Otta-Blog
Archives
April, 2017June, 2015
May, 2015
March, 2015
November, 2014
June, 2014
May, 2014
April, 2014
March, 2014
July, 2013
We stayed there over Canada Day yet again. I can't say enough good things. The room was fantastic, the Inn is very close to Parliament Hill and the Market, and the food was great. - Doug Cambell, Montreal
Pies Pies Pies
May 05, 2014 - Recipes
For a crust that best resists sogginess from wet fillings, choose a crumbly crust made with egg. Flaky crusts more readily soak up liquid.
To make sure that the crust won't be undercooked and to minimize sogginess, prebake the crust in the pan "blind," without filling. Line the crust with parchment paper and weigh it down with dry beans or ceramic pie weights for part of the prebaking. When weights are removed, "dock" the dough by pressing down with fork tines to prevent blistering. Protect exposed edges from excess heat with strips of kitchen foil or pie guards.
Give the prebaked crust a moisture-resistant coating of beaten egg, chocolate, melted butter, concentrated fruit preserves, or pastry cream, or a layer of moisture-absorbent crumbs. For an egg wash, return the crust to the oven for a few minutes until the coating is dry, then let it cool before filling and baking.
Fresh fruit fillings often release copious liquid and fail to thicken well, especially if the fruit has been sliced.
To control the consistency of