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Friday, September 28, 2012
Roasted Pork Loin with Beer Sauce
Never having made German food before I decided to follow this recipe exactly. This pork roast was flavorful and juicy. The beer sauce had a very different flavor but it was absolutely delicious. Perfect with potato pancakes and oven roasted brussels sprouts and carrots!
Roasted Pork Loin with Beer Sauce
by Susan Whempner
adapted from The Food Network
2 Tablespoons butter
1 large red onion, thinly sliced
2 garlic cloves, minced
1 teaspoon ground cumin
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon ground allspice
2 (12 ounce) bottles beer (not dark)
1/2 cup Dijon mustard
1/4 cup honey
1 (3 1/2) pound boneless pork loin, tied
2 Tablespoons vegetable oil
1 Tablespoon butter, room temperature
1 Tablespoon all purpose flour
Melt 2 tablespoons of butter in a heavy large saucepan over medium-high heat. Add the onion and sauté until tender and golden brown, about 15 minutes. Add the garlic, cumin, cinnamon and allspice and stir for 1 minute. Add the beer, mustard and honey and bring to a boil (the sauce will foam). Remove from the heat. Puree in batches in a blender until smooth. Cool to room temperature. Pour into a baking dish. Add the pork loin; turn to coat. Cover and refrigerate for 8 hours or overnight, turning occasionally.
Preheat oven to 375 degrees F. Remove the pork from the marinade; pat dry. Reserve the marinade. Heat the oil in a heavy large skillet over medium heat. Season the pork with salt and pepper. Add to the skillet and brown on all sides. Transfer to a baking sheet with rim. Roast in the oven for 3/4 to 1 hour or until a thermometer inserted into the thickest part registers 155 degrees F. Transfer the pork to a work surface; reserve any pan juices.
Combine the pan juices and the marinade in saucepan. Bring to a boil. Reduce the heat to simmer. Mix the butter and the flour in a small bowl until a smooth paste forms. Add to the sauce and simmer until the sauce thickens. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Cut the pork into slices. Pour the sauce over.
Weiner Schnitzel and Latkes
Weiner Schnitzel
by Rachael Tanisadapted from Grandma's Secret Wiener Schnitzel Recipe
Ingredients:
1 pound veal
1 cup breadcrumbs (I used Panko)
2 teaspoons lemon juice
1 Tablespoon parsley flakes
1 egg
cooking oil
Directions:
1. Pound the meat until it is less than 1/4 inch thick.
2. Into a large skillet, pour oil approximately 1/4-inch deep; heat until the oil bubbles when you drop in a pinch of breadcrumbs.
3 Beat the egg, add 1 teaspoon of lemon juice.
4. Add the parsley to breadcrumbs.
5. Dredge the meat in the egg, then the breadcrumb mixture; fry until golden brown on each side.
6. Sprinkle with the remaining lemon juice.
Latkes
by Rachael Tanis
adapted from Potato Latkes I
1 cup breadcrumbs (I used Panko)
2 teaspoons lemon juice
1 Tablespoon parsley flakes
1 egg
cooking oil
Directions:
1. Pound the meat until it is less than 1/4 inch thick.
2. Into a large skillet, pour oil approximately 1/4-inch deep; heat until the oil bubbles when you drop in a pinch of breadcrumbs.
3 Beat the egg, add 1 teaspoon of lemon juice.
4. Add the parsley to breadcrumbs.
5. Dredge the meat in the egg, then the breadcrumb mixture; fry until golden brown on each side.
6. Sprinkle with the remaining lemon juice.
Latkes
by Rachael Tanis
adapted from Potato Latkes I
Ingredients:
2 cups peeled and shredded potatoes (I used the frozen ones for hashbrowns, thawed)
1 Tablespoon grated onion
3 eggs, beaten
2 Tablespoons all-purpose flour
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
1/2 cup peanut oil for frying
Directions:
1. In a medium bowl, stir the thawed potatoes, onion, eggs, flour and salt together.
2. In a large heavy-bottomed skillet, over medium-high heat, heat the oil until hot. Place large spoonfuls of the potato mixture into the hot oil, pressing down on them to form 1/4 to 1/2 inch thick patties. Brown on one side, turn and brown on the other. Let drain on paper towels. Serve hot, with optional dollop of sour cream.
2 cups peeled and shredded potatoes (I used the frozen ones for hashbrowns, thawed)
1 Tablespoon grated onion
3 eggs, beaten
2 Tablespoons all-purpose flour
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
1/2 cup peanut oil for frying
Directions:
1. In a medium bowl, stir the thawed potatoes, onion, eggs, flour and salt together.
2. In a large heavy-bottomed skillet, over medium-high heat, heat the oil until hot. Place large spoonfuls of the potato mixture into the hot oil, pressing down on them to form 1/4 to 1/2 inch thick patties. Brown on one side, turn and brown on the other. Let drain on paper towels. Serve hot, with optional dollop of sour cream.
Potato Pancakes
by Allison Donel
3 large raw potatoes, grated - about 2 1/2 cups (press out water by wringing in a kitchen towel)
1 small onion, finely chopped
Salt and pepper
2 large eggs, beaten
3 Tablespoons matzoh meal or cracker crumbs or flour or some of each
a dash of nutmeg
Mix all together. If it seems too wet add more flour or crumbs. Heat a large heavy skillet and add about 1/4 inch oil. Drop in potato mixture and flatten with the back of the spoon. Fry on both sides until crisp and brown. Serve at once with sour cream or applesauce. This is a very forgiving recipe – more potatoes or less, more crumbs or less, and it is still good.
Thursday, September 27, 2012
Beef Rouladen with Bavarian Red Cabbage
As a child, my family spent a lot of time in New Braunfels Texas. My parents also lived in the area for several years after they retired. It is a small German town between San Antonio and Austin. New Braunfels was the best place to swim in the cool waters of the Comal River, the best place to shop at the Outlet Malls and the best place to get authentic German Food. The restaurant we went to is no longer there, but I have wonderful memories of their Schnitzel, Red Cabbage and German Bread. Oktoberfest is a fun celebration that takes place in early fall, so I said "vouldn't it be vunderful to celebrate with a challenge in 37 Cooks!" I hope you will roll out the barrel and join us for a barrel of fun!
