Super Mega Deluxe Apple/Pear Pie (with Spelt Crust)

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I promised this recipe months ago but alas my spontaneous, never-the-same-thing-twice cooking style makes recipe writing tricky. This is a good pie to make during the winter since apples and pears are the only local fruits still available at the farmer’s market. I first came up with this recipe as a way to make apple pie sweeter and juicier. In fact it really began with the addition of ripe pears to apple sauce years ago while attempting to make the best apple sauce in the world (without additional sweetner). Once I perfected the sauce it didn’t take long to come up with ways to use the sauce that would maximize it’s usefulness.

Apple/Pear Sauce:

Ingredients:

  • 5 apples
  • 2 pears
  • Pinch of cinnamon
  • Pinch of freshly grated nutmeg
  • Squeeze of lemon (you can add some zest too)
  • 1/2 cup water

Get the sauce going before starting the pie. I don’t have any hard and fast quantities when it comes to apples and pears so I’ve estimated for you. I just use whatever I’ve got on hand with about 80% apple and 20% pear (or some similar ratio).

Peel and core the apples and pears. Cut each one in half and slice or dice into 1/4″ chunks.

Toss the apples and pears into a pot and cook on a medium heat with a few squeezes of lemon juice (if you’ve got it on hand), a pinch of cinnamon and nutmeg, and the water. You don’t need a lot of water. I’d say about 1/2 cup for 5 apples/pears.

Turn the heat down to a low simmer once the stuff in the pot gets rockin’ and let the whole thing cook until the fruit is soft.

Turn off the heat and let it cool down a bit before mashing with a hand-held potato masher or grinding with a food mill.

Yield: You’re going to get a lot of sauce out of this. You will not need all of this sauce for the pie. Save the rest in the fridge or eat it with just about everything!

PIE!

Prepare and roll out your pie crust using the crust recipe found here. There is enough dough for a bottom and top.

Ingredients:

  • Approx 5-7 apples
  • 1-2 Pears
  • Couple of squeezes of lemon
  • A fistful of flour
  • 1 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1/2 tsp ground nutmeg
  • Optional: 1 tablespoon maple syrup (for extra sweetness)
  • Approx. 1 cup apple/pear sauce (above)

Peel, core, and slice the apples and pears into 1/4″ thick slices. Throw everything into a bowl with some squeezes of lemon to reduce browning.

Toss the apple and pear slices together with the flour, cinnamon, and nutmeg until they are coated. Add your optional maple syrup at this time.

Pour the entire mix into the pie crust. Spoon in the apple/pear sauce into all the crevices between the raw apples and pears. Use as much as possible and eat the rest.

Place the crust on top and crimp the edges. You can go the easy route by making a circle and crimping the edges (don’t forget to cut some x’s into the surface with a knife for venting) or get fancy by piecing together shapes or weaving 3/4″ ribbons of dough to form a top.

Bake in an oven preheated to 400° until juices are bubbling through the vents and the crust is golden. If the crust starts to get too dark try turning the heat down slightly.

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Vegan Cranberry Thumbprints

Guest post by Renee Garner

I’d never been a fan of cranberry sauce that is until I started making my own. If you have ever made jam before, cranberry sauce is much like making jam, and just as easy to can. With fresh cranberries readily available, now is the perfect time for stockpiling this tart treat.

  • 1 pound cranberries (fresh is best!)
  • 1 cup orange juice (I prefer a sweeter orange juice, splurge for the good stuff, it really makes a difference)
  • 1 cup sugar

Rinse and sort the berries, toss in the compost the ones that are too soft, bruised and generally unappealing.

Dissolve the sugar in the o.j., careful not to burn it. Stir often and keep your eye on it!

Once the sugar is dissolved, add the clean berries, turn the heat up to a soft boil. Keep stirring and be careful not to let it burn! (Can I say this enough?) I like to mush the berries after they pop, if you leave whole berries you will have a tiny little burst of cranberry goodness in each bite.

Lower the temp and cook until the sauce thickens a bit. It will thicken even more in the fridge, so keep that in mind. At this point let it cool and enjoy!

Even better:

Make shortbread thumbprint cookies (adapted from this recipe) and add a dollop of your new favorite cranberry sauce recipe for a slightly sweet, slightly tart cookie with a hint of orange. Absolutely delicious!

  • 1 1/2 cup Earth Balance, room temperature (vegan margarine, butter if want the nonvegan equivalent)
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 3 cups flour
  • 1 Tablespoon vanilla
  • Egg Replacer equivalent of 4 eggs (6 t powder, 8 t warm water)
  • 3 additional tablespoons warm water

Preheat oven to 400 degrees F. Beat the margarine in with the sugar. Once this is thoroughly mixed, add the remaining ingredients, except for the warm water. Mix and mix and mix. If your mixture is still too powdery add 1/2 T of warm water at a time until the dough is barely moist. Form dough into little balls about 1 1/2 inches diameter. Place on an ungreased cookie sheet (with the copious amount of margarine included, no additional grease is needed unless you want blackened shortbread cookies) and poke the center with your thumb to create a little divot to fill with yummy cranberry goodness once the cookies are cooled. Bake for 10 to 12 minutes. Let cool, fill your thumbprint with cranberry sauce. Enjoy!

Also bake them in small batches, that way if the first batch spreads too much you can add a tad more flour, you’ll also learn on the first batch how much cooking time yours will need.

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