipe.
Regular pie crust again, and this time we're going to blind bake at 375F for ten minutes with weights, then ten more without. Then the oven stays at 375F.
6 ounces thick cut bacon, cut into narrow strips (it was about 7 slices of bacon, I think)
2 eggs
2 egg yolks
1 1/4 cups half and half
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon white pepper
pinch nutmeg (I used a quarter teaspoon of that too. I like nutmeg, okay?)
1 cup Gruyere or Swiss Cheese (I used closer to a cup and a half of Gruyere)
Fry up the bacon until it's crispy and fantastic. Transfer it to some paper towels and let drain. If you're like me and bought a pound of bacon (if not, you're doing it wrong), then go ahead and fry it up and have a snack. POW.
Then beat up the eggs, and add the rest of those things. If you shred the cheese really fine, it'll whisk in pretty easily. Mix well, then put the bacon on the bottom of the crust. Pour the egg stuff in slowly; the rushing liquid may push some bacon around, so be delicate. Then bake 30 to 35 minutes, until the eggs puff up a little and start to brown on top. Like the custard pie, it'll keep cooking for a bit, so it's cool if the center is still a little wiggly.
The extra yolks in this recipe are a welcome addition. It's richer, yet still really fluffy and moist. Fantastic pie, and I've learned a lot about meringues and custards and crusts this week. Good stuff.
So quiche: Today's (I mean, Saturday's) Quiche Lorraine (whaaaa? this one has a fancy name?) is an Emeril Lagasse recipe.
Regular pie crust again, and this time we're going to blind bake at 375F for ten minutes with weights, then ten more without. Then the oven stays at 375F.
6 ounces thick cut bacon, cut into narrow strips (it was about 7 slices of bacon, I think)
2 eggs
2 egg yolks
1 1/4 cups half and half
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon white pepper
pinch nutmeg (I used a quarter teaspoon of that too. I like nutmeg, okay?)
1 cup Gruyere or Swiss Cheese (I used closer to a cup and a half of Gruyere)
Fry up the bacon until it's crispy and fantastic. Transfer it to some paper towels and let drain. If you're like me and bought a pound of bacon (if not, you're doing it wrong), then go ahead and fry it up and have a snack. POW.
Then beat up the eggs, and add the rest of those things. If you shred the cheese really fine, it'll whisk in pretty easily. Mix well, then put the bacon on the bottom of the crust. Pour the egg stuff in slowly; the rushing liquid may push some bacon around, so be delicate. Then bake 30 to 35 minutes, until the eggs puff up a little and start to brown on top. Like the custard pie, it'll keep cooking for a bit, so it's cool if the center is still a little wiggly.
The extra yolks in this recipe are a welcome addition. It's richer, yet still really fluffy and moist. Fantastic pie, and I've learned a lot about meringues and custards and crusts this week. Good stuff.
Shoo Fly Pie
I'm all caught up with baking, but now I'm way off on the blog side. Oops. I'll try to crank through 'em all today. Today's pie shouldn't take too long.
So on to business. Shoo Fly Pie; it's basically molasses pie, but it's a pretty unique one. Definitely a pie I will bake again.
In related news, I've been fiddling with blind baking my crusts a bit. Often, when I blind bake a crust that then needs to go in for some more baking (like quiches, primarily), they end up a little dark and crunchy. So when we get the video together, I'll add some extra info on blind baking that I've figured out with some trial and error. Until then, I'll be specific with the details for that pie.
Let's talk about molasses! This pie (baked yesterday for Friday; I 'swapped' it with the one I had originally intended for Friday when I decided to give this week a theme) is another I shamelessly hefted from an episode of Good Eats, Pantry Raid X: Dark Side of the Cane.
Start with the good ol' pie crust. When you blind bake it, go for 425F and bake for ten minutes with the weights, then seven additional minutes without the weights. then reduce the oven to 350F.
5 1/2 ounces all-purpose flour
4 ounces dark brown sugar
2 tablespoons cold, unsalted butter
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
3/4 cup boiling water
3/4 teaspoon baking soda
8 ounces molasses, by weight
1 whole egg, beaten
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
In a food processor, mix up the first four. (Yeah, yeah, I know... more measures by weight. If you don't have a scale, find a converter online. It shouldn't be difficult with a quick Google search.) Scrape it down and blend some more just to make sure it's all pretty homogeneous. Then reserve a quarter cup and set them aside.
In a separate bowl, pour the boiling water over the baking soda. Crazy science!! Just watch the episode of Good Eats; Alton Brown says it better. Add the other wet stuff, and whisk to combine. Then add the larger portion of the dry stuff and whisk again. Pour the mix into the crust and sprinkle the quarter cup of the dry stuff on top. Pop 'er in the oven for about 40 to 45 minutes, until it starts to look dry or crack on top. Let it cool for about two hours before slicing.
For as wet as the mix is going in, the filling fluffs up a lot and doesn't seem at all like a pie from the texture. But man, it is tasty. So you know what? Pie it is. DELISH.
So on to business. Shoo Fly Pie; it's basically molasses pie, but it's a pretty unique one. Definitely a pie I will bake again.