Beef Rouladen with Bavarian Red Cabbage
by Linda Mire
Beef Rouladen
1 ¼ lb to 1 ½ lb sirloin round tip, cut into 4 steaks that are about ¼ inches thick
(My butcher cuts my steaks. You want nice, long strips that will be about 3" x 8" when pounded thin)
Salt & pepper to taste
4 Tablespoons of spicy mustard
1 large white onion, finely chopped
4-5 dill pickles spears, finely chopped **
3 cloves of garlic, finely chopped
4 slices of bacon (uncooked)
1 Tablespoon olive oil
1 carton low sodium beef broth (32 ounces)
½ stick of butter
3 Tablespoons of flour
Toothpicks
Place each slice of meat between plastic wrap and pound it thin, so that you have thin slices (about 3" x 8") to work with. Sprinkle each side of meat with salt and pepper. Spread 1 tablespoon of spicy mustard over each slice. Take a heaping tablespoon of the chopped onion and pickle and spread across each slice. Divide the garlic between all four slices.
Beginning at the bottom, roll each slice up. Wrap a slice of bacon around each. Keep the seam on the top and secure slices with at least 3 toothpicks. Heat olive oil in large skillet with lid. Place the Rouladen seam side up in hot oil and brown. Gently roll from side to side. You won’t be able to get your top brown because of the toothpicks. When browned, add half a carton of the beef broth to your skillet. Bring to boil, then reduce heat to low, cover and simmer for 45 minutes. Check frequently and add a little water as the liquid cooks down. The broth/water level should go up about half way up on the Rouladen. Do not cover completely with liquid!
After 45 minutes, remove the Rouladen from the pan and place on a paper towel lined plate. Turn the heat up to high and reduce your liquid to about ½ cup. Reduce heat to medium and add butter. When the butter is melted, add flour and whisk. You want the flour to be a nice dark brown color. Begin to slowly add remaining beef broth, whisking to incorporate and to avoid lumps. If additional liquid is needed, add water. When you get the thickness you prefer for your gravy, turn the heat off. Place the Rouladen on a serving plate and cover with gravy.
** For a delicious spicy version, use pickled jalapenos instead of dill pickles. The amount you want to use depends on how spicy you would like it to be: 1 teaspoon - mild, 2 teaspoons - spicy and 3 teaspoons - on fire!
Bavarian Red Cabbage
adapted from this recipe at CD Kitchen
1 large head red cabbage, washed and coarsely chopped
1 medium onion, finely chopped
2 large apples, cored and chopped into bite size pieces
2 teaspoons salt
2 cups hot water
3 Tablespoons of brown sugar
1 cup cider vinegar
6 Tablespoons butter
Place in crock pot in the order listed above. Cook on high for 1 ½ hours. Turn crock pot down to low and continue to cook for an additional 3 ½ hours. Drain liquid and serve.
Linda's Oktoberfest Challenge Starts Today!
As has become our practice at the beginning of each new cooking challenge, we want to take time to introduce you to the our members. Linda is sponsoring the Oktoberfest Challenge and we're so glad she did! -37 Cooks
Hi, everyone! My name is Linda Mire. My life has changed so much over the last few years.
My days are now spent participating and serving as an administrator in a cookbook group, participating in challenges in 37 Cooks, and bargain shopping. I love decorating with vintage items and secondhand furniture! My children have given me two cute grand puppies that were rescued from shelters. While I truly adore them, I can’t wait for a cute little boy or girl to love and spoil.
My husband and I love to travel. We love going to visit my daughter in college. We have also taken two amazing trips to South Dakota/Wyoming and to Maine since he has retired. He now shares in my hobby of cooking.
Prior to retirement, I was a licensed Independent Insurance Agent. I started as file clerk for an insurance company right out of high school and I worked my way up the ladder, holding various positions at companies and agencies. My cooking was not so great during those years because I juggled all of my children’s activities and my own work schedule and professional activities.
I now love sharing healthy recipes with my family. My son and daughter are joining in on the fun and learning to cook healthy too. We have all learned that cooking at home is a much better option.
If I had one cooking wish granted, it would be to have the amazing baking talent my Grandmother had. Everything she did was by scratch and she never used a written recipe. It was all stored in her heart and baked with all the love she had for us..
I recently started a blog called Seasons and Seasoning to capture my journey as I add touches of seasoning to all the many seasons of my life!
- I retired due to health reasons
- my baby girl left for a college that is 12 hours away
- my son got married
- my husband retired
My days are now spent participating and serving as an administrator in a cookbook group, participating in challenges in 37 Cooks, and bargain shopping. I love decorating with vintage items and secondhand furniture! My children have given me two cute grand puppies that were rescued from shelters. While I truly adore them, I can’t wait for a cute little boy or girl to love and spoil.
My husband and I love to travel. We love going to visit my daughter in college. We have also taken two amazing trips to South Dakota/Wyoming and to Maine since he has retired. He now shares in my hobby of cooking.
Prior to retirement, I was a licensed Independent Insurance Agent. I started as file clerk for an insurance company right out of high school and I worked my way up the ladder, holding various positions at companies and agencies. My cooking was not so great during those years because I juggled all of my children’s activities and my own work schedule and professional activities.
I now love sharing healthy recipes with my family. My son and daughter are joining in on the fun and learning to cook healthy too. We have all learned that cooking at home is a much better option.
If I had one cooking wish granted, it would be to have the amazing baking talent my Grandmother had. Everything she did was by scratch and she never used a written recipe. It was all stored in her heart and baked with all the love she had for us..
I recently started a blog called Seasons and Seasoning to capture my journey as I add touches of seasoning to all the many seasons of my life!
Wednesday, September 26, 2012
Impossibly Easy Almond Joy Pie
Hey you guys! Guess who made a pie? This girl! I am a self-titled NON-baker! No desserts come from my kitchen. But, I did it… and I’m not ashamed to say that I used an easy-peasy recipe and took some help from the store, because, well, I made a pie!! I used a Betty Crocker recipe, which I got from my cousin who said that everyone loved it when she made it. I love coconut so this was a no-brainer for me, and by adding a few more ingredients I made it taste like my favorite candy bar.
Impossibly Easy Almond Joy Pie
by Sarah Gillespy
adapted from Betty Crocker’s Impossibly Easy Coconut Pie
1/2 cup Bisquick mix
2 cups milk (We only buy 2% and it worked fine.)
1 cup shredded coconut (The recipe didn’t say sweetened or not, but I went to 3 stores and all they had was sweetened so that is what I used.)
1/2 cup sugar (The recipe called for ¾ of a cup, but I felt that was a lot, so I cut it.)
1/4cup butter, melted
1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla
4 eggs
1/2 Hershey bar, chopped
handful of almonds, chopped
Heat oven to 350 degrees. Mix all ingredients in a bowl until well blended. Pour mixture into a greased pie plate. Bake about an hour or until nicely browned and when you insert a knife into the center it comes out clean. Let cool for a bit and eat and enjoy!
