[Sca-cooks] pie crust was what's wierd-ish, what isn't
David Friedman
ddfr at daviddfriedman.com
Fri Nov 12 14:48:39 PST 2004
cailte asked:
>speaking of pastry and pie crust.... i am about to do 700 small
>salmon pasties. has anyone made pie crust in a food processor? how
>do you do it, and does it work well?
It is how I usually do it, and yes, it works well, giving me the same
results as if I do it by hand. I use the food processor to cut the
butter into the flour, then dump into a bowl and mix the water in by
hand. In fact, I posted my description of doing it to this list a
week or two ago--I'll repeat that post at the bottom of this.
Elizabeth of Dendermonde/Betty Cook
----------
Cynara wrote:
>You said you made the pie crusts in advance and froze them. Do you have a
>recipe, and more importantly, some pointers on making good pie crust? Up
>until now I have relied on pre-made crusts, but Pillsbury just recently
>changed their packaging on their refrigerated crusts, and it seems like they
>have also changed their formula and the size of the piece of dough as well.
>At any rate, I haven't had good luck with the new crusts. And my local
>grocery is no longer carrying the Mrs. Smith's (dairy-free) frozen shells.
>So I have to learn to make my own. I would need to use either vegetable
>shortening or soy margarine instead of butter.
For recipes with no indication of what the pie crust should be, I use
a standard modern flaky pie crust made with partly whole wheat flour
and butter, although it can be done with margarine. I have no idea
whether or not this is right--I know of no pie crust recipes before
the 16th century, and the ones then include both "short paste" and
pie crusts without fat.
For two 9" crusts, mix 2/3 c whole wheat flour and 1 1/3 c white
flour, cut a quarter pound of butter into the flour until it is in
very small lumps (I generally use a food processor for this; I have
done it with two knives cutting X-wise against each other, but not
for feast quantities), then add about 6 tablespoons of water a
spoonful or two at a time and mix very carefully with a fork until it
starts to hang together, working it as little as possible. I roll
them out between two sheets of waxed paper into a circle the diameter
of the waxed paper, remove one sheet of waxed paper and loosen the
other before inverting the crust into a pie pan (it being a lot
easier to peel waxed paper off the pie crust when it is lying flat
than after it is in the pie pan). Put into a gallon zip-lock bag,
squeeze the air out and seal, and you can have a stack of these
sitting in your freezer for when you need them. I remember one
earlier occasion for a larger feast when we had a real assembly line
going in my kitchen and dining room making 20 or more pie crusts for
the event a few weeks away. It is a way of getting a labor-intensive
job out of the way when you have the leisure, without, as far as I
can tell, compromising quality.
Elizabeth/Betty Cook
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