In related news, I've been fiddling with blind baking my crusts a bit. Often, when I blind bake a crust that then needs to go in for some more baking (like quiches, primarily), they end up a little dark and crunchy. So when we get the video together, I'll add some extra info on blind baking that I've figured out with some trial and error. Until then, I'll be specific with the details for that pie.
Let's talk about molasses! This pie (baked yesterday for Friday; I 'swapped' it with the one I had originally intended for Friday when I decided to give this week a theme) is another I shamelessly hefted from an episode of Good Eats, Pantry Raid X: Dark Side of the Cane.
Start with the good ol' pie crust. When you blind bake it, go for 425F and bake for ten minutes with the weights, then seven additional minutes without the weights. then reduce the oven to 350F.
5 1/2 ounces all-purpose flour
4 ounces dark brown sugar
2 tablespoons cold, unsalted butter
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
3/4 cup boiling water
3/4 teaspoon baking soda
8 ounces molasses, by weight
1 whole egg, beaten
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
In a food processor, mix up the first four. (Yeah, yeah, I know... more measures by weight. If you don't have a scale, find a converter online. It shouldn't be difficult with a quick Google search.) Scrape it down and blend some more just to make sure it's all pretty homogeneous. Then reserve a quarter cup and set them aside.
In a separate bowl, pour the boiling water over the baking soda. Crazy science!! Just watch the episode of Good Eats; Alton Brown says it better. Add the other wet stuff, and whisk to combine. Then add the larger portion of the dry stuff and whisk again. Pour the mix into the crust and sprinkle the quarter cup of the dry stuff on top. Pop 'er in the oven for about 40 to 45 minutes, until it starts to look dry or crack on top. Let it cool for about two hours before slicing.
For as wet as the mix is going in, the filling fluffs up a lot and doesn't seem at all like a pie from the texture. But man, it is tasty. So you know what? Pie it is. DELISH.
Saturday, June 18, 2011
Egg Custard Pie and by custard I mean I need to use up egg yolks
I've been a little off track with everything lately. Pies are coming a day or so late. Hopefully I will get back on schedule by Monday, since that's my day off of work.
In other news, I need more ideas! What should I put in pies? I don't want to repeat last summer's pies, but I hit a lot of the classics. It makes it tougher for this summer...
Anyway, on to business: Custard Pie
Rather than a pudding-style custard cooked over the stove, this is a light, moist baked custard, like a quiche. Except it's sweet, and without extras like three kinds of pork.
So start with the standard pie crust. The recipe I used wasn't clear whether to blind bake it or not, so I went for it. In hindsight, the edges got a little crunchy, and having the flaky crust mingle with the very wet custard allowed them to combine to an extent. I think having the crust cold should help keep the custard separated. Still tastes fantastic, though!
So however you decide to do the crust, the custard is pretty simple:
3 eggs
3 egg yolks
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon nutmeg
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 1/2 cups milk
Beat the eggs and yolks together well, mix the other stuff together, and then combine both. Pour it into the crust, then pop it in the oven. The oven should be at 450F for about fifteen minutes, then reduce to 350F for 25 to thirty minutes. The edges should just be set, and the center will set even after it comes out of the oven. You might need to rotate the pie at some point during the baking. I rotated it about ten minutes before I took it out.
Regardless of my pie's spongy, egg-soaked crust, YUM. I've been chowing down on this bad boy all by myself. I doubt anyone else will get the chance to have a slice.
In other news, I need more ideas! What should I put in pies? I don't want to repeat last summer's pies, but I hit a lot of the classics. It makes it tougher for this summer...
Anyway, on to business: Custard Pie
Rather than a pudding-style custard cooked over the stove, this is a light, moist baked custard, like a quiche. Except it's sweet, and without extras like three kinds of pork.
So start with the standard pie crust. The recipe I used wasn't clear whether to blind bake it or not, so I went for it. In hindsight, the edges got a little crunchy, and having the flaky crust mingle with the very wet custard allowed them to combine to an extent. I think having the crust cold should help keep the custard separated. Still tastes fantastic, though!
So however you decide to do the crust, the custard is pretty simple:
3 eggs
3 egg yolks
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon nutmeg
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 1/2 cups milk
Beat the eggs and yolks together well, mix the other stuff together, and then combine both. Pour it into the crust, then pop it in the oven. The oven should be at 450F for about fifteen minutes, then reduce to 350F for 25 to thirty minutes. The edges should just be set, and the center will set even after it comes out of the oven. You might need to rotate the pie at some point during the baking. I rotated it about ten minutes before I took it out.
Regardless of my pie's spongy, egg-soaked crust, YUM. I've been chowing down on this bad boy all by myself. I doubt anyone else will get the chance to have a slice.
Wednesday, June 15, 2011
I'm having trouble coming up with witty titles pie
That is what I will call this pie. If you stop by and want to try it, please ask for it by name.
