Showing posts with label Pecan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pecan. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 17, 2014

A slice by request

The creation of the most simple is the most difficult. Take for example piecrust, which if judged by the ingredient list should be no problem. Then why is it so hard to find a good one? One that is flaky but does not crumble, or firm enough that it holds together yet does not tip over the edge to cardboard. With most endeavors the more seemingly simplistic, the fewer places you get to hide any mistakes. This could not be clearer then with a piecrust.

For so long I avoided making this dough leaving it in the hands of my pastry chef friends, and then I would go begging for some. I was finally force to attack this foe and with offered help of a pastry chef I got the support and coaching I need. I have a feel for food, and can execute that delicate balance been solid technique with a feathered touch. But I had in my mind an aversion to this most basic dough. It must have been my second term pastry instructor in culinary school who declared I would never make a pastry chef. And, he was correct. I knew that I had no feel for making marzipan roses or inscribing “Happy Birthday” in a fluid, wispy fashion with a paper cone filled with melted chocolate, and really had no desire to fiddle with that. I did know I have a palate that loved to explore, and a mind that could figure out the science of a problem.

Piecrust is a fast moving technique, well if you are in this century and are using a food processor. Everything in the ready, and once the flour has been spun for a minute the butter bits, and water following promptly and are done before I think. I always add an egg yolk to the dough in order the thwart the amount of shrinkage many of us have suffered – the add fat from the egg prevents the gluten structure from stretching too much and subsequently contracting – I have ended up with a disk as opposed to the pie shell I was trying to achieve.

I can whip out a pie-dough in minutes now, and using a rolling pin was never an issue. I also enjoy baking cakes and other confectionaries, though don’t confuse me with a baker for I will never pipe a greeting across the top of your cake or decorate it with anything then edible flowers I snip for the garden.

Pecan Pie – yields 10-inch pie
Pastry dough
3-cups all-purpose flour
1/8-teaspoon salt
6-ounces unsalted butter – cut into small pieces and chilled
2 egg yolks
2 to 3 tablespoons cold water

To make the dough in the bowl of the food processor, fitted with a plastic blade add the flour and salt. Let the machine run for a minute then through the tube, with the machine running, start dropping in the butter pieces. Then add the egg yolks and cold water. As soon as the dough starts to pull together shut off the food processor. Turn the dough out on to a piece of plastic wrap, and tightly wrap up the dough. Refrigerate for 1 to 2 hours before using.

Filling:
2-ounces unsalted butter
2-tablespoons honey or agave
2-cups dark brown sugar
1-tablespoon water
¼-cup half-n-half
1-tablespoon vanilla extract
3 eggs
2-cups pecans

To make the filling place the butter, agave, brown sugar and water in a 2-cups saucepan, and over a medium heat let the butter and sugar melt. Stir every so often to make sure everything melts evenly. Once the butter and sugar is completely melted, remove from the heat and stir in the half-n-half and vanilla.

Beat the eggs until voluminous and pale yellow in color. Slowly stir in the butter/sugar mixture into the eggs to completely combine.

Pre-heat the oven to 350 degrees.

On a lightly floured surface roll the piecrust out to about ¼-thick, and line a 10-inch pie pan with the dough. With the tines of a fork poke the bottom of the piecrust.

Place in the oven, and cook for 10-minutes. Remove from the oven. Place the pecans in the piecrust and then pour over the egg mixture.


Bake for 30 minutes, and then reduce the oven temperature to 300 degrees. Continue baking until the center of the pie is set, approximately 30 minutes. Remove from the oven, and cool. Once the pie has cooled refrigerate for a few hours before serving.

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Some Lost Some Gain


I think it took the latter part of August and all of September to finally feel dried out. Through expected springtime rains; then a summer that saw daily deluges, and a sun that played peek-a-boo behind clouds that threatened more rain left everything a bit more than damp.

Mold grew on the south side of trees, many of which up-ended due to the softened ground that no longer allowed their impressive roots to anchor securely. Sinks holes were reported with such frequency I though I was living in Florida. And, then there was the garden. Seedlings went in but little came out. Eggplant, borage, cumin and black-eyed peas drowned within days. Cucumbers managed to vine and meander but the constant down pours thwarted the pollinators I rely upon forcing them keep hidden and safe from watery bombardments. Of the tomatoes that developed, I would venture to guess that half rotted on the branch. However, my greatest disappointment was with the pomegranate tree. By late April into May its branches were rife with flowers and by the June I spotted a nascent fruit take hold. Then more rains, and not a gentle drizzle but sideward sheets that seared flowers from the branch and made that one promise disappear between the crackle of lighting and subsequent clap of thunder.

The radishes, kale, chard, beets and lettuces of the autumn garden germinated well in the constant moistness. My farmer’s markets satisfied my craving for zucchini, okra and eggplant. We did not go without, and will not starve this coming winter, even if my pantry and a chest freezer are at half capacity – just disappointed my melon tasted like water.

There seems a bright spot in this otherwise bleak, overcast report and that is apples are fabulous this fall. Big, juicy and plentiful. And, I cannot believe I am saying this, but I am actually looking forward to a cold snap because then my favorites: Black Twig,Golden Russet and Arkansas Black will be coming to market.



Moist Apple Bundt Cake – yields 9-inch bundt cake

Apprx. 1-1/2-pounds apples – peeled, cored and diced1-tablespoon ground cinnamon
1-cup chopped pecans
2-cups sugar
8 ounces (2-sticks) unsalted butter
2-eggs
2-teaspoons vanilla extract
2-cups all-purpose flour
1-teaspoon baking powder
½-teaspoon baking soda
1/8-teaspoon salt
3/4-cup sour cream

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.

Butter and flour a 9-inch bundt cake pan.

In a small bowl mix the apples, pecans, cinnamon and 2-tablspoons of sugar to thoroughly combine. Hold to the side.

Beat the butter and the remaining sugar until light and fluffy. Beat in the eggs, one at a time, making sure each is incorporated before adding the next one. Mix the vanilla extract into the butter mixture.

Sift together the flour, baking powder and salt.

Add the flour and sour to the butter mixture, and mix to combined.

Pour about  two-thirds of the batter into the cake pan, and then sprinkle about ¾’s of the pecan mixture over the batter. Pour in the remaining batter. Scatter the remaining apple/pecan mixture on top of the cake.

Place in the oven, and bake for about 60 to 90 minutes, or until a cake tester inserted in the center of the cake comes out clean.

Remove to a cooling rack, and let the cake sit for about a half hour before removing from the pan. Allow the cake to cool completely on the rack.