1/4cup butter, melted
1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla
4 eggs
1/2 Hershey bar, chopped
handful of almonds, chopped
Heat oven to 350 degrees. Mix all ingredients in a bowl until well blended. Pour mixture into a greased pie plate. Bake about an hour or until nicely browned and when you insert a knife into the center it comes out clean. Let cool for a bit and eat and enjoy!
Apple-Bacon Pie with Gingersnap Crust
Apple-Bacon Pie with Gingersnap Crust
by Sandra Simmons
Adapted from Mims Bledsoe, Pie Shop, Atlanta
Adapted from Mims Bledsoe, Pie Shop, Atlanta
When Carrie's Pie Challenge first hit the 37 Cooks scene, I was worried. I can't make pie! Pie is really, really hard! Then I made a couple pies and realized it's not that hard. I am Worst Case Scenario Girl.
So then I started wondering if there were any famous Atlanta pie shops. Being fairly new to Atlanta and being a Thanksgiving-only, pie-eating kinda gal, I had to google. And I came up with Pie Shop. I saw right off it's owned by a gal names Mims. Mims? Best name ever! This blog post sealed the deal for me. Pie with gingersnap crust? Pie with apples, my husband's favorite? Pie with BACON? Let's go!
Gingersnap Crust
2 cups crushed gingersnap cookies
1 stick butter, melted
¼ cup sugar
Apple Filling
5 medium Granny Smith apples - peeled, halved and cored (I used this apple peeler, and as you can see in the photo above, it works!)
2 tablespoons lemon juice, about 1 lemon
½ teaspoon ground cinnamon
½ teaspoon ground cloves
½ teaspoon freshly grated or ground nutmeg
1/4 cup sugar
2 tablespoons flour
Bacon-Streusel Topping
6 slices bacon, fried crisp and drained*
1 cup flour
1 cup light brown sugar
1 stick butter, chilled and cut into ¼-inch cubes
1. Make the crust: Preheat the oven to 350°. In a medium bowl, fold together the crushed gingersnaps, melted butter and sugar. Press the mixture into a 10-inch pie pan until flat and even. Place in the oven and bake for 15 minutes, until the edges start to set, then remove from the oven and set aside to cool completely.
2. Make the filling: Thinly slice the apples. Place them in a large bowl and drizzle the lemon juice over the slices. In a small bowl, combine the cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, sugar and 2 tablespoons flour. Fold the mixture into the apples until the apples are just coated. Spoon the apples into the crust.
3. Make the topping and bake the pie: Increase the oven temperature to 375°. In a medium bowl, combine the flour and brown sugar. Using your fingers or a pastry cutter, mix the butter into the flour and sugar mixture until pea-size clumps form. Crumble the cooled bacon and add it to the flour mixture. Sprinkle the streusel evenly over the top of the apple filling and place the pie in the oven. Bake until the top is browned and the apples are tender, about 45 minutes. Serve warm or at room temperature with Blue Bell Homemade Vanilla Ice Cream.
*We cook our bacon in the oven at 350 degrees for 25-30 minutes. We take a rimmed baking sheet and cover it with aluminum foil (for easy cleanup) and put a cooling rack in the backing sheet. Then add your bacon slices and you're ready to go. No mess and no watching the bacon to make sure it doesn't burn! That said, you can cook your bacon any way you like.
Roasted Tomato & Ricotta in Vol au Vent
Roasted Tomato & Ricotta in Vol au Vent
by Sarah K of The Garden of Earthy Delights Blog
This may look like a fancy dish, but it's incredibly easy - especially if you cheat like I do and use frozen puff pastry. The tomatoes come from our garden; in the heat of summer our tomato plants are so prolific that there's no way to eat them all fresh! So instead, we roast them and pack them in oil to save them for whatever our needs may be.
For each serving:
Vol au Vent shell:
1 square puff pastry, defrosted if previously frozen (I use Tenderflake, which come with two squares in a box)
Preheat oven to 425F.
Roll out puff pastry to a square with 1/4" thickness. Trim the edges with a sharp knife so it forms a perfect square. Cut a 3/8"-1/2" border around the square, leaving two opposing corners still attached to the main body of the pastry.
Lift one of the unattached corners and fold over to the opposite inside corner, attaching the edges with a bit of water. Do the same with the other corner. Prick the inside of the tart evenly with a fork. Bake on a cookie sheet for 18-20 minutes, then let cool for 10 minutes.
Filling:
Ricotta cheese
Fresh basil
Flaked or coarse salt
Spread a layer of ricotta cheese on your tart. Sprinkle with torn or chiffonaded leaves of basil. Arrange a layer of cherry tomatoes on top. Finish with a pinch of salt (I used Anglesey sea salt; Maldon would be lovely too), and serve.
Honestly, that's it - roll, trim, bake, fill. I know, right? So simple - which leaves you more time to relax, eat, and hang out with your loved ones - after all, that's the best part of the meal.
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
Cranberry Walnut Pie and Strawberry Pie
The Epic Pie Fail
by Rachael Tanis
by Rachael Tanis
I made two pies - one strawberry, one
cranberry walnut. While baking said pies, a piece of crust fell off and was
smoking and burning in my oven, so I took them both out and turned off the oven
so I could clean it. I was impatient and wanted to finish my pie so I put the
cranberry in the toaster oven to finish. Normally I keep checking to make sure
it doesn't burn, but I set the timer, got distracted and forgot about it
until I heard the "ding".. pulled it out and of course it had
burned... threw that pie away. Put the strawberry pie in, watched it this time, came out
perfect. Refrigerated overnight.
The next day, I wanted to take it to my Aunt's. My sister rode with me and she held the pie. About 10 mins on our way, the pie started melting!! It was dripping all in her purse and in my brand new SUV!! So I quickly pulled into the parking lot of a business center... no trash cans outside. I didn't want to go inside and ask them to take and dispose of (or eat) a melting pie... so we stashed it in the bushes and left it for the birds. The End.
The next day, I wanted to take it to my Aunt's. My sister rode with me and she held the pie. About 10 mins on our way, the pie started melting!! It was dripping all in her purse and in my brand new SUV!! So I quickly pulled into the parking lot of a business center... no trash cans outside. I didn't want to go inside and ask them to take and dispose of (or eat) a melting pie... so we stashed it in the bushes and left it for the birds. The End.
Apple Pie in a Bag
by Rebbekkah Fisher
adapted from Favorite Family Recipes
For the Crust:
1 1/2 cups flour 1 1/2 teaspoons sugar
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 cup olive oil
2 Tablespoons milk
For the Apple Filling:
5-6 apples, peeled and sliced
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon nutmeg
1/2 cup sugar
2 Tablespoons flour
5-6 apples, peeled and sliced
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon nutmeg
1/2 cup sugar
2 Tablespoons flour
2 teaspoons almond extract
Combine all ingredients except the apples in a bowl. Mix well, then toss the apples in the mixture. Put the apple filling into the unbaked pie crust.