So this is a Butterscotch Pie. I found the recipe because I was looking for a way to use egg yolks. You see, after the Chocolate Pie on Friday had a sorry meringue, I decided I would have to practice meringues. So we made some delicious meringue cookies, and I used nine egg whites. We used a couple of the yolks to make a chocolate mousse for the cookies, but I was left with six yolks without a home. After I share Monday's pie's recipe with you, I'm going to go figure out a way to use up the rest of 'em.
I was feeling lazy, so I made a graham cracker crust for this pie. I halved the recipe I told you about with the Rhubarb Cheesecake, because I can't really get them to cooperate with pie plates. So it only went about halfway up the sides, but I think it turned out well. It's a really good flavor complement, and the butterscotch custard/pudding dealie was pretty small too, so it didn't even overfill the crust.
For the filling:
3/4 cups brown sugar
1/3 cup flour
1 tsp salt
2 cups milk
3 egg yolks
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
3 tablespoons butter
Mix the dry ones together a bit in a saucepan. Beat the egg yolks a bit with some milk and then add the wet stuff to the pan. Cook on medium heat, stirring constantly, until it thickens. Keep at it for about 30 seconds or so more, to make sure it's all thickened. Then turn off the heat and stir in the vanilla and butter until fully combined. Pour onto the crust, and chill.
Yeah, it's a lot like the chocolate pie if you skip the meringue layer. And the chocolate... Same process, I mean. And also quite tasty.
If I had used a standard pie crust, I think doubling the filling would have been smart. For the halved graham cracker crust, however, it's perfect the way it is.
So this is a Butterscotch Pie. I found the recipe because I was looking for a way to use egg yolks. You see, after the Chocolate Pie on Friday had a sorry meringue, I decided I would have to practice meringues. So we made some delicious meringue cookies, and I used nine egg whites. We used a couple of the yolks to make a chocolate mousse for the cookies, but I was left with six yolks without a home. After I share Monday's pie's recipe with you, I'm going to go figure out a way to use up the rest of 'em.
I was feeling lazy, so I made a graham cracker crust for this pie. I halved the recipe I told you about with the Rhubarb Cheesecake, because I can't really get them to cooperate with pie plates. So it only went about halfway up the sides, but I think it turned out well. It's a really good flavor complement, and the butterscotch custard/pudding dealie was pretty small too, so it didn't even overfill the crust.
For the filling:
3/4 cups brown sugar
1/3 cup flour
1 tsp salt
2 cups milk
3 egg yolks
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
3 tablespoons butter
Mix the dry ones together a bit in a saucepan. Beat the egg yolks a bit with some milk and then add the wet stuff to the pan. Cook on medium heat, stirring constantly, until it thickens. Keep at it for about 30 seconds or so more, to make sure it's all thickened. Then turn off the heat and stir in the vanilla and butter until fully combined. Pour onto the crust, and chill.
Yeah, it's a lot like the chocolate pie if you skip the meringue layer. And the chocolate... Same process, I mean. And also quite tasty.
If I had used a standard pie crust, I think doubling the filling would have been smart. For the halved graham cracker crust, however, it's perfect the way it is.
Tuesday, June 14, 2011
Pork (and pork and pork and eggs) Pie
No, not the traditional British pie. It's Quiche Saturday! (Even if I'm a couple days late with this post...)
I'm getting the hang of quiches, so I went ahead and winged it. I got some breakfast sausage, ham, and bacon at the Farmer's Market (it's not all fruit and veggies!) and a hybrid (that's part goat and part cow's milk) cheddar cheese.
About a cup or so of the cheese goes on the bottom of the pie crust after it's blind baked, then I arranged as many of the sausage links as I could fit in the crust. Between the links, I packed in as much ham as I could (I think about a half pound, maybe a little less). The sausage links were whole, and I got the ham in slices then chopped them up in smaller chunks. I fried the bacon a bit, so it was still soft, then weaved a fancy bacon-lattice top for the pie. Then five eggs and a cup of half and half (well, about 3/4 cup of half and half and the rest was milk, cause I didn't have quite a cup left...), beaten up real good and poured over the whole thing. Bake it at 375F for about an hour, until the eggs are fully set. I covered the top with foil about halfway through, because some of the bacon had crisped up and was getting pretty dark.
It was really good. Like, three pigs' worth of delicious.
I'm getting the hang of quiches, so I went ahead and winged it. I got some breakfast sausage, ham, and bacon at the Farmer's Market (it's not all fruit and veggies!) and a hybrid (that's part goat and part cow's milk) cheddar cheese.
About a cup or so of the cheese goes on the bottom of the pie crust after it's blind baked, then I arranged as many of the sausage links as I could fit in the crust. Between the links, I packed in as much ham as I could (I think about a half pound, maybe a little less). The sausage links were whole, and I got the ham in slices then chopped them up in smaller chunks. I fried the bacon a bit, so it was still soft, then weaved a fancy bacon-lattice top for the pie. Then five eggs and a cup of half and half (well, about 3/4 cup of half and half and the rest was milk, cause I didn't have quite a cup left...), beaten up real good and poured over the whole thing. Bake it at 375F for about an hour, until the eggs are fully set. I covered the top with foil about halfway through, because some of the bacon had crisped up and was getting pretty dark.
It was really good. Like, three pigs' worth of delicious.
