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Wink
Because you love bacon and you love pie - behold the bacon apple pie
Can you imagine what it would taste like with melted cheddar cheese?
I just can't stop drolling
Okay, okay, I also posted this in the Vegetarian/Vegan Recipe Swap thread, but it's a pie after all, so I'm cross-referencing here. :)
TWO BERRY PIE WITH PECAN-SUNFLOWER CRUST
1-1/2 C pecan pieces
1/2 C unsalted sunflower seeds
1/4 C pitted dried plums (formerly known as prunes)
1/4 tsp stevia
2 C fresh blueberries
2 C sliced fresh strawberries
2 tsp lemon juice
2 tsp psyllium powder (you can find this natural fiber in the, ahem, "cleansing" section of natural food stores, but it's used here as a thickener)
Combine the pecans and sunflower seeds in a food processor and process until coarsely ground. Add the dried plums, 1 tsp of psyllium powder, and 1/8 tsp of stevia, and process until thoroughly combined. Press the mixture into a pie plate.
Stir together the blueberries and 1-1/2 cups of the strawberries. Pour into the pie crust and set aside.
In a blender, combine the remaining 1/2 cup of strawberries, lemon juice, remaining 1 tsp of psyllium, and remaining 1/8 tsp of stevia. Blend until smooth. Pour the sauce mixture over the berries and refrigerate for at least 1 hour before serving. For best results, serve this pie the same day you make it.
NOTE: You should wind up with enough sauce to come to the tops of the berries in order for the pie to "gel" together. I didn't have nearly enough, so I added about 1/2 cup of water and another 1 tsp of psyllium to the sauce and reblended before pouring. Just be forewarned that you may need to make adjustments, and if you add liquid, you'll have to add enough psyllium to match.
Serves 8
Per serving: 261 calories, 21 g fat, 5 g protein, 17 g carbs, 6 g fiber, 0 cholesterol, 12 mg sodium
Wink,
As some here may know my family owned a bakery for around 30 years.
I don't know about this vegan nut crust. Give me a pate brisee anyday. All buttery and flakey.
Here's the reciepe for a pate brisee, or all butter pie crust. It's actually quite easy to make.
3 cups all purpose flour
1 tsp salt
1 tbsp sugar
1 1/2 sticks of butter, chilled and cut into chunks
1/4 to 1/2 cup cold ice water
Mix dry ingredients, cut in butter until coarse, slowly pour in ice water until firm. Refrigerate.
The measurements might be off because the receipe I've got is for around 10lbs of dough.
You can use this classic crust for anything.
Oh and pecan pie is one my favorite, but I like including 1/4 cup of bourbon in the receipe for taste or try replacing the pecans with shaved almonds.
I don't know about the calories of a slice of bourbon pecan pie. Hmmm maybe like 1,000 calories?
Had dinner with a pastry chef and a baker aka "mom and dad".
Asked them if they knew a flour less pie crust. Mom said to use almond flour and increase the butter by 50%, but that it would taste more like a cookie.
Dad said you can make anything flakey by treating it like croissant dough. Roll the dough out. Layer it with soften butter. Fold over. Repeat over and over and over again. The more layers the flakyer the dough gets. After you finish chill the dough so it rests.
I think this would work out, but without a commercial dough roller, it's hard on the arms and is super tedious. Plus you need to have cool hands or maybe dip them in ice water so the dough doesn't stick to your hands.
So what I'm really saying is does anyone want to try this technique and report back?
Wink?
Poppy?
Anyone?
Had dinner with a pastry chef and a baker aka "mom and dad".
Asked them if they knew a flour less pie crust. Mom said to use almond flour and increase the butter by 50%, but that it would taste more like a cookie.
Dad said you can make anything flakey by treating it like croissant dough. Roll the dough out. Layer it with soften butter. Fold over. Repeat over and over and over again. The more layers the flakyer the dough gets. After you finish chill the dough so it rests.
I think this would work out, but without a commercial dough roller, it's hard on the arms and is super tedious. Plus you need to have cool hands or maybe dip them in ice water so the dough doesn't stick to your hands.
So what I'm really saying is does anyone want to try this technique and report back?
Wink?
Poppy?
Anyone?
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