For the Crumb Topping:
1/2 cup flour
1/2 cup butter
1 cup sugar
Use a pastry blender to cut the butter into the four and sugar, mix until crumbly. Cover the apple filling with the crumb topping.
1/2 cup flour
1/2 cup butter
1 cup sugar
Yes, you really do put the pie inside a brown paper grocery bag. Once the pie is inside, roll up the the top of the bag and close it together with either staples or large paper clips. Place the bag on the lowest shelf in the oven. Bake at 350 for 90 minutes. Don't open the bag until the time is up and you have let it cool outside the oven for about 5 minutes. Serve with vanilla ice cream. So good!
Chicken Pot Pie
We love Friends of 37 Cooks. So far we've received recipes from friends who want to cook along with us. But this recipe came to us because one of our members saw the pie photo on her News Feed on Facebook! She wrote to her friend and begged and pleaded that she write up her recipe and send it in for Carrie's Pie Challenge. We're all so glad Susan did. Read through this recipe. We think you'll agree, it's special! - 37 Cooks
Chicken Pot Pie
Chicken Pot Pie
by Susan Cramer
Here is how I make the CPP. I use the recipe in the Betty Crocker cookbook I got as a wedding gift in 1985. Mine says it’s Copyright 1978, 1969 and it’s the Ninth Printing, 1983.
Anyway, here’s the recipe as it appears in the cookbook:
1/3 cup margarine, butter or chicken fat
[My notes on these ingredients: I omit the onion; husband is allergic, sadly. But it still tastes really good. For the veggies, I have used a bigger package, like 16 ounces or so – it just makes more filling and there’s still enough of the gravy to go around. Oftentimes I go more on the chicken, too.]
Heat margarine over low heat until melted. Blend in the flour, onion, salt and pepper. Cook over low heat, stirring constantly, until the mixture is smooth and bubbly; remove from the heat. Stir in broth and milk. Bring to a boil, stirring constantly. Boil and stir for 1 minute. Stir in the chicken and frozen vegetables; reserve.
Prepare Celery Seed Pastry. Roll 2/3 of pastry into 13-inch square on a lightly floured cloth-covered board. Ease the pastry into a square pan, 9x9x2 inches; pour chicken filling into the pastry-lined pan. Roll remaining dough into an 11-inch square; place over the filling. Roll the edges under; flute. Cut slits in the center to allow steam to escape. Bake uncovered in 425° oven until crust is brown, 30 to 35 minutes. 6 servings.
Celery Seed Pastry:
2/3 cup plus 2 Tablespoons shortening or 2/3 cup lard
2 cups all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons celery seed
1 teaspoon salt
4 to 5 Tablespoons water
Cut the shortening into the flour, celery seed and salt until particles are the size of small peas. Sprinkle in water, 1 tablespoon at a time, tossing with fork until all the flour is moistened and the pastry almost cleans the side of a bowl (1 to 2 teaspoons water can be added if necessary). Gather the pastry into a ball.
The rest is just me:
My notes on the pastry: When I made it today, I omitted the celery seed but I LOVE it with celery seed. It just gives it a little extra something. I often use a round pie pan – I have a big one, it seems bigger than normal, and if I use a square pan, that one seems bigger, maybe 10x10, too. So I usually make that recipe for the pastry times 1.5 so half again – instead of 2 cups flour, I use 3 cups flour, etc. And with me using extra chicken and veggies, a bigger pie is perfect. I would also rather have to trim off a little extra pastry than to not have enough to make a nice pie. It looks ugly when I try to stretch it too far.
For all my pastry making, I use shortening for the fat. A couple of us in my family have trouble with butter in the pastry for some reason (I mean gastric distress kind of trouble, lol) so I use shortening. I prefer butter if possible for everything but the only time I use shortening is for pastry and biscuits. Did you see the movie The Help? And the part about Crisco? That cracked me up because my mother went through one of those big cans EVERY week when I was growing up. Almost everything was fried. But we weren’t unhealthy or overweight so I’m not sure what all that means… but where was I?
Oh yeah. I first measure my dry ingredients into my bowl and I use a whisk to mix them up – whisk is a good tip for mixing dry ingredients for any baking recipe. Then I cut in the shortening using my pastry cutter. It works pretty well but you can also use two knives (table knives are fine). I pretty much follow the recipe – when the particles are about the size of small peas I stop. Better to stop a little early than go too long with pastry. It doesn’t like to be handled overly much or it gets tough. Remember that. Tough pastry is not flaky or delicate.
Then it’s time to add the water. I use ice water meaning I have a cup with ice cubes and water in it and I measure my water right out of that cup. Cold water is important. And if you use butter instead of shortening, cold butter is important.
I add one tablespoon of water at a time and use a fork to toss it around. It doesn’t seem to be doing much those first couple of tablespoons but just do it one at a time – add water, toss around, add water, toss around. I think the reason it’s not exact on the amount is because it can vary due to the humidity when you make it. If that’s not the reason, it sounds good, right?
Then when it just starts to come together, you stop adding water and gather it up in a ball. You want it to stick together, not be too crumbly, but not too moist, either. With practice, you get better at knowing when to stop adding water.
Then I sprinkle some flour on my counter (my very clean counter, of course). Sometimes I use a pastry cloth that I have but the counter works fine and cleans up fine. I have some of that Corian counter stuff. My last house had granite and I rolled out some dough right on it and it stained my counter. I was not happy. The Corian doesn’t stain so I like that, even though it’s not as pretty as the granite.
I do divide up the dough about like the recipe says – around 2/3 of it for the bottom crust and 1/3 for the top crust. Then I take the 2/3 part and form it into a big fat disc shape on the floured counter, sprinkle a little flour on top of it and then I get my French rolling pin and start rolling it out. I absolutely love my French pin – I know I’ve told you this before – but I think it does a much better job for me than my standard rolling pin. Something about how it “eases” out the circle – it’s magic! When I get it a couple inches or so bigger across than my pan is wide, I transfer it into the pan. Usually I just fold the dough lightly in half and pick it up and unfold it. If it tears a bit, that’s okay – you can dip your finger in water then mend it up pretty well.
