Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Finishing Your Fabulous Apple Pie! Part 2.

Pre-heat oven to 425 degree Fahrenheit.

While the bottom of the pie is in freezer, time to slice the apples. I use a small straight edge knife that is sharp. Take each quarter and slice very thin slices. Put them back into the citric water-bowl. When all quarters are sliced, leave them in the bowl while you prepare the rest of the filling. In a closeable container, add 1/3 cup white sugar, 2/3 cups light brown sugar, 1 tsp. Cinnamon, ½ tsp ginger, ¼ tsp allspice, 1/8 tsp nutmeg, 4 tbsp cornstarch. Close lid and shake to blend completely.

Drain the bowl of sliced apples. Mix sugar mixture with the apples. Set to side.

Finish rolling out the rest of the dough. Wrap it around the rolling pin, set aside. Get bottom half of pie from freezer. Empty bowl of apples/sugar mix into bottom half. Arrange so no apples sit on pie edge. Cut 2 tsp butter into slices and place randomly on top of apples/sugar mix. Brush pie crust edge with milk all the way around. Lay top disc of dough over the apples and press down all around the edge with fingers or fork. Trim edge all the way around. Pie is now ready for the oven.

Place the pie on a flat baking sheet to catch the drippings that will ooze out while baking. Tent the pie with a sheet of aluminum foil that has a 3” diameter hole cut in the center. Crimp edges of aluminum under the pie edge to protect edges from browning too fast. Slide baking sheet & pie into oven. Set timer for 15 minutes. When timer goes off, reduce heat to 400 degrees Fahrenheit. Set timer to 35 minutes. When the timer goes off remove aluminum tent. Set timer 10 minutes, check top of pie, for hint of tan color, if it has slight color, it's time to remove from oven. Do not let edges brown too much!

Upon removal from oven, sprinkle top of pie with large granulated sugar. Let pie cool and serve with a big dollop of whipped cream or ice-cream! YUM!



Monday, September 12, 2011

Making the Most Fabulous Apple Pie EVER! Part 1.

Baking the perfect apple pie.

I went to my friend Lori Parker's end of summer party. For, my contribution I baked what I know best- a pie. Who doesn't love pie? It's not as complicated as it seems to make one, just time consuming. I use my time baking as a way to relax. Try it you might enjoy doing this as much as I do! Anyway. I will write this recipe as if I was talking you through your first pie, start to finish. All advice given: hard won through the years.

What you need:

5-6 large apples or 7-8 small apples. I prefer softer apples vs. hard apples. I think they melt better in your mouth when you bite into the finished product.

2 tsp lemon juice.

2/3 cup brown sugar

1/3 cup white granulated sugar

1 tsp. cinnamon

½ tsp ground ginger

¼ tsp nutmeg

1/8 tsp all spice

1/8 tsp ground cloves

4 tbsp corn starch

2 tsp butter

2/3 cup Crisco or lard

Water

2+ cups flour

salt

3-4 tbsp extra large granulated sugar


Tools needed. 2 large bowls, 1 long-tonged fork, baking sheet, 10” pie plate, rolling pin,silver foil, plastic dough rolling sheet or wax paper,


Preheat oven to 425 degrees Fahrenheit.


Wash apples, while drying fill a large bowl halfway with water add the lemon juice. It can be fresh or bottled. Does not matter since the citrus is in the water to keep the apples from turning color. On a cutting mat, quarter the apples, peel and core. Put the quarters in the water-bowl making sure to dunk each piece as it goes in, to get the citric acid on it so it does not turn brown. Do not slice apples just yet. When apples are peeled and cored, it's time to make the dough.


Dough:

Take a 1 cup (narrow) glass measuring cup, fill with cold water to 1/3 full. Spoon in Crisco keeping it below water until the water line reaches one cup. Put in refrigerator.

Place 2 level cups of white flour in a large bowl, add 2, pinches (Really just pinch the salt and take from it what ends up pinched between your fingers!) salt. Blend into the flour. Remove the Crisco from the water with a long-tonged fork, place in the middle of the flour. Put water back into the fridge. With the fork, work the Crisco into the flour until well blended, resembling crumbs and pea sized pieces. At this point get the water from the fridge and pour into flour/Crisco mix. GENTLY toss and mix together until the dough holds loosely together in larger pieces. Stop working with the fork. Flour your hands (clean of course) and gather the large pieces (about 1/2”-1” in size) into a ball with your hands, GENTLY pressing the ball together until it holds. Place in fridge for a few minutes while you prepare your pie plate.

You will need a 10” pie plate. (Tip: if you are baking for a gathering of friends away from home, use the disposable aluminum ones. It is so, so easy to lose your glass pie plates since they never come back, should you leave your left-over pie with your host for their happy consumption after party.) Place the tin on a flat baking sheet. Get out your plastic dough rolling sheet or wax paper. Wet the surface you plan to roll the dough out on. By wetting the surface, the plastic sheet stays in place and does not try to move with the roller. Place the plastic dough rolling sheet or wax paper on this surface. If using wax, you will need two 1½ ' pieces, let them over lap by 1 inch. The wax sheets should be placed parallel to you. Dust plastic dough rolling sheet or wax paper well with flour.

Cut the dough in half. With hands gently shape into discs. The slightly larger one first (I weigh my discs to make sure they are close in weight.) is flattened on rolling surface, pick dough up off the surface, re-dust surface with flour, flip the disc over putting unfloured side down on surface. Gently flatten with hands in round shape. Take rolling pin and begin to roll out. Your choice of rolling pin ideally will be wide in length and width. There should be some weight to the pin. (Technique tip: use large, long strokes with the rolling pin from the center point of the dough disc. Short and many strokes work the dough more, making it harder) As the dough rolls out, it may break apart. Don't worry. I have a patching technique for you. Once the disc is rolled out enough to fit in pie pan, starting at one end of the dough begin to wrap it around the rolling pin for easy placement in the pan. Line up the dough to pn and begin to unroll the rolling pin. The dough should ease right into place. You might have to gently move it, but that's OK! Now trim the dough to the edge of the pan. Keep trimmings.

Now if the dough cracks or needs additional edging, take a shot glass full of milk (or similar substance) and using a pastry brush dipped into the milk, paint the edges that need additional dough. Take dough trimmings and place where filler dough is needed. Press onto the painted dough until they “glue” together. You will have a perfect shell to fill! place the pie plate with crust into the freezer while you prepare the rest of the goodies that will be placed on top of the bottom half of the crust.

More tomorrow on finishing this fabulous pie! Learn how to prepare filling, and top off the crust!