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The first riffing I tried was a free-form pear tart.
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The funny thing is that these little pies tasted familiar. I couldn't place the taste immediately, but I think what I recognized was the taste of McDonald's apple pie, but without the chemical aftertaste or the gumminess. I wouldn't usually liken my own cooking to McDonald's and mean it favorably, but in this case, I'm sure you'll all agree that it's a good thing. A very tasty, buttery, sweet, very good thing.
Try making these - you won't regret it. Oh, also, buy this book
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Crust:
- 3 parts flour : 2 parts fat : 1 part water (12 oz. flour : 8 oz. butter : 4 oz water by weight)
- pinch salt
- 1T sugar
- Using a food processor, mix sugar, salt and flour.
- Add chilled butter, cut into chunks and process until mixture is crumbly.
- Pulse while drizzling water. You may not need all of it.
- Makes enough dough for 2 pies or free-form tarts or 8 mini tarts.
- Divide and chill dough.
- For mini pies, divide dough into 8 equal pieces. Roll each into a ball, flatten and roll out to 1/4" thick. (You can also reserve part of the dough for a later use - these mini pies were made from the leftovers from an earlier free form tart.)
- 1 Apple, peeled, cored, quartered, and sliced thinly
- 2 T butter
- pinch salt
- 1/4 c dark brown sugar
- 1 t vanilla
- 1 t cinnamon
- Smoosh (that is the best word for it) the butter, brown sugar, cinnamon, salt, and vanilla together in a small bowl. A fork does a good job of this.
- Place dough rounds on a baking sheet (I used a half sheet with silpat).
- Place 1/4 of the apple slices overlapping in the middle of the dough rounds.
- Spoon 1/4 of the butter/sugar mixture on top of the apple slices.
- Fold the sides of the dough into the middle, crimping all the open edges with your fingers to seal the filling in.
- Use a knife to cut slits in the top of the dough to allow steam to escape.
- Bake at 425 for about 20 minutes (check frequently) or until crust is golden brown. (Seriously, watch closely because I forgot to time the baking.)
- Let cool on baking sheet for ten minutes before removing with a spatula.
- Serve warm (optional: these would be amazing with a dollop of whipped cream or a small scoop of ice cream).
2 comments:
If studying cooking ratios results in making up delicious recipes like this, I say keep on with it! Bring on the ratios! Add some fractions and long division too, maybe that will be even more tasty (possible?).
Ooh, I think I'll leave the long division out of the kitchen. It might make sauces, etc. separate. :)
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