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    Entries in pies can be crusty (2)

    Tuesday
    Jun182013

    Apple Pie-Rogies

    Tiny apple pies. Because it's too hot to cook a whole one.

     

    And because one of the requests on the cookie board was "apple cinnamon" and I really wanted to make the cookies that look just like tiny pies that Taneasha sent me a link to (it wasn't really a recipe since all it did was reshape premade dough and fill it with premade apple filling). But for some reason, that seemed like a lot of work. So instead I made perogies.

    No, I don't understand how my brain works either.

    Apple Pie-Rogies

    the lovely crustiness

    • 1 c butter
    • 3 c sifted flour
    • 1 c icing (powdered) sugar
    • 1/4 tsp salt
    • 10 - 12 tbsp milk

    the tasty fillingness

    • 3 apples
    • 3 tbsp lemon juice
    • 2 tbsp brown sugar
    • 1 tbsp butter
    • 1 tsp cinnamon

    apparently we're playing the game of "guess which ingredient isn't in the pic" again

    Peel and dice your apples into small pieces.

    Toss them into a pot with the rest of the filling stuff and set the burner to medium.

    You're going to have to stir these from time to time, but not so often that you can't make the crust while they simmer.

    Chop the butter into smallish chunks (and if you stole one of them for the filling, I promise I won't tell) and add the flour and the sugar and the salt to the bowl.

    Yes we're making pastry. No you don't have to freak out.

    Really, it's one of the easiest things to make. You just have to resist the urge to squish the dough between your fingers. It's gotta be one of those strange lizard-brain things, the urge to knead dough. Like cats do, and small children. Anyway, don't.

    Cut the flour/sugar/salt into the butter until you have something that looks kinda like crumbs.

    (pic of crumbs goes here... I forgot to take one, you have to use your imagination)

    Sprinkle about 6 or 8 tbsp of the milk around on top of the crumbs and then using a wooden spoon CUT through the dough.

    Don't stir, cut. From time to time, you'll need to scrape the spoon off. Keep adding a tbsp of milk at a time and cutting through the dough, until you get a shaggy mess that will hold together like damp sand.

    You are allowed to squish it this one time only. :P

    Turn the crumbly shaggy mess out onto the counter. Don't panic.

    Like the nursery rhyme says, "pat it and roll it." Pat it down, then fold (roll) half of it on top of the other half, and keep doing that until it looks like this:

    I know, I know, I need the in between pics so you'll believe me that it works and I'm not pulling some kind of Food Network bullshit, but I've only got two hands and they were both covered in shortcrust dough at the time (that's what we're making here: shortcrust dough).

    Your apples should be done now by the way.

    Chop the dough in half and roll out one half of it. You want it about 1/8 of an inch, or aboout 3 mm thick. 

    Using a 2.5 inch cookie or biscuit cutter, or really big wine glass, you should be able to get just over a dozen from half the dough. Ultimately, between the two halves and rerolling the scraps, you should end up with about 3 dozen cookies.

    Drop about a half teaspoon of filling on one side of the circle.

    Fold over the other side and press the edges together.

    I pressed mine with a fork: looks fancy and encourages the edges to stay together.

    Oh, um, you should have preheated the oven to between 300 and 325. My oven was being a fucking wack job last night, and I have no idea how hot it was in there, but I'm guessing it was in that range.

    Brush the tiny pies with an egg wash of one egg (also not in the ingredients pic) and a few tbsp of milk. You need these extra proteins on top to make sure the pies come out shiney and at least a little browned.

    Poke a few holes in the top with a toothpick. If the steam has an easy way to get out it won't try busting through the pressed-together edges.

    These take 16 - 18 minutes at whatever temperature my oven was. If the oven is too hot, you'll have very browned bottoms and still white tops. The top will be cooked, but it won't look that way.

    They're tiny, they're tasty, they're totally worth the folding and forking.

    That is some tender and flaky crust, lemme tell ya. And yes, you can do it too.

    I really wanted to make some kind of glaze to go on these (perogies need sour cream), but it was late, and I didn't want to make more dishes, so I left them as is. Plus, I couldn't decide if I should try to make something with sour cream in keeping with the theme, or go with a caramel.

