From my vintage postcard collection. |
Today I'll be making turkey tetrazzini, with roasted beets and parsnips on the side and more rhubarb and pumpkin pies. We're having our Mennonite friends Melvin and Anna Hurst over for a Sunday supper of "leftovers" (well, not really, but that was the premise) later this afternoon and I'm looking forward to a nice leisurely "catch up" as I haven't seen either of them in a month. I'd even intended to host a "leftover" potluck for friends last night but it just never materialized.
As for food this Thanksgiving, back to our "simplicity" kick. I didn't make homemade cranberry sauce this year, or homemade rolls, or even cranberry nut bread. But the stuffing was arguably my best yet––from a recipe I came up with in college that I've been tweaking for the past 30 years. This year I added dried cherries and chopped pecans, as well as the Italian sausage, chopped apples and fresh cranberries that I have always included.
But we also had P I E! Homemade! By me! I say this so enthusiastically, and with great unabashed pride in my heart, because I've always had pie phobia–big time. The fillings are never the problem, it's the crust. Usually it is the one thing I ask guests to bring at Thanksgiving: dessert (and dessert at Thanksgiving usually equals pie). A few weeks ago my friend Rosemary back in New Hampshire sent me a pie dough recipe she had tweaked from Joanne Chang's Flour Bakery in Boston. It was the best pie dough, and easiest, I've made yet. If it sounds like there is a lot of butter, there is: but you're worth it (Rosemary also added a few more tablespoons to the original recipe). Rosemary, I should also add, was the frequent pie lady at our house (as well as my friend Linda, but I don't want to start a pie war between these two friends!).
© Anne Taintor, Inc. |
[Here is her first recipe: click here for blog archive!]
• 1 cup flour
• 1/2 tsp salt
• 10 Tbsps cold butter
• 1 egg yolk
• 2 Tbsps milk
Eli loves to help. |
A perfect pie trifecta! |
Thanksgiving without pumpkin pie is akin to sacrilege. |
5 comments:
I'm a devotee of the vodka pie crust from cook's illustrated. Fabulous and fool proof.
We are roasting our bird today, Sunday -- nice Thanksgiving out this year, and then leftovers with friends. But of course we need our own leftovers so we can have lots of turkey curry in the freezer, sandwiches all week, etc. Here's to wintertime and all the cooking ahead!
I'm rather partial to Colonial Williamsburg's pie crust recipe (from their cookbook), which can be made sweet (add sugar), or not. But I must say, you're tempting me with this one. I just might have to try it!
Whoops! Rosemary here...I should never rely on my memory. The pie dough recipe should be 9 Tbsp. butter, NOT 10. Also, add 2 tsp. sugar to the recipe. Here's the link from the Boston Globe:
http://www.boston.com/lifestyle/food/articles/2010/10/20/pate_brisee_recipe/
Sorry about that...
It's funny about the sugar mention: I was thinking, as I made it, that a bit of sugar would be good. I would definitely add it for a dessert pie; omit for a quiche or pot pie. And VODKA!? Who knew? (well apart from Ivy and I'm guessing Rosemary...) Will have to try it sometime. My friend Melissa said she uses vanilla vodka, too.
Post a Comment