At this point the edges are hanging down all around and I put in the filling. Leave it and get your 1/3 part of dough and roll it out, maybe an inch or so wider than the pan. You can fold that one over and put it on top and unfold it over the filling. Then it’s time to seal it up. It looks best if you make your top crust roll over the bottom crust and fold under by the edge of the pan, so all the top is just a seamless piece of dough. Does that make sense? You know there are probably people on the Internet making pie crust and can explain it a whole lot better than me. Ha ha! If you have too much dough, you can pinch some off. Sometimes I have too much in some spots and too little in others so I’ll move some over and sort of mend it together where I need it. Just remember not to handle it too much. The more of that you do, the tougher it gets. It would be better to have an imperfect but flaky, delicate crust than to have a cosmetically perfect crust that’s tough – in my opinion.
Then you should vent your crust before you bake by making some cuts with a knife. My mom made hen tracks in her chicken pot pie and so do I. You can also vent pies by using those little cookie cutters and then you can use the pieces you cut out to decorate the top of your pie. Lots of cute things people do.
I usually get some strips of aluminum foil and form them around the edge of my pies before I put them in the oven to keep the edges from getting overly brown. I have some of those pie guards but they really only fit one size pie so they don’t work for everything. Then when there’s about 10 minutes left in baking I take them off so the edges can brown.
This recipe freezes really well – I just freeze it unbaked. I will usually set it in the freezer unwrapped then once it’s solid wrap it up. Then when it’s time to bake I put it in the oven frozen but it does take about twice as long and you definitely want to protect the edges from burning then! You can check the temp inside with a thermometer to make sure it’s heated up all the way through. I can usually see that it’s bubbling, too.
I have also doubled it and made it in a 13x9 dish and that works great, too. I think it’s pretty flexible. I have not tried using fresh vs frozen veggies but I bet it would be fabulous – I wonder if you’d have to precook them a bit first, though?
I see I’ve written you a novel about chicken pot pie of all things. Hope that helps!
Anyway, here’s the recipe as it appears in the cookbook:
1/3 cup margarine, butter or chicken fat
1/3 cup all-purpose flour
1/3 cup chopped onion
½ teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon pepper
1 ¾ cup chicken or turkey broth
2/3 cup milk
2 cups cut-up cooked chicken or turkey
1 package (10 ounces) frozen peas and carrots
Celery Seed Pastry (below)
1/3 cup chopped onion
½ teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon pepper
1 ¾ cup chicken or turkey broth
2/3 cup milk
2 cups cut-up cooked chicken or turkey
1 package (10 ounces) frozen peas and carrots
Celery Seed Pastry (below)
[My notes on these ingredients: I omit the onion; husband is allergic, sadly. But it still tastes really good. For the veggies, I have used a bigger package, like 16 ounces or so – it just makes more filling and there’s still enough of the gravy to go around. Oftentimes I go more on the chicken, too.]
Heat margarine over low heat until melted. Blend in the flour, onion, salt and pepper. Cook over low heat, stirring constantly, until the mixture is smooth and bubbly; remove from the heat. Stir in broth and milk. Bring to a boil, stirring constantly. Boil and stir for 1 minute. Stir in the chicken and frozen vegetables; reserve.
Prepare Celery Seed Pastry. Roll 2/3 of pastry into 13-inch square on a lightly floured cloth-covered board. Ease the pastry into a square pan, 9x9x2 inches; pour chicken filling into the pastry-lined pan. Roll remaining dough into an 11-inch square; place over the filling. Roll the edges under; flute. Cut slits in the center to allow steam to escape. Bake uncovered in 425° oven until crust is brown, 30 to 35 minutes. 6 servings.
Celery Seed Pastry:
2/3 cup plus 2 Tablespoons shortening or 2/3 cup lard
2 cups all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons celery seed
1 teaspoon salt
4 to 5 Tablespoons water
Cut the shortening into the flour, celery seed and salt until particles are the size of small peas. Sprinkle in water, 1 tablespoon at a time, tossing with fork until all the flour is moistened and the pastry almost cleans the side of a bowl (1 to 2 teaspoons water can be added if necessary). Gather the pastry into a ball.
The rest is just me:
My notes on the pastry: When I made it today, I omitted the celery seed but I LOVE it with celery seed. It just gives it a little extra something. I often use a round pie pan – I have a big one, it seems bigger than normal, and if I use a square pan, that one seems bigger, maybe 10x10, too. So I usually make that recipe for the pastry times 1.5 so half again – instead of 2 cups flour, I use 3 cups flour, etc. And with me using extra chicken and veggies, a bigger pie is perfect. I would also rather have to trim off a little extra pastry than to not have enough to make a nice pie. It looks ugly when I try to stretch it too far.
For all my pastry making, I use shortening for the fat. A couple of us in my family have trouble with butter in the pastry for some reason (I mean gastric distress kind of trouble, lol) so I use shortening. I prefer butter if possible for everything but the only time I use shortening is for pastry and biscuits. Did you see the movie The Help? And the part about Crisco? That cracked me up because my mother went through one of those big cans EVERY week when I was growing up. Almost everything was fried. But we weren’t unhealthy or overweight so I’m not sure what all that means… but where was I?
Oh yeah. I first measure my dry ingredients into my bowl and I use a whisk to mix them up – whisk is a good tip for mixing dry ingredients for any baking recipe. Then I cut in the shortening using my pastry cutter. It works pretty well but you can also use two knives (table knives are fine). I pretty much follow the recipe – when the particles are about the size of small peas I stop. Better to stop a little early than go too long with pastry. It doesn’t like to be handled overly much or it gets tough. Remember that. Tough pastry is not flaky or delicate.
Then it’s time to add the water. I use ice water meaning I have a cup with ice cubes and water in it and I measure my water right out of that cup. Cold water is important. And if you use butter instead of shortening, cold butter is important.
I add one tablespoon of water at a time and use a fork to toss it around. It doesn’t seem to be doing much those first couple of tablespoons but just do it one at a time – add water, toss around, add water, toss around. I think the reason it’s not exact on the amount is because it can vary due to the humidity when you make it. If that’s not the reason, it sounds good, right?
Then when it just starts to come together, you stop adding water and gather it up in a ball. You want it to stick together, not be too crumbly, but not too moist, either. With practice, you get better at knowing when to stop adding water.
Then I sprinkle some flour on my counter (my very clean counter, of course). Sometimes I use a pastry cloth that I have but the counter works fine and cleans up fine. I have some of that Corian counter stuff. My last house had granite and I rolled out some dough right on it and it stained my counter. I was not happy. The Corian doesn’t stain so I like that, even though it’s not as pretty as the granite.
I do divide up the dough about like the recipe says – around 2/3 of it for the bottom crust and 1/3 for the top crust. Then I take the 2/3 part and form it into a big fat disc shape on the floured counter, sprinkle a little flour on top of it and then I get my French rolling pin and start rolling it out. I absolutely love my French pin – I know I’ve told you this before – but I think it does a much better job for me than my standard rolling pin. Something about how it “eases” out the circle – it’s magic! When I get it a couple inches or so bigger across than my pan is wide, I transfer it into the pan. Usually I just fold the dough lightly in half and pick it up and unfold it. If it tears a bit, that’s okay – you can dip your finger in water then mend it up pretty well.
