All this said, I don’t love pie. I don’t hate it, but I am not someone who lives and dies by pie. However, I do love the miniature and making food that Belle will enjoy. This weekend in the snowstorm, my husband and I spent a full day making crusted food—2 pot pies and 3 different kinds of sweet pies. Of course, all these pies (excluding one) hinged on a single crust. We made basic vegan pie crust with shortening. Shortening freaks me out, and the crust was a bit too tough (the pate brisee from the tarts a few weeks earlier was much more tender but not vegan), so I will be trying this recipe next time.
Today, I thought I would post the pictures of the two apple pies that we did. As these were for Belle, I did not add sugar (though clearly you could). These are very close to being the same pie, but one is fussy and one is, well, rustic. In the end, Belle liked both,
In addition, we also decided to add cardamom to the little pies. I have been thinking that cardamom would compliment the tartness of rhubarb. I had hoped to make cardamom and rhubarb meringues this weekend, but didn’t get around to it. This pie experiment made me think I should make those meringues.
But I was so pleased with the three pies from the weekend (these are just two of them) that I decided to include them in a blog roundup for Pi Day on Kitchen Parade.
Recipes:
Rustic Apple and Rhubarb Pie
Begin by creating a syrup by heating and reducing in half
½ cup of unsweetened apple juice
Roll pie crust out to 1/8 of an inch thin and then use a butter knife to cut out a circle of crust
Soak in ½ cup of apple juice (not the syrup) the following:
1 stalk thinly sliced rhubarb
1 small tart apple
Arrange the fruit in a radial pattern in two layers of the crust and then fold over the crust to form a rudimentary pie. Sprinkle with the apple syrup.
If desired top with 1 T cane sugar (I did not.)
Bake at 350 for ten minutes.
This results in one rustic pie.
Mini Apple Rhubarb Pies
Roughly dice
1 small tart apple
1 stalk of rhubarb
In a space sauce pan heat the fruit with
½ cup water
1 pod cardamom
1 sprinkle of nutmeg
1 sprinkle of cinnamon
1 T cane sugar (if desired)
Cook on medium until the fruit is softened.
Use cookie cutters to create rounds of pie crust that will fill mini-muffin tins (ideally, with a little crust peaking out over the tins)
Fill each pie, ¾ ths full with the rhubarb/ apple sauce. Seal each pie with another round of dough
Bake at 350 for ten minutes.
This results in 5 tiny pies.