Saturday, June 11, 2011
Now what?
Without the surprise pie ingredients inspiring my pies, it was tough to choose one to bake on Friday. I was bothering my friends for ideas, and finally one caught my attention. Chocolate pie. Simply, chocolate pie. Nothing fancy, just a dense, rich chocolate custard with a fluffy meringue to contrast.
Because I like chocolate.
Again, same ol' pie crust, blind baked, and let it cool while you're making the custard and meringue. Also, turn the oven down to 350F after the crust is done.
2 egg whites
pinch cream of tartar
4 tablespoons sugar
4 tablespoons cocoa (or 1 1/2 squares baking chocolate)
5 tablespoons flour
3/4 cup sugar
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 1/2 cups milk
2 egg yolks
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 tablespoon butter
Start with the meringue. They're pretty finicky. Make sure the bowl and the beaters on the mixer are VERY clean. Any amount of fat that might be there can foil your attempt to make a nice foam from the egg whites. Equally, when you separate the eggs, try not to touch anything. Oil on your skin can kill the meringue too. Beat the whites with the cream of tartar until it foams up. Keep beating and very slowly add the sugar. When you get stiff peaks, you're all done. Cover it and put it someplace relatively dry and cool.
Then the filling. If you have a flour sifter, sift the flour and cocoa powder together. Cocoa is particularly fond of forming little chunks that refuse to combine into liquids. Then add the sugar and salt, mix 'em up. Beat the egg yolks into the milk and mix those into the dry stuff as well as you can. Cook on medium heat while stirring until it thickens. Then simmer and stir for another sixty seconds. Turn off the heat and stir in the butter and vanilla until fully combined. Pour the custard into the crust.
Give the meringue a little 30 second beating. This will blend any sugar that hadn't dissolved fully in the first go around into the meringue. The sugar is the part which prevents the water from falling off of all the bubbles (which is what would make your meringue fall in on itself or shed a layer of water between it and the custard).
Then bake the whole deal (you're just cooking the meringue here) at 350F for fifteen or twenty minutes, until the meringue is golden brown.
Yummy pie. However, next time, I think I would either double the recipe or one-and-a-half it. The meringue was particularly thin (which is also due to the fact that I was too hasty with it...) and the chocolate layer, while rich and delicious, could have been more substantial. You can't have too much delicious, right!?
Because I like chocolate.
Again, same ol' pie crust, blind baked, and let it cool while you're making the custard and meringue. Also, turn the oven down to 350F after the crust is done.
2 egg whites
pinch cream of tartar
4 tablespoons sugar
4 tablespoons cocoa (or 1 1/2 squares baking chocolate)
5 tablespoons flour
3/4 cup sugar
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 1/2 cups milk
2 egg yolks
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 tablespoon butter
Start with the meringue. They're pretty finicky. Make sure the bowl and the beaters on the mixer are VERY clean. Any amount of fat that might be there can foil your attempt to make a nice foam from the egg whites. Equally, when you separate the eggs, try not to touch anything. Oil on your skin can kill the meringue too. Beat the whites with the cream of tartar until it foams up. Keep beating and very slowly add the sugar. When you get stiff peaks, you're all done. Cover it and put it someplace relatively dry and cool.
Then the filling. If you have a flour sifter, sift the flour and cocoa powder together. Cocoa is particularly fond of forming little chunks that refuse to combine into liquids. Then add the sugar and salt, mix 'em up. Beat the egg yolks into the milk and mix those into the dry stuff as well as you can. Cook on medium heat while stirring until it thickens. Then simmer and stir for another sixty seconds. Turn off the heat and stir in the butter and vanilla until fully combined. Pour the custard into the crust.
Give the meringue a little 30 second beating. This will blend any sugar that hadn't dissolved fully in the first go around into the meringue. The sugar is the part which prevents the water from falling off of all the bubbles (which is what would make your meringue fall in on itself or shed a layer of water between it and the custard).
Then bake the whole deal (you're just cooking the meringue here) at 350F for fifteen or twenty minutes, until the meringue is golden brown.
Yummy pie. However, next time, I think I would either double the recipe or one-and-a-half it. The meringue was particularly thin (which is also due to the fact that I was too hasty with it...) and the chocolate layer, while rich and delicious, could have been more substantial. You can't have too much delicious, right!?
Friday, June 10, 2011
The last of round one's surprise ingredients! (And how Ryan is bad at clicking "publish")
So if you've been keeping track, you'll know that i was given the task of making pies from the following ingredients:
Cranberries (whole, frozen)
Yogurt (plain, unsweetened)
Yuca root (waxy and brown on the outside, starchy and white on the inside)
and finally
Pears! Just regular pears. D'anjou, if you're hip on pear varieties.
Yeah, I saved the easiest one for last. Whatev.
Anyway, here it goes. Again, the standard pie crust is the one to use for this recipe. However, since we don't cook the insides separately and it isn't a quiche, don't blind bake the crust. You'll see this as a trend with double-crusted pies, though on this one I made a streusel-type crumble top. Start by preheating to 375F.