At this point the edges are hanging down all around and I put in the filling. Leave it and get your 1/3 part of dough and roll it out, maybe an inch or so wider than the pan. You can fold that one over and put it on top and unfold it over the filling. Then it’s time to seal it up. It looks best if you make your top crust roll over the bottom crust and fold under by the edge of the pan, so all the top is just a seamless piece of dough. Does that make sense? You know there are probably people on the Internet making pie crust and can explain it a whole lot better than me. Ha ha! If you have too much dough, you can pinch some off. Sometimes I have too much in some spots and too little in others so I’ll move some over and sort of mend it together where I need it. Just remember not to handle it too much. The more of that you do, the tougher it gets. It would be better to have an imperfect but flaky, delicate crust than to have a cosmetically perfect crust that’s tough – in my opinion.
Then you should vent your crust before you bake by making some cuts with a knife. My mom made hen tracks in her chicken pot pie and so do I. You can also vent pies by using those little cookie cutters and then you can use the pieces you cut out to decorate the top of your pie. Lots of cute things people do.
I usually get some strips of aluminum foil and form them around the edge of my pies before I put them in the oven to keep the edges from getting overly brown. I have some of those pie guards but they really only fit one size pie so they don’t work for everything. Then when there’s about 10 minutes left in baking I take them off so the edges can brown.
This recipe freezes really well – I just freeze it unbaked. I will usually set it in the freezer unwrapped then once it’s solid wrap it up. Then when it’s time to bake I put it in the oven frozen but it does take about twice as long and you definitely want to protect the edges from burning then! You can check the temp inside with a thermometer to make sure it’s heated up all the way through. I can usually see that it’s bubbling, too.
I have also doubled it and made it in a 13x9 dish and that works great, too. I think it’s pretty flexible. I have not tried using fresh vs frozen veggies but I bet it would be fabulous – I wonder if you’d have to precook them a bit first, though?
I see I’ve written you a novel about chicken pot pie of all things. Hope that helps!
Monday, September 24, 2012
Tomato Cobbler
We had to get approval from Carrie to include this in Carrie's Pie Challenge. Lucky for Rebbekkah, Carrie is a really chilled-out kinda gal and said it was absolutely ok to include this as a pie! However you might categorize it. It sounds delicious. Rebbekkah says, "Adam cut into this before I could snap a pic so I had to cut a “slice” out for the pic. It’s a terrible picture, but I’m telling you it was incredible!!! The crust was awesome! It tasted like a chile relleno. It didn’t call for cheese but I added it because I just felt like it was needed." - 37 Cooks
Tomato Cobbler
by Rebbekkah Fisher
adapted from Tomato Cobbler from Homesick Texan
1 pound of tomatoes, peeled, cored & diced, or 2 cups canned diced tomatoes, drained
1 jalapeno chile, seeds & stem removed, diced
2 cloves garlic, minced
1/4 cup of chopped cilantro
1/4 teaspoon ground cumin
1 teaspoon lime juice
Salt & pepper to taste
1 stick of unsalted butter
1/2 cup of flour
1/2 cup of cornmeal
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
1 cup of whole milk
Optional: 1 cup sharp cheddar cheese
1. Preheat oven to 350*
2. Toss together the tomatoes, jalapenos, garlic, cilantro, cumin, & lime juice. Add salt & pepper to taste.
3. In a large ovenproof skillet; preferably a cast-iron, melt the butter on low heat. Once melted, remove from heat.
4. In a bowl, mix flour, cornmeal, baking powder & kosher salt. Add the milk & stir until thick and smooth. Pour the batter over the batter. DO NOT STIR. Spoon the tomato mixture on top of the batter. Bake in the oven for 30 minutes, uncovered. Sprinkle with cheese and let the cheese melt in the oven for about 2 minutes.
by Rebbekkah Fisher
adapted from Tomato Cobbler from Homesick Texan
1 pound of tomatoes, peeled, cored & diced, or 2 cups canned diced tomatoes, drained
1 jalapeno chile, seeds & stem removed, diced
2 cloves garlic, minced
1/4 cup of chopped cilantro
1/4 teaspoon ground cumin
1 teaspoon lime juice
Salt & pepper to taste
1 stick of unsalted butter
1/2 cup of flour
1/2 cup of cornmeal
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
1 cup of whole milk
Optional: 1 cup sharp cheddar cheese
1. Preheat oven to 350*
2. Toss together the tomatoes, jalapenos, garlic, cilantro, cumin, & lime juice. Add salt & pepper to taste.
3. In a large ovenproof skillet; preferably a cast-iron, melt the butter on low heat. Once melted, remove from heat.
4. In a bowl, mix flour, cornmeal, baking powder & kosher salt. Add the milk & stir until thick and smooth. Pour the batter over the batter. DO NOT STIR. Spoon the tomato mixture on top of the batter. Bake in the oven for 30 minutes, uncovered. Sprinkle with cheese and let the cheese melt in the oven for about 2 minutes.
Chocolate Silk Pie with Pecans
Chocolate Silk Pie with Pecans
by Susan Whempner
adapted from a recipe I found on cooks.com
1 unbaked pie crust (for a single crust pie)
1 cup semi-sweet chocolate chips
1 stick (1/2 cup) butter
1 cup sugar
pinch salt
1 tbsp unsweetened cocoa powder
2/3 cup evaporated milk
1 tsp vanilla
3 eggs
1 to 1 1/2 cup chopped pecans
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Pre-bake crust for about 8 minutes.
Meanwhile, in a microwave safe bowl melt chocolate chips and butter at
50% power for 2 minutes or until butter is melted. Whisk until smooth,
then whisk in salt, sugar, cocoa powder, vanilla and evaporated milk.
Whisk in eggs last (if butter is hot and you add the eggs too soon
they'll start to cook). Pour chocolate mixture into pre-baked crust and
sprinkle chopped pecans all over the top. Bake for about 30 minutes or
until filling has puffed but center is still wiggly (it will set when
it's cooled). Cool completely and then refrigerate until ready to serve
(best when served very cold). Enjoy this sinfully rich, chocolate-y goodness with homemade whipped cream (my husband says if there's no whipped cream there's no point in having the pie).
Tip: I always use a glass pie plate, but I used to have trouble getting the bottom of the crust browned. I read a great tip for solving this problem. If you have a pizza baking stone, put it
in the oven while it's preheating. When you first put your pie in the oven place it on the stone for about 15-20 minutes, then remove the stone and finish baking pie. It works like a charm!
