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Sunday, September 07, 2008

A pie bird and a vegetable oil pie crust

For her birthday last year I got Shelley a copy of Mildred Armstrong Kalish's book Little Heathens. It is her story about growing up on an Iowa farm, and she includes a number of recipes. The one that she most brags about is her vegetable oil pie crust--how, because it doesn't have butter/shortening/lard in it, it can be re-worked extensively and not get tough. Shelley was intrigued, and while in MN we picked a huge supply of blueberries one morning. Why not make pie and try the recipe?

For one double crust pie, or two single crusts:

3 cups all-purpose flour
¾ cup vegetable oil
1½ tsp. salt
⅜ cup skim or whole milk

"Blend all together with a fork, and form into two equal balls using your hands. Roll out between two sheets of wax paper. Peel the top paper off the dough using a spatula. With the paper side up, carefully fit the crust into the pie pan. Now carefully remove the wax paper. If the crust tears, don't worry. Using your fingers, carefully paste over the hole. Take care not to stretch the dough. Unlike the old-fashioned lard dough, you can handle this mixture as much as you like. You will probably never make the old-fashioned dough again." (Kalish, page 132)

I did more mixing of the pie filling, and Shelley suffered through more dough mixing and rolling. It wasn't easy. We also tried Karen's pie bird for the first time. The pie bird sits on top of the bottom crust, and has filling put in around it and then the top crust fitted on top, with the top of the bird sticking out. It has an opening in the bottom that leads up through its beak, so that it allows steam to vent from the pie, and I guess also any extra liquid, hopefully keeping the pie from running over, and also supporting the crust in the middle on the bird's shoulders. Wikipedia tells us that the connection between pies and birds goes back a long way, and mentions the nursery rhyme "Sing a Song of Sixpence."

The pie bird was a great success, and the filling was yummy (sorry no recipe--we used one of Karen's that I didn't write down), but the crust was panned. It was difficult to work with and hard once baked--less flaky, more cardboard. We actually struggled to cut through the bottom crust of the pie. Hmm. After all that, Karen admitted to us that she had tried a vegetable oil pie crust once before, with the same result. I guess we three will go back to making the old-fashioned dough again.









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