6 pears (The recipe I used recommends D'anjou or Bartlett, but I don't have enough pear experience to make that call.), peeled, cored, sliced thin
3 tablespoons lemon juice
1.5 oz flour (OH SNAP we're weighing flour again... if you don't have a food scale, a third of a cup is a pretty close estimate)
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1/8 teaspoon salt (at this point, I've got a pretty good one-eighth-teaspoon pinch)
1.5 oz flour
1/3 cup brown sugar
3 tablespoons cold butter, in small pieces
As you're getting the pears sliced, toss them with the lemon juice to prevent them from oxidizing. In a separate bowl, mix the rest of 'em from the first chunk. Toss the pear slices with the flour to get it all nicely coated, then spread them out in the bottom of the crust.
Use a couple forks or a pastry cutter to combine the flour, sugar, and butter of the second chunk of ingredients until it's all crumbly. Them sprinkle it out over the pears. Bake for about an hour, or until the top is lightly browned.
My surprise ingredient shoppers only bought four pears for me, and since they got the surprise ingredients just over a week before I baked this pie, those ones were quite soft and ripe. The other two, on the other hand, were very firm. I think it made the texture really interesting! Most of the ripe pears sort of dissolved into the filling and made it all gel together really well, while the firm pears stayed pretty firm, so there were chunks that had a nice crispness. Overall, everyone really liked how this one turned out. It disappeared in just over a day, which is pretty quick for pie around here. I don't know how that can be a phenomenon, pie staying in the house of four college guys, but it happens. So if you're in the neighborhood, stop by! I bet I'll have some pie for ya.
Cranberries (whole, frozen)
Yogurt (plain, unsweetened)
Yuca root (waxy and brown on the outside, starchy and white on the inside)
and finally
Pears! Just regular pears. D'anjou, if you're hip on pear varieties.
Yeah, I saved the easiest one for last. Whatev.
Anyway, here it goes. Again, the standard pie crust is the one to use for this recipe. However, since we don't cook the insides separately and it isn't a quiche, don't blind bake the crust. You'll see this as a trend with double-crusted pies, though on this one I made a streusel-type crumble top. Start by preheating to 375F.
6 pears (The recipe I used recommends D'anjou or Bartlett, but I don't have enough pear experience to make that call.), peeled, cored, sliced thin
3 tablespoons lemon juice
1.5 oz flour (OH SNAP we're weighing flour again... if you don't have a food scale, a third of a cup is a pretty close estimate)
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1/8 teaspoon salt (at this point, I've got a pretty good one-eighth-teaspoon pinch)
1.5 oz flour
1/3 cup brown sugar
3 tablespoons cold butter, in small pieces
As you're getting the pears sliced, toss them with the lemon juice to prevent them from oxidizing. In a separate bowl, mix the rest of 'em from the first chunk. Toss the pear slices with the flour to get it all nicely coated, then spread them out in the bottom of the crust.
Use a couple forks or a pastry cutter to combine the flour, sugar, and butter of the second chunk of ingredients until it's all crumbly. Them sprinkle it out over the pears. Bake for about an hour, or until the top is lightly browned.
My surprise ingredient shoppers only bought four pears for me, and since they got the surprise ingredients just over a week before I baked this pie, those ones were quite soft and ripe. The other two, on the other hand, were very firm. I think it made the texture really interesting! Most of the ripe pears sort of dissolved into the filling and made it all gel together really well, while the firm pears stayed pretty firm, so there were chunks that had a nice crispness. Overall, everyone really liked how this one turned out. It disappeared in just over a day, which is pretty quick for pie around here. I don't know how that can be a phenomenon, pie staying in the house of four college guys, but it happens. So if you're in the neighborhood, stop by! I bet I'll have some pie for ya.
Wednesday, June 8, 2011
More surprise ingredients!
I'm a little off schedule now... but it shouldn't be a problem to get back on track. Monday's pie used yet another of the surprise ingredients: Yogurt. Not too much of a stretch, really. Mara suggested straining it and substituting for the cream cheese in a cheesecake. And since Occasionally Cheesecake Mondays are a thing, things just fell into place.
Straining the yogurt took quite a while, so I didn't get the cheesecake in the oven until Tuesday. And then when I got home from work today, it felt like swimming to just sit on the couch. I decided I would spare the house from the heat of using the oven an hour or so.
Anyway, cheesecake.
I strained two 32 oz containers of plain yogurt to try to get the weight equivalent of four packages of cream cheese. It was pretty close. Using cheesecloth, I strained the yogurt most of Monday in a colander inside a bowl. There was a little room under the colander so the yogurt wasn't resting in its juice. For the first several hours, a lot of water drained off. I poured it off every hour to hour and a half. I think it drained pretty evenly, but I mixed the yogurt a few times through the day in case certain parts were holding more liquid. If I had done it in smaller doses, I prolly could have rolled up the cheesecloth and squeezed out a lot of the liquid, but I just went at it with the whole darn thing. It took a lot longer, but oh well. Anyway, when it was getting late, I just stuck the bowl/colander/cheesecloth/yogurt stack into the fridge and let it keep draining all night. I weighed it in the morning, and I think it was about 1 pound 13 oz, compared to the 2 pounds the recipe called for. Close enough. Or I was getting impatient.