Frito PIE Burger
Frito PIE Burger
by Willie Simmons
This recipe came to mind for Carrie's Pie Challenge. Ok, it's not really a pie! But PIE is in the name and I bet you'll love it!
2 pounds lean ground beef, make patties (use this method if you like)
Kosher salt
freshly ground pepper
8 sesame seed buns, toasted
cheddar cheese, 8 slices or about 1 cup grated
1 sweet onion, sliced, preferably Texas 10/15, but Hawaiian, Vidalia, or a local sweet onion will do
pickled jalapeno slices, between 4 & 10 per burger, how hot do you like it?
a bag of Fritos
1 can chili, Wolf brand, no beans, heated (I'm a Texan. If you want legitimate Frito Pie, ya gotta use Wolf!)
Heat a skillet over medium heat or fire up the grill. Add a little salt and pepper to each side of your patties. Don't want to over-handle the meat because it affects the tenderness of the burger. Cook your patties til they're like you like em.
While you're frying or grilling your burger to desired doneness, toast your buns.
To assemble, place your bun on a plate and add your burger patty. Add a slice of cheddar cheese, onion slices, jalapeno slices, Fritos, and pour a little (or a lot) of the chili on top. Eat.
Friday, September 21, 2012
Raspberry Buttermilk Pie
Raspberry Buttermilk Pie
by Diana Horst
Adapted from the Blackberry Buttermilk Pie by Lauren Weisenthal on Serious Eats
A few weeks ago, I saw a recipe for Blackberry Buttermilk Pie over on Serious Eats. It sounded so light and refreshing, and just screamed summer. I wanted to play around with it and thought, “Ooh, how’s about a Cherry Garcia Buttermilk Pie, with a bit of chocolate chunks in the filling and cherries on top?”
Well, Wegmans was out of cherries. That should have been my first clue as to how my plans were going to go. But I’m one of those cooks who can wing it and improvise. The raspberries looked wonderful, so I grabbed a pint of them.
I really love a cream cheese pastry crust and had one in the fridge, ready to go. Problem #2 arose when I burned it while blind baking it. I’m blaming it on Sandra. We were chatting online about, of course, 37 Cooks. And well, honestly I had two batches of bread dough going too, so…
I did the Pillsbury Punt and used a refrigerated instant crust and THIS time used a timer. Duh. I blind baked the crust that evening and made the filling the next morning, topped it with the berries while home for lunch and brought it into work. Pouf! It was gone in three minutes flat. Faster than the Garlic Cheddar Chive bread I brought in the morning, which is saying something, because my co-workers love my breads.
Single pie crust recipe or a Pillsbury refrigerated pie crust
1 1/2 teaspoons unflavored, powdered gelatin
3/4 cup heavy cream
1/3 cup granulated sugar, divided
3 Tablespoons honey, divided
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 1/2 cups buttermilk
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2-3 oz. of dark chocolate, chopped into chunks
1 pint fresh raspberries
1 teaspoon zest from 1 tangerine, plus two Tablespoons of juice
Adjust oven rack to lower middle position and preheat oven to 425°F. When oven is ready, line chilled pie shell with foil or parchment paper and fill with weights (I reuse dried beans for this), and bake on the lowest rack of the oven for 15 minutes. Remove weights and liner, turn pie, and bake until the bottom crust is a golden brown, about 10 minutes. Remove pie shell from oven and allow to cool completely.
Place 1/4 cup cold water in a small bowl and sprinkle with gelatin. Allow to sit until softened, about 2 minutes. Add heavy cream, salt, and 1/4 cup sugar minus two tablespoons and 2 tablespoon of honey to a medium saucepan set over low heat, stir to combine and slowly bring the mixture to just a simmer. Once it starts to bubble on the edges, remove it from the heat and stir in the gelatin until it is completely dissolved. Stir in the buttermilk and vanilla. Pour the mixture through a fine mesh strainer into the pie shell and chill. About 30 minutes into chilling, add chopped chocolate to filling and continue chilling for at least 4 hours, until the filling has set.
When ready to serve:
In a medium bowl combine berries, remaining sugar, remaining honey, juice and zest. Toss to combine and allow to sit for ten minutes, until the berries begin to become juicy and the sugar has dissolved. Top the set pie with the berries and serve.
Easy Chicken Pot Pie
Easy Chicken Pot Pie
by Willie Simmons
Crust
Perfect Pie Crust, your own favorite pie crust recipe, or prepared crust from the freezer section of your store (2 crusts)
Filling
1 whole chicken, can be roasted or poached, or you can use a rotisserie chicken from the grocery store (I like the ones from Costco), meat removed and cut in bite-sized pieces
about 1 pound Frozen Vegetables
Chicken Stock, enough to cover the vegetables in a saucepan plus 1/2 cup
1 pouch Pioneer Country Gravy
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Place your bottom crust in an 8x8 ceramic, glass, or metal baking dish.
Cook your chicken, allow to cool, and cut into bite-sized pieces. Freeze the skin and bones in a Ziploc for making stock at another time.
Put your frozen vegetables in a saucepan and cover with the chicken stock. Bring to a boil. In a separate mixing bowl, whisk 1/2 cup of chicken stock and the packet of Pioneer Gravy. Pour this mixture into the boiling vegetables and chicken stock in the saucepan. Turn the heat down to maintain a simmer and cook until the vegetables are cooked through and the broth has thickened.
Stir the chicken into the vegetable mixture in the saucepan and pour them on top of the bottom crust. Place top crust on top of the mixture and trim the edges.
Bake for an hour or until the crust is the color in the photo.
Orange Creamsicle Tart
Orange
Creamsicle Tart
Amy
Klein
adapted
from Thomas Keller's Lemon Tart, Bouchon
Graham
Cracker Crust:
16
graham crackers, finely crushed
1/2
cup butter, melted
1/3
cup sugar
Or,
you could always buy a pre made graham cracker crust. Whatever works best for
you.
Orange
Sabayon:
8
ounces orange cream soda; I used Stewart's brand, but as long as you are using
the best quality orange cream soda you can find, it doesn't really matter. It
does matter that you use a good quality one, because you will be reducing it
and intensifying the flavor.
3
ounces orange juice. If you are juicing your own oranges, it takes about
2.
2
large eggs
2
large egg yolks
3/4
cup sugar
6
Tablespoons cold unsalted butter, cut into 6 pieces.
Mix
together the graham
crackers, melted butter and sugar. Pat into a 8" pie pan. Bake
at 300F for 10 minutes. Let cool completely.
