**Indulge in a Culinary Journey with My Mom's Original Pie Crust: A Symphony of Sweet and Savory Delights**
Welcome to a realm of culinary wonders, where the aroma of freshly baked pies fills the air, and every bite transports you to a moment of pure bliss. My mom's original pie crust is the cornerstone of this extraordinary pie-making adventure, a versatile and delectable foundation for an array of sweet and savory creations.
This collection of recipes showcases the boundless possibilities that await you with this exceptional pie crust. Whether your heart desires the classic allure of apple pie, the tangy zest of lemon meringue pie, or the rustic charm of chicken pot pie, this assemblage of recipes guides you through each step with precision and passion.
For those who cherish the timeless flavors of tradition, the classic apple pie beckons with its flaky crust encasing a symphony of tender, caramelized apples, perfectly balanced with a hint of spice. If citrusy delights are your forte, the lemon meringue pie awaits, its zesty filling crowned with a billowy cloud of toasted meringue.
Savory cravings are not left wanting. The chicken pot pie emerges from the oven, a golden-brown masterpiece filled with succulent chicken, tender vegetables, and a creamy, flavorful broth, all enveloped in the comforting embrace of the pie crust.
But the culinary journey doesn't end there. This comprehensive guide also unravels the secrets behind a variety of other delectable fillings, transforming the humble pie crust into a canvas for creativity. From the sweet decadence of chocolate cream pie to the savory allure of shepherd's pie, each recipe unlocks a new dimension of taste and texture.
Embark on this culinary odyssey, where the pie crust takes center stage, and every bite tells a tale of passion, precision, and pure culinary bliss.
NO BUTTER PIE CRUST, MY MOM'S BEST
This oil-based crust is tender, flaky, and flavorful-everything you want in a pie crust. The dough for this crust is not chilled, so it's rolled out between sheets of waxed paper. The texture of the dough depends on many factors like humidity and how the flour and oil are measured. It's best to scoop the flour into the measuring cup lightly, then level the top of the cup. Use a liquid measuring cup to measure the oil (like a glass Pyrex measuring cup with pour spout) to ensure the oil is measured properly. The dough should be fairly soft and pliable, not cracking and dry. If you've added all of the water and the dough still needs some elasticity, slowly add more oil, 1 teaspoon at a time. Use a pie plate with a flat rim for easy crimping. Recipe is based on Betty Crocker's, and makes one double crust pie. Use the 10-inch double crust recipe for single-crust pies (more dough to work with for crimping the edges; tuck the extra under the perimeter before crimping).
Provided by Maureen Abood
Number Of Ingredients 10
Steps:
- In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour and salt. Add the oil, all but the extra teaspoon, and lightly stir with a metal spoon until most of the flour is incorporated and pea-sized meal forms. There will be some larger clumps of dough too.
- Add the water 1 tablespoon at a time, incorporating after each addition. The dough should be soft and pliable, not cracking and dry. Add another teaspoon of oil to get there if needed, but do not add extra water. Divide the dough in half.
- Tear off two 15" sheets of waxed paper. Wipe the work surface with a sponge dampened with cold water to keep the paper from slipping. Place one sheet of waxed paper on the damp surface lengthwise in front of you, and place half of the dough in the center of the paper. Shape the dough into a flat disk and cover with the other sheet of paper lengthwise.
- Roll the dough, starting from the center of the disk and working your way out in every direction (think of working around the clock). The dough and paper do not turn; they stay fixed. As the rolling pin moves to the outer edges of the dough, be careful not to press to hard or else the dough will get too thin at the edges. Press more in the center, less at the edges, as you roll.
- Roll the dough 2 inches larger than the pie pan, making room for the dough to slide down into the pan and still cover the rim. The crosswise edges of the waxed paper can serve as a guide at 12 inches. Roll to that edge for a 10" crust, and just inside at 11 inches for a 9" crust. If the dough is rolled beyond the waxed paper, just scrape under it with a thin, sharp knife or spatula to loosen it before picking the crust up off the counter.
- Peel off the top piece of waxed paper and discard. Place the pie plate right next to the crust. Pick up the crust with its paper and invert it over the pie plate. Move the crust to arrange it evenly over the rim of the plate. Remove the waxed paper and discard. Gently lift the edges of the crust and ease the crust into the pan. Trim the crust all the way around the rim right up against the rim. If an area is short of the rim, patch it with trimmings.