4 (8oz) packages cream cheese OR 2x 32oz yogurt, strained
1 1/2 cups white sugar
3/4 cup milk
4 eggs
1 cup sour cream
1 tablespoon vanilla extract
1/4 cup all-purpose flour
Go ahead and prep the graham cracker crust we used last week. Instead of reserving a third of the crumbs to stick on the sides of the finished cheesecake, I just patted them all on the bottom of the springform pan and baked it a few minutes longer. Impatience and all...
Preheat the oven to 350F for the cheesecake.
Then, mix up the insides! The recipe I followed does it one way (and incidentally, I did it that way), but I'm going to suggest a different order. To your yogurt (or if you want to go traditional, four 8oz packages of cream cheese), add the sugar and beat until smooth. Beat the eggs in one at a time, then add the sour cream. Hold the milk until the end, mixing the flour and vanilla into it. It should be easier to whisk the flour into the milk than to convince it to combine with the rest of it. Then set aside the electric beater and gently stir the milk mixture into the rest with a big wooden spoon or something. Slowly pour the deliciousness into the crust. Let it rest for a few minutes to allow some of the bubbles that inevitably got trapped in the goo to rise out. If you're confident, try gently striking the pan on the surface of the counter. It'll help the bubbles shake loose. Then bake for 60 minutes.
Lots of people have trouble with cheesecakes cracking on top. Here're a few tips to prevent that. First,make sure the ingredients (especially if you use cream cheese) are room temperature. That will allow them to all combine evenly. Another is having too much air in the custard. So knocking those bubbles out is the first step. But cooling too fast is usually the biggest offender. So when it's done baking, just turn off the oven and leave it in there for a few hours. Be patient!! The cheesecake will thank you.
I've been enjoying this one so far! It has a slightly different flavor and texture. Definitely yummy.
Straining the yogurt took quite a while, so I didn't get the cheesecake in the oven until Tuesday. And then when I got home from work today, it felt like swimming to just sit on the couch. I decided I would spare the house from the heat of using the oven an hour or so.
Anyway, cheesecake.
I strained two 32 oz containers of plain yogurt to try to get the weight equivalent of four packages of cream cheese. It was pretty close. Using cheesecloth, I strained the yogurt most of Monday in a colander inside a bowl. There was a little room under the colander so the yogurt wasn't resting in its juice. For the first several hours, a lot of water drained off. I poured it off every hour to hour and a half. I think it drained pretty evenly, but I mixed the yogurt a few times through the day in case certain parts were holding more liquid. If I had done it in smaller doses, I prolly could have rolled up the cheesecloth and squeezed out a lot of the liquid, but I just went at it with the whole darn thing. It took a lot longer, but oh well. Anyway, when it was getting late, I just stuck the bowl/colander/cheesecloth/yogurt stack into the fridge and let it keep draining all night. I weighed it in the morning, and I think it was about 1 pound 13 oz, compared to the 2 pounds the recipe called for. Close enough. Or I was getting impatient.
4 (8oz) packages cream cheese OR 2x 32oz yogurt, strained
1 1/2 cups white sugar
3/4 cup milk
4 eggs
1 cup sour cream
1 tablespoon vanilla extract
1/4 cup all-purpose flour
Go ahead and prep the graham cracker crust we used last week. Instead of reserving a third of the crumbs to stick on the sides of the finished cheesecake, I just patted them all on the bottom of the springform pan and baked it a few minutes longer. Impatience and all...
Preheat the oven to 350F for the cheesecake.
Then, mix up the insides! The recipe I followed does it one way (and incidentally, I did it that way), but I'm going to suggest a different order. To your yogurt (or if you want to go traditional, four 8oz packages of cream cheese), add the sugar and beat until smooth. Beat the eggs in one at a time, then add the sour cream. Hold the milk until the end, mixing the flour and vanilla into it. It should be easier to whisk the flour into the milk than to convince it to combine with the rest of it. Then set aside the electric beater and gently stir the milk mixture into the rest with a big wooden spoon or something. Slowly pour the deliciousness into the crust. Let it rest for a few minutes to allow some of the bubbles that inevitably got trapped in the goo to rise out. If you're confident, try gently striking the pan on the surface of the counter. It'll help the bubbles shake loose. Then bake for 60 minutes.
Lots of people have trouble with cheesecakes cracking on top. Here're a few tips to prevent that. First,make sure the ingredients (especially if you use cream cheese) are room temperature. That will allow them to all combine evenly. Another is having too much air in the custard. So knocking those bubbles out is the first step. But cooling too fast is usually the biggest offender. So when it's done baking, just turn off the oven and leave it in there for a few hours. Be patient!! The cheesecake will thank you.
I've been enjoying this one so far! It has a slightly different flavor and texture. Definitely yummy.
Monday, June 6, 2011
Saturday=Brunch
And Quiche! And Farmer's Market, so fresh veggies for inside the quiche!
As with last week, we were way full before the quiche was done for all the other brunch things we made. Oh well. Leftovers!
