Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Cranberry Ginger Pear Apple Pie

I made my first pie five years ago today.  I had been watching Pushing Daisies and was hungry for pie.  We had received a fruit basket from my in-laws for Christmas and some of the pears were about to go bad, so I decided to make a pie.  I had no idea what I was doing.  I mixed some flour, butter, sugar, and maybe an egg together and made something of a crust-like consistency that I then pressed into an eight inch cake pan.  The filling was pears, apples, dried cranberries, brown sugar, and ginger ale.


Today, I used actual pie making techniques and revisited the ingredients of the original pie.

Ingredients:
3 Granny Smith apples
3 red pears
8 oz of fresh cranberries
5 tablespoons of Pie Filling Enhancer
1/4 cup + 2 tablespoons of sugar
1 teaspoon of fresh grated ginger

Directions:
Peel and slice the apples and pears.
Toss them in the two tablespoons of sugar.
Pulse the cranberries, 1/4 cup of sugar, and ginger in a food processor five times.
Combine the cranberry mixture, the apple-pear mixture and the Pie Filling Enhancer.
Pour into a crust.
Place a lattice crust on top.
Brush with milk and sprinkle with sugar.
Bake for 20 minutes at 425oF, rotate, reduce the temperature to 375oF and bake for another 30 minutes.
Allow to cool.


The original pie was more like fruit soup in a bread bowl as opposed to a pie.  My equipment has also improved.  I how have a Fruit & Vegetable Peeler, Corer & Slicer.  Instead of a cake pan that came in a bakeware set from Walmart, I have a handcrafted French pie dish from Emile Henry.  And I actually own trivets, instead of setting the pie on a pot holder to cool.


The new pie is really good.  The cranberries and ginger add a little bit of punch to flavor.  There is a bit of a crispness left to the apples and pears that add a variety to the texture.  There is nothing wrong with this pie.  I will probably make it again next year to celebrate the anniversary, but there is nothing outstanding about this pie that would make me want to make it all year round.

Piece out!
Justin

Monday, December 28, 2015

Mini Cranberry Eggnog Tarts

My husband had a potluck at work.  Since I often send him with slices of pie for his co-workers, I figured they would be expecting him to bring pie.  Also, our other go-to potluck dish, Buffalo Chicken Dip, was already taken.  So instead of making two pies, I made a dozen mini tarts using 4 inch tart pans.  Since the platter could only hold eight, I got to eat the other four myself.


In order to have enough dough for twelve crusts, I doubled the recipe, so here is the recipe I used.

Ingredients:
2 1/2 cups of flour
1/2 cup of sugar
1 tsp of salt
14 tbsp of softened butter
2 large eggs

Directions:
Combine all ingredients in a food processor.  Separate into 12 small balls.  Roll out the balls and press into tart pans.  Prick and blind bake using pie weights at 350oF for 15 minutes, then remove the pie weights and continue to blind bake for another 15 minutes.

Then, instead of making my own cranberry jam, I heated a can of jellied cranberries with a 1/4 cup of orange juice.  Once the jellied cranberry chunks dissolved and started to thicken again, I added a few drops of red food coloring to fix the color.  I then spooned two tablespoons of the cranberry filling into each tart shell.

On top of that I poured a serving spoon of the eggnog filling over the cranberry filling that had cooled for 5 minutes.  Then I baked them at 300oF for 20-25 minutes.

The mini tarts are just as delightful as the full sized one.  They are not heavy or overly rich, they are the perfect combination of delicate flavor and wonderful textures.  I would definitely make these again.

Piece out!
Justin


Chocolate Truffle Tart

This is another recipe from Gourmet Holiday Baking magazine.  I really wanted to make this pie, but I knew that there was no way that I would be able to eat the whole thing in a timely fashion.  So, I made it for my neighbor.


Instead of a spring form pan, I used a free-bottom tart pan.  And instead of a crust made of chocolate wafer cookies, I made it with speculoos. 

Speculoos Crust:
7 oz of speculoos (This is one box from Trader Joe's.)
8 tablespoons of melted butter.

In a food processor, grind the cookies down to dust, then drizzle in the melted butter.  
Press with hands into the tart pan.  
Refrigerate for 30 minutes before filling.

The filling is made by melting 1/2 pound of 60% cacao bittersweet chocolate with 6 tablespoons of butter.  Whisk 2 eggs, 1/3 cup of heavy cream, 1/4 cup of sugar, 1/4 tsp of salt, and a teaspoon of vanilla.  Then whisk the chocolate mixture into the egg mixture until well combined.

Then bake the tart at 350oF for 20-25 minutes.  Then let it cool and sprinkle with unsweetened cocoa powder.


Since I gave this pie as a gift, I have no idea how it tastes.  However, the text I received from my neighbor said "the pie is Michelin 3 stars worthy!  Perfect!  Don't change a thing! Thank you!" followed by three tongue-hanging-out emojis.

Piece out!
Justin

Saturday, December 12, 2015

Cranberry Eggnog Tart

I had a few people over from work last week and decided to make a Cranberry Egg Tart.  Luckily, this pie can be made over a few days; otherwise, I would not have had the time to make it on a weeknight.


As I made no changes to the recipe, I do not feel comfortable copying it here.  I would suggest that you go buy the Gourmet Holiday Baking magazine here, it is well worth the price.  It has other great recipes that I intend to try like the Crème Brûlée Tart and several non-pie recipes.  It will be available in stores until mid-January 2016 and it looks like this:


So, other than taking three days to make, this pie is fairly easy to make and, as a bonus, it looks really cool.  Making the cranberry jam seemed like a superfluous step, you could easily use canned jellied cranberries and then follow the recipe instead of making it yourself.  This would save you a lot of time if you are making it in a hurry.  Making the cranberry jam is not hard, but it is an extra step and then you have to wait for it to cool.  So, I leave that up to you.  The rest of it is a piece of cake, literally, it is basically cheesecake... with bourbon and nutmeg.


The result is amazing.  It is creamy, and sweet, and tart, and everything that you want.  The eggnog cheesecake filling is not heavy and adds a fluffy quality to the pie.  For something that I anticipated being super-rich, it was actually quite delicate.  I would gladly make this pie again, I would just cheat on the cranberry to save myself some time.

Piece out!
Justin