- Fill the pie with filling (usually 5-6 cups of sugared fruit with some starch like flour or cornstarch or tapioca to hold it together), then roll the second half of the dough for the top crust just as you did the bottom crust, but roll this circle slightly smaller than the bottom crust (about an inch smaller). After the top crust has been arranged over the pie, trim the crust so that there is ½-1 inch overhang of the top crust beyond the rim. Tuck that overhang under the bottom crust all around the rim. This seals the pie and prevents drips.
- Crimp the edges of the pie in a rope design: place your thumb on the pastry rim at an angle and firmly pinch the dough between thumb and bent index finger. Push down into the rim as you pinch. Make the next pinch with thumb resting against the last pinched edge.
- Cut vents decoratively in the top. Rub or brush the entire top of the pie with milk. Cover the edges of the pie with a pie guard or pieces of foil, crunching it well so it stays in place. The foil is not a perfect science; just get it to cover as much of the edge as possible.
- Bake as directed depending on your pie filling. A general rule is 425 degrees for 50 minutes or so, until a fruit filling is bubbling vigorously and the crust is golden brown. Remove from the oven and cool; the filling will firm up some as the pie cools, so it's always best to bake your pies early in the day on the day they will be served.. Serve lukewarm or at room temperature. The pie will keep on the kitchen counter for a couple of days, loosely covered with waxed paper or foil.
MY MOM'S PIE CRUST
This is the flakiest crust I've ever had. Thank you mom
Provided by Donna Woodford
Categories Pies
Time 1h
Number Of Ingredients 4
Steps:
- 1. Combine salt, flour and Crisco solid shortening use a pastry cutter to mix
- 2. Add cold water and stir. Easy to work the dough but remember not to handle too much or crust will be tough, not flaky.
- 3. divide into 3 equal portions, roll out, and put in pie pan DO NOT POKE CRUST
- 4. Bake at 350 for 15 minutes. If filled pie bake according to recipe. For example an apple pie uses 2 crusts. Bake for 15 min at 425 and reduce heat to 350 and bake for 30 min
MOMS APPLE PIE
My Mother always makes the most delicious Apple pie. I have made her apple pie many times....it all comes down to the taste that the juice the apples, cinnamon and lemon juice makes. This pie has the perfect combination of tartness & sweetness.. With my Aunts crust and my Moms filling, I can't go wrong..Enjoy!! My pics.
Provided by Cassie *
Categories Fruit Desserts
Time 1h35m
Number Of Ingredients 10
Steps:
- 1. Preheat oven to 400 degree.
- 2. Prepare crust if making homemade. If using store bought, place bottom crust into pie plate.
- 3. Prepare apples. Peel and slice apples about 1/4 inch thick, place in a medium bowl; add flour, sugars, cinnamon, lemon juice, mix and set aside. (taste after they start making juice). I leave these set for about 15 - 20 minutes, then stir again and taste. If the juice is too sour, add some more sugar. It should be somewhat tart.
- 4. Place the bottom crust in pie plate, having some overhang, spoon the apples and juice in. I heap mine; they will cook down, so make sure you have your dish heaped, but not running over. Top with pieces of butter.
- 5. Now, carefully top the apples with the other crust. Fold top crust under the edge of the bottom crust. Use a fork or fingers to pinch the crusts together.
- 6. I brush the top with milk, sprinkle with sugar, and cut several slits to vent.
- 7. Bake at 400 degree F. for 15 minutes; I cover the crust with foil to keep from getting too brown. Make sure you place foil under the pie as it the juices may leak out. Reduce heat to 350 degree F. and bake for another 50 to 55 minutes. I take a thin knife and slide it through one of the venting holes to make sure apples are tender. I made one deep dish and one regular 9 in. pie. You may need to bake a deep dish a few minutes longer, obviously there are more apples to cook.
- 8. Let cool on cooling rack. Cover and refrigerate pie till ready to serve. Cover left over pie and refrigerate.
MY MOM'S FLAKY PIE CRUST
It doesn't matter where my mom takes one of her pies, she receives compliments on her light flaky pie crusts. You never see the crust still sitting on the plate when someone eats a slice of her pie! This is a versatile crust recipe and can be used for more than just pies. Plenty of appetizers start with a crust too! When I...
Provided by Kimberly Quintal
Categories Other Appetizers
Time 45m
Number Of Ingredients 6
Steps:
- 1. Pour 2 cups flour into a mixing bowl. Add sugar and salt and stir. Add 1 cup shortening. With pastry cutter, cut in the shortening until the mixture resembles sand.