The one is an Asparagus, Leek, and Gruyere Quiche.
As with other quiches, I used the standard pie crust I've talked so much about.
1 tablespoon butter
1 leek, halved and thinly sliced (discard the darker green parts)
1 pound asparagus, thinly sliced
salt and pepper to taste
1 cup shredded gruyere cheese
4 eggs
1 1/4 cups half and half
While the crust is blind baking, melt the butter on medium heat and add the asparagus and leek. Season with salt and pepper and cook for a few minutes.
Then once the crust is done baking and cooled for a bit, spread the cheese in the bottom of the crust, then the asparagus/leek. Beat the eggs with the half and half, and pour them over the other stuff in the crust. Mine barely fit. Bake at 350F for about an hour, until the eggy bit is set.
I fell asleep from food-coma in the middle, and it cooked for about an hour and a half... a little dark on top, but yummy nonetheless.
As with last week, we were way full before the quiche was done for all the other brunch things we made. Oh well. Leftovers!
The one is an Asparagus, Leek, and Gruyere Quiche.
As with other quiches, I used the standard pie crust I've talked so much about.
1 tablespoon butter
1 leek, halved and thinly sliced (discard the darker green parts)
1 pound asparagus, thinly sliced
salt and pepper to taste
1 cup shredded gruyere cheese
4 eggs
1 1/4 cups half and half
While the crust is blind baking, melt the butter on medium heat and add the asparagus and leek. Season with salt and pepper and cook for a few minutes.
Then once the crust is done baking and cooled for a bit, spread the cheese in the bottom of the crust, then the asparagus/leek. Beat the eggs with the half and half, and pour them over the other stuff in the crust. Mine barely fit. Bake at 350F for about an hour, until the eggy bit is set.
I fell asleep from food-coma in the middle, and it cooked for about an hour and a half... a little dark on top, but yummy nonetheless.
Busy weekend, and lots of pies!
And I'm way behind on blog posts.
Going all the way back to Friday: Nantucket Cranberry Pie
Another Surprise Pie Ingredient inspired this one, but cranberries make a more obvious pie ingredient, so it wasn't too tricky.
I found this recipe on a food blog, and at first I thought to myself "What?! this isn't a pie either!" However, the author shared my concern, and quelled it for me. The way she describes it "It's pie in Nantucket."
So there.
Also, it's REALLY easy. So much so that I was tempted to try baking it on a grill. Alas, we didn't have as much grill space I thought there would be at the barbeque, so I baked it in the oven like a normal person.
Start by preheating the oven to 350F and greasing up a cake pan generously with butter.
Here's all the stuff:
2 (heaping) cups cranberries
3/4 cups pecans, chopped
2/3 cup sugar
1 cup flour
1 cup sugar
1 stick butter, melted
2 eggs, beaten
1 teaspoon almond extract
1/4 teaspoon salt
a little extra sugar
Spread the cranberries in the bottom of the cake pan, then the pecans on that, then sprinkle the sugar over as evenly as possible. Then mix the rest of the stuff (other than the extra sugar, that's for later) in a bowl and pour it out over the fruit/nuts/sugar in the pan. It's pretty thick, so try to pour it out as evenly as you can, cause it'll be tricky to spread it. Then bake for 45 to 50 minutes. A few minutes before you take it out, sprinkle that other sugar on top.
SUPER YUM. I will make this pie MANY times in the future. So many great things about it; tart cranberries, crunchy nuts, sweet, crispy topping... the only thing is that it doesn't come out of the pan with all the gooey insides and you have to scoop it all out separately so it doesn't make nice slice-of-pie-shaped servings. Instead I just ate it out of the pan. After the other people dug their slices out.
Going all the way back to Friday: Nantucket Cranberry Pie
Another Surprise Pie Ingredient inspired this one, but cranberries make a more obvious pie ingredient, so it wasn't too tricky.
I found this recipe on a food blog, and at first I thought to myself "What?! this isn't a pie either!" However, the author shared my concern, and quelled it for me. The way she describes it "It's pie in Nantucket."
So there.
Also, it's REALLY easy. So much so that I was tempted to try baking it on a grill. Alas, we didn't have as much grill space I thought there would be at the barbeque, so I baked it in the oven like a normal person.
Start by preheating the oven to 350F and greasing up a cake pan generously with butter.
Here's all the stuff:
2 (heaping) cups cranberries
3/4 cups pecans, chopped
2/3 cup sugar
1 cup flour
1 cup sugar
1 stick butter, melted
2 eggs, beaten
1 teaspoon almond extract
1/4 teaspoon salt
a little extra sugar
Spread the cranberries in the bottom of the cake pan, then the pecans on that, then sprinkle the sugar over as evenly as possible. Then mix the rest of the stuff (other than the extra sugar, that's for later) in a bowl and pour it out over the fruit/nuts/sugar in the pan. It's pretty thick, so try to pour it out as evenly as you can, cause it'll be tricky to spread it. Then bake for 45 to 50 minutes. A few minutes before you take it out, sprinkle that other sugar on top.