Pour
the orange cream soda into a small saucepan over low to medium heat. Reduce the
soda to a syrupy consistency. It should take about 7-10 minutes. You should end
up with roughly 1 ounce of syrup. If you've reduced it too much, just add a few
more ounces of soda and keep reducing. Let cool and add it to your orange
juice.
For
the sabayon:
Bring
about 1 1/2 inches of water to a boil in a pot that is slightly smaller than
the diameter of the bowl you will be using for the sabayon. Meanwhile, in a
large metal bowl, whisk the eggs, yolks, and sugar for about a minute, or until
the mixture is smooth.
Set
the bowl over the pot of boiling water and, using a large whisk, whip the
mixture while you turn the bowl (for even heating). After about 2 minutes, when
the eggs are foamy and have thickened, add one third of the orange juice
mixture.
Continue
to whisk vigorously and, when the mixture thickens again, add another third of
the orange juice mixture. Whisk until the mixture thickens again, then add the
remaining juice mixture. Continue whisking, still turning the bowl, until the
mixture is thickened and light in color and the whisk leaves a trail in the
bottom of the bowl. The total cooking time should be around 8-15 minutes.
Turn
off the heat, but leave the bowl over the pot of water. Whisk in the butter one
piece at a time. The sabayon may loosen slightly, but it will thicken and set
as it cools. Pour the warm sabayon into the crust and let sit to cool to room
temperature, for about an hour. Then refrigerate for at least 2 hours before
serving.
Mini Apricot Fried Pies
by Linda Mire
My Grandmother made the best Apricot Fried Pies. I don't have a recipe because she did everything from memory. While she made everything from scratch, my recipe is something that is quick and very easy. The apricots are the star here, and these mini pies are very tasty and remind me of my Grandmother's.
1 Pillsbury refrigerated pie crust
1/4 jar of apricots in natural juice, diced (about 1 cup diced)
Powdered sugar for dusting
Corn Oil
1/4 jar of apricots in natural juice, diced (about 1 cup diced)
Powdered sugar for dusting
Corn Oil
Unroll the pie crust and cut 10-12 circles using a biscuit cutter. Place 1 teaspoon of diced Apricots in the middle of each round. Fold over (making half-moons). Then go around the edges and seal, using the tines of a fork. Fill a medium fry pan with oil, about half way up. Heat the oil to 350 degrees. Carefully put the mini pies in hot oil. Fry in two batches, 5 to 6 at a time, so you don't crowd your pan. Fry for about five minutes, until golden brown, turning once.
Drain on a paper towel and sprinkle with powder sugar.
Enjoy!
Enjoy!
Thursday, September 20, 2012
Mini Chicken-Green Chile Pot Pies
Pot pies are comfort food for many who harbor fond
memories of tucking into a store-bought dinner in front of the TV. But
they don't have to come from that orange box. Here, a traditional meal
gets a modern makeover when chicken meets green chile. And for those who
consider portion control paramount? These pies are baked in individual
tins. Enjoy as many as you wish. Then consider freezing the rest for a
busy night when you'd love to recreate your childhood pot-pie moments
with a spicy, flavorful kick.
Mini Chicken-Green Chile Pot Pies
by Julie Kozarsky
3 Tablespoons butter
3 Tablespoons flour
3 cups whole milk
1 teaspoon chili powder
1 teaspoon cumin
Special equipment: 12-cup cupcake or muffin pan
First, make béchamel: melt butter over low-medium heat, then stir in
flour. Stir constantly for 2-3 minutes, not allowing it to brown. Add
milk and whisk until the roux is incorporated. Allow to simmer gently
for 30-40 minutes until reduced to about 2 cups.
Meanwhile, prepare the rest of the filling. In a medium saucepan, bring to a boil approximately six cups of salted water. Add diced potato and cook until tender - depending on your dice, maybe five minutes. Add corn kernels for the final minute of cooking. Drain and set aside.
In a small skillet heated to medium-high, add canola oil and then chopped onion. Saute until onion is transparent and beginning to brown. Add onion to cooked potatoes and corn. Then, add the chopped chiles and chicken to the mixture. Stir to distribute.
Somewhere around now, preheat your oven to 350F.
When béchamel is reduced, season with salt, chili powder, and cumin. Add the chicken-veggie mixture and allow flavors to mingle over very low heat while you prepare the crusts.
Roll out pie crusts. Using a round cutter, a small bowl, or glass, cut out circles to fit the space in your muffin tin. Press a dough circle into each hole. Save scraps; roll and cut them into strips or whatever decorative patterns you wish. Ladle filling into each mini-crust. Top pies with strips or shaped dough.
Bake for 30-35 minutes or until crusts are golden brown.
NOTE: Due to variation in different cupcake pans, you may end up with
excess filling and pie dough. Feel free to use the leftovers to make a
casserole: spoon filling into a baking dish of an appropriate size, then
top with filling scraps and bake with the mini-pies. Alternatively,
just make a standard 9-inch pie. It's less finicky, but not as cute.
Mini Chicken-Green Chile Pot Pies
by Julie Kozarsky
3 Tablespoons butter
3 Tablespoons flour
3 cups whole milk
1 small potato, diced small (about 3/4 cup)
1 small onion, chopped
1 Tablespoons canola oil1 small onion, chopped
3 green chiles (Hatch, poblano, Anaheim), roasted, peeled, and chopped
1 cup cooked chicken, chopped
1/2 cup corn kernels (fresh or thawed if from frozen)1 cup cooked chicken, chopped
Your favorite pie dough recipe, enough for a double crust
1 teaspoon salt1 teaspoon chili powder
1 teaspoon cumin
Special equipment: 12-cup cupcake or muffin pan
Meanwhile, prepare the rest of the filling. In a medium saucepan, bring to a boil approximately six cups of salted water. Add diced potato and cook until tender - depending on your dice, maybe five minutes. Add corn kernels for the final minute of cooking. Drain and set aside.
In a small skillet heated to medium-high, add canola oil and then chopped onion. Saute until onion is transparent and beginning to brown. Add onion to cooked potatoes and corn. Then, add the chopped chiles and chicken to the mixture. Stir to distribute.
Somewhere around now, preheat your oven to 350F.
When béchamel is reduced, season with salt, chili powder, and cumin. Add the chicken-veggie mixture and allow flavors to mingle over very low heat while you prepare the crusts.
Roll out pie crusts. Using a round cutter, a small bowl, or glass, cut out circles to fit the space in your muffin tin. Press a dough circle into each hole. Save scraps; roll and cut them into strips or whatever decorative patterns you wish. Ladle filling into each mini-crust. Top pies with strips or shaped dough.
Bake for 30-35 minutes or until crusts are golden brown.