- 2. Add 1/4 cup of milk at first. Sometimes you will use the full 1/2 cup of milk and sometimes not depending on time of year and humidity, etc. With a large fork (I like to use a large serving fork for example) stir until it "comes together" and STOP! Over mixing is what causes a tough dough. With floured hands, form a dough ball then flatten a bit into a "disc". Wrap in plastic wrap and set in fridge for about 20-30 minutes to rest and allow the dough to relax, making it easier to roll.
- 3. During the last 10 minutes of resting, pre-heat oven to 350 degrees. When ready, on a well floured surface (you can use less flour if you have one of those pastry discs with a pastry cover on it) roll dough out to whatever shape you need it for the pan or pie plate you are using. "Dock" the crust (poke holes in it with a fork, toothpick or other utensil to make small steam release holes) before baking, usually bakes for about 25 minutes if you are using for a no-bake pie filling to add in afterwards. For crusts that bake with the filling, follow your recipe's instructions.
- 4. This recipe makes enough dough for a double crust pie but I love crust so much that I sometimes use 3/4 of the dough for a thicker crust then roll out the remaining dough, cut into strips and sprinkle with cinnamon & sugar and bake, making YUMMY treats!
- 5. Why not butter? Butter gives good flavor but makes crust hard/crunchy not light & flaky. Shortening really is the key. I've known people to combine both like: 3/4 shortening to 1/4 butter but I stick with mom's success! I suppose butter flavor shortening would work.
MOM'S PAT-A-PIE PIE CRUST
Original recipe by Esther Gilbertson, I believe. A quick and easy way to make a pie crust, or as it was originally called "oil pastry" with no fuss but excellent results. When recipe calls for salad oil, I took this to mean anything you'd use on a salad and put in half canola half organic olive oil.
Provided by Food Snob in Israel
Categories Dessert
Time 5m
Yield 1 pie, 1 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 5
Steps:
- Sift flour, sugar and salt into a bowl.
- Whip oil and milk together.
- Pour over flour mixture and mix with a fork.
- Pat 2/3 of the dough into a pie plate.
- Use filling of your choice.
- Crumble rest of dough on top.
- Bake as for any pie.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 2245.4, Fat 148.2, SaturatedFat 21.3, Cholesterol 6.4, Sodium 2355.8, Carbohydrate 201.3, Fiber 6.8, Sugar 9.1, Protein 27.3
EASY PIE CRUST
Prep now and enjoy wonderful pies all season. Make the crust and topping in advance and keep them in the freezer for up to three months, then defrost fully before using.
Provided by Martha Stewart
Categories Food & Cooking Dessert & Treats Recipes Pie & Tarts Recipes
Time 1h40m
Yield Makes 2
Number Of Ingredients 4
Steps:
- To make the dough for the pie crust, mix 2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour and 1 teaspoon each salt and sugar in a medium-size bowl. Cut 2 sticks chilled unsalted butter into pieces. With a pastry blender, cut in butter, working until mixture resembles coarse meal.
- Add 4 tablespoons ice water; work with hands until dough comes together. If dough is still crumbly, add more ice water a tablespoon at a time (up to 4 more tablespoons). Do not overwork.
- Divide dough in half, and flatten halves into disks. Wrap disks separately in plastic; refrigerate at least 1 hour.
- To form the pie shell, roll the dough on a floured surface into a 14-inch round. Wrap around rolling pin and carefully unroll over a 9-inch pie plate.
- Fit gently into bottom and side of plate. Use kitchen shears to trim dough to a 1-inch overhang; fold under, and seal to form a rim.
- Crimp rim with fingertips and knuckle. Repeat with remaining dough; wrap each with plastic, stack, and freeze.
Tips:
- Use a pastry blender or two forks to cut the butter into the flour mixture. This will create small pea-sized pieces of butter that will help create a flaky crust.
- Work quickly when handling the dough. Overworking the dough will make it tough.
- Chill the dough for at least 30 minutes before rolling it out. This will help prevent the dough from shrinking in the oven.
- Roll the dough out on a lightly floured surface. This will help prevent the dough from sticking.
- Trim the edges of the dough evenly. This will help the pie crust bake evenly.
- Bake the pie crust for 15-20 minutes, or until it is golden brown.
Conclusion:
With careful preparation and attention to detail, you can achieve crispy, flaky pie crust every time. Whether trying a classic apple pie or a savory quiche, remember to work quickly and chill your dough before baking. With a little practice, you're sure to impress your friends and family with delicious homemade pies.
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