SUPER YUM. I will make this pie MANY times in the future. So many great things about it; tart cranberries, crunchy nuts, sweet, crispy topping... the only thing is that it doesn't come out of the pan with all the gooey insides and you have to scoop it all out separately so it doesn't make nice slice-of-pie-shaped servings. Instead I just ate it out of the pan. After the other people dug their slices out.
Thursday, June 2, 2011
Rhubarb Cheesecke Reactions and "Yuck, a Pie!"
First order of business: That was really tasty! All parties involved with the consumption of Rhubarb Cheesecake said it was delicious. The tartness complemented the creamy goodness that is cheesecake in a wonderful way. Presentation-wise, I felt the cheesecake was a little short. It only filled up about two of the three inch depth of my springform pan. So next time, I might try making the recipe 1.5 times as big.
Then on to the first of the surprise pie ingredients!
Zim was really excited about bringing back a yuca root as one of my surprises. I was baffled.
I looked it up, and it appears that it is related to tapioca, so it wasn't too much of a long shot. So I moved on to googling for recipes.
The yuca pie recipe I found had me wary.... For one thing, the recipe had no crust, seemed overly starchy, and was slightly leavened. So my brain thought 'CAKE!' and 'IMPOSTOR!' But it seemed interesting, so I just went for it.
2 cups shredded yuca root
1/2 cup flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
2 sticks butter (see last paragraph)
1 cup sugar
2 cups coconut milk
1 cup coffee
3/4 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon allspice
1/4 teaspoon nutmeg
1/2 stick butter
1/2 cup sugar
3/4 cup powdered milk
1/2 cup water
Preheat the oven to 375F and mix the first four in a bowl. No big deal.
Cream the butter and sugar together. This works best if the butter is room temp, not melted. I was in a crunch for time, so I melted mine. Add the rest of the wet things and spices and combine. Then mix in the dry bowl. Butter and flour whatever vessel you choose for this goop. I used two round cake pans, but you could easily use a 13x9 or some such baking pan.
Bake until it gets firm and golden brown.
While that's going on in the oven, melt the butter from the last block of ingredients in a saucepan. Add in the sugar, powdered milk, and water. Stir constantly over low to medium heat until it thickens.
I had mine on pretty low heat, and the mixture liked to get stuck to the bottom a lot. If I didn't scrape it off pretty quickly, it would burn. so my recommendation would be to use a silicon spatula that you can use to constantly scrape the pan and stir to keep an even consistency.
When the oven part is done, pour this goop on top.
Overall, I am pleased with the taste. It's sweet, chewy, dense, and creamy. However, the butter, or god, the butter. It is swimming in it. I am wary that my melting the butter rather than creaming it at room temp made it fail to incorporate, but I also think that there is just too much of it. Hopefully if you want to try this recipe, you have read the whole post before staring to cook. That way you can attempt to prevent the buttery overload I experienced. I ended up putting the finished product on a cooling rack over a baking sheet and letting some of the butter drip out, then setting them on paper towels to soak out a bit more.
Then on to the first of the surprise pie ingredients!
Zim was really excited about bringing back a yuca root as one of my surprises. I was baffled.
I looked it up, and it appears that it is related to tapioca, so it wasn't too much of a long shot. So I moved on to googling for recipes.
The yuca pie recipe I found had me wary.... For one thing, the recipe had no crust, seemed overly starchy, and was slightly leavened. So my brain thought 'CAKE!' and 'IMPOSTOR!' But it seemed interesting, so I just went for it.
2 cups shredded yuca root
1/2 cup flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
2 sticks butter (see last paragraph)
1 cup sugar
2 cups coconut milk
1 cup coffee
3/4 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon allspice
1/4 teaspoon nutmeg
1/2 stick butter
1/2 cup sugar
3/4 cup powdered milk
1/2 cup water
Preheat the oven to 375F and mix the first four in a bowl. No big deal.
Cream the butter and sugar together. This works best if the butter is room temp, not melted. I was in a crunch for time, so I melted mine. Add the rest of the wet things and spices and combine. Then mix in the dry bowl. Butter and flour whatever vessel you choose for this goop. I used two round cake pans, but you could easily use a 13x9 or some such baking pan.
Bake until it gets firm and golden brown.
While that's going on in the oven, melt the butter from the last block of ingredients in a saucepan. Add in the sugar, powdered milk, and water. Stir constantly over low to medium heat until it thickens.
I had mine on pretty low heat, and the mixture liked to get stuck to the bottom a lot. If I didn't scrape it off pretty quickly, it would burn. so my recommendation would be to use a silicon spatula that you can use to constantly scrape the pan and stir to keep an even consistency.
When the oven part is done, pour this goop on top.
Overall, I am pleased with the taste. It's sweet, chewy, dense, and creamy. However, the butter, or god, the butter. It is swimming in it. I am wary that my melting the butter rather than creaming it at room temp made it fail to incorporate, but I also think that there is just too much of it. Hopefully if you want to try this recipe, you have read the whole post before staring to cook. That way you can attempt to prevent the buttery overload I experienced. I ended up putting the finished product on a cooling rack over a baking sheet and letting some of the butter drip out, then setting them on paper towels to soak out a bit more.
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