Strawberry Rhubarb Pie
>> Wednesday, June 10, 2009
There is no better way to start summer vacation than with a fresh strawberry rhubarb pie! I could happily go with straight rhubarb, but the little ones in the house appreciated the sweetness of the strawberries. This will be my first posting of the basic dairy-free pie crust I use all the time. The recipe is a piece of American culinary history, as it came straight out of my 1939 copy of Fannie Farmer's Boston Cooking-School Cook Book. Depression-era cookbooks are an absolute treasure of dairy and egg-free recipes. If crust making seems too daunting, you can use Pillsbury Refrigerated Pie Crusts...something I do a bit more often than I'd like to admit.
The filling is adapted from epicurious. If it seems like your berries and rhubarb are particularly juicy, you can add a few more tablespoons of cornstarch or Minute tapioca. I like tapioca a bit more because too much cornstarch as a thickener starts to taste gloppy and corny. Serve this up with a big scoop of dairy-free vanilla ice cream!
Some pie crust advice that might help your pastry-induced anxieties: The dough is sticky. Your life will be better if you roll it out between two sheets of plastic wrap. If you try use a lot of flour, the dough will get dry and tough. The dough is crumbly. Just do your best when transferring to the pie pan, pinch the dough to patch up holes. The dough doesn't taste like much (no butter!!). Keep it thin and the fruit flavor will shine through. The dough likes to burn. After the crust has baked a while and is starting to turn golden, set a piece of foil over the whole thing. Don't crimp it or anything. Just a straight piece over top.Strawberry Rhubarb Pie
3 1/2 cups sliced rhubarb, 1/2 inch thick slices ( 1 1/2 pound bunch, untrimmed)
16 ounce package of strawberries, hulled and halved
1/2 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup white sugar
1/4 c. cornstarch
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon salt
1.) Make the dough first, then work on the filling while the dough chills in the refrigerator...unless you're thinking, fresh pie is good enough for today, and you're using a Pillsbury crust. Then just start making the filling while the crust warms up on your counter.
2.) Mix all the filling ingredients together and let them sit while you roll out the crust.
3.) Pre-heat oven to 400.
4.) Roll half the dough out and make the pie base. Dump in the filling. Roll out the other half and make the little lattice top and crimp around the edges. I do a "cheaters lattice", where the crust isn't interwoven. The pieces are just lined up at an angle. Dairy-free crust is very soft and breakable and any messing around causes the crust to crumble in your hands. I actually really hate the crust rolling part. I've made zillions of pies and it still gives me heartburn. Brush with water and sprinkle with sugar.
5.) Place the pie on a parchment-lined cookie sheet. The pie will bubble over, so be prepared.
6.) Bake for 20 minutes at 400, then decrease the heat to 350 and bake for another 1 hour and 20 minutes or so. If it starts to brown too quickly (and it will), place some foil over the whole pie loosely. The pie is done when it starts to bubble towards the center. If it is just bubbling at the edges, it is not done in the center, so keep baking.
7.) Cool before eating, it thickens as it cools.
Basic Dairy-Free Double Pie Crust
3 cups flour
1 cup shortening, sliced into chunks and frozen
1 teaspoon salt
1 T. sugar
Ice water (about 6-8 Tablespoons)
1.) I'm lazy, and crust stresses me out. I use a food processor. If you have a pastry cutter and know how to use it, you're probably better at pie making that I, so you can figure out how to adapt.
2.) Dump the flour, salt and sugar in a food processor and give it a few pulses to mix things up.
3.) Dump in half of the sliced shortening. Give it 8 short pulses.
4.) Dump in the rest of the shortening. Give it another 8 pulses.
5.) Spoon in 6 Tablespoons of ice water, give it another 8 pulses. Test the dough by pinching a bit of it together. If it seems really crumbly or dry and looks like it might hassle you while rolling it out, add the other 2 T. of water and give a few more pulses.
6.) Divide into two blobs, wrap in plastic wrap, form into a nice disk and refrigerate until you want to use it or at least an hour.









3 comments:
looks tasty, even though there's rhubarb in it! :-)
I actually like the Meijer brand frozen pie crust better than the Pillsbury. I think the Pillsbury just seems greasy and tastes like lard or something. Like ALL lard and nothing else.
Pet Ritz also makes pie crusts that I like better than Pillsbury, too.
Just FYI. You know, in case you make me a pie someday. Or not.
I recently set out to find a good dairy-free recipe for pie dough. Of course I checked here first but apparently I was just a bit early (thanks for posting it now though!) I ended up modifing Cook's Illustrated's "Foolproof Pie Dough" by subbing margarine for the butter, which worked well.
The advantage of this clever recipe is that it produces a moist, pliable dough that is very easy to work with. The secret ingredient is vodka, read the article to find out why (http://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2007/11/cooks-illustrated-foolproof-pie-dough-recipe.html). I suspect it might work with an all-shortening crust too.
Sofia, I have tried that recipe! The science behind it is pretty cool, I should revisit it with allergy-friendly substitutions. Thanks for reminding me! E, I should go looking at ingredients again, Meijer has some pretty good (albeit, weird ) options...like their dairy-free 'buttermilk' biscuits. I take it you don't want the extras from my rhubarb plant...
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