    What would you glaze these with?

     

     

    Tuesday
    Nov272012

    I almost know what I'm doing

    What goes with eggnog?

    Mincemeat pies. Um, sorta mincemeat. And kinda not really a pie.

    Proper 'mincemeat' really does have meat in it. In fact, the picadillo I stuffed into poblano peppers is more like traditional mincemeat than this filling is, but I've never been one for tradition. I am firmly of the opinion that "it's always been done this way" is the best reason to do it another way.

    And so I stuffed biscuit dough with fruit.

    (first eggnog, now mincemeat... almost seems like we're actually on top of a holiday for once)

    Minced Fruit Pasties (or Turnovers, if you prefer)

    What you need:

    • 1 recipe's worth of biscuit dough or biscuit dough
    • 2.5 small wrinkly apples, or about that much apple
    • a few dried pears (or apricots, or some other fruit)
    • 1/2 c dates
    • zest from one orange
    • 1/2 inch ginger
    • 2 tbsp butter
    • 2 tbsp cinnamon sugar (or cinnamon and sugar to make that amount)
    • 1 tsp vanilla (you can use some kind of booze here if you'd like)
    • 1 egg

    What you gotta do:

    I had a few apples in the fruit basket that have been there for way too long. I once read "wisened" as a description for apples, and I think that's what these ones were. Fresh crisp ones would work fine too, but if you've got a couple old ones sitting around... (anyone seeing my inspiration for this recipe?)

    Put your grater into a medium sized bowl, and start grating apples. Peel them? What? Why? I rarely see any reason to peel apples. The peel is completely edible, doesn't taste bad, and will add colour to things if it's red. Plus, that's extra work.

    Zest the orange on a microplane grater, and then use it for the ginger. Microplanes are great for ginger.

    Chop whatever dried fruit you're using into small chunks. If you've got some candied orange peel, that would work too.

    My butter and cinnamon sugar are already combined, leftover from the cinnamon buns, but yours should go in now, separately if that's how they are.

    Vanilla too. Or booze, your call.

    Now, the dates. You can pre-chop these if you want, but dates are pretty easy to mash, so I just dumped mine in whole and went at them with a wooden spoon.

    If you don't happen to have a batch of biscuit dough in the fridge because you made a double when you did yesterday's cinnamon biscuit buns for brunch, you'll have to make some.

    If you do: handy! Roll it out into a rectangle.

    I cut mine into 9 pieces; the pieces were the right size (about 5x5 inches), but this only makes filling for 6. I'm sure you can find something to stuff into those biscuits. A bit of sausage would be nice... Sausage biscuit rolls!

    Drop a couple or three tablespoons of the filling mixture on one side of a biscuit square, and spread it out into a triangle-ish shape. No meat, but it kinda looks like there is...

    Don't get too close to the edge. Fold the other half of the dough over the filling to make a triangle.

    Starting at one of the corner points, lift the bottom dough and stretch-fold-roll it over the top dough. Biscuit dough is sticky enough that you shouldn't need any water or egg to make the edges stick, but if yours aren't sticking, water will help.

    Stretch-fold-roll your way toward the point, then stretch-fold-roll along to the other corner.

    Apparently I took no pictures of this process.

    When you're done, they should look something like these:

    Brush them with an egg with a tsp of water beaten into it.

    Cut a slit or two in the top so steam can escape. If you to this, you are less likely to have filling explode out of the side. You can dust the tops with sugar too if you'd like.

    Bake them at 400 for about 20 minutes.

    I'm still working the kinks out of my new oven, but I'm pretty sure I was around 400, and mine only took 18 minutes.

    They'll be lovely and shiney and golden when they're done.

    And some of them will have strangely face-like features.

    Tasty served with morning coffee, afternoon tea, or a glass of evening eggnog.

    Stick around. We are actually going to pull off some holiday shit this year. Taneasha's thinking sweets, and I'll be making small things you can eat with one hand.

    Maybe one day I'll get back to writing things you want to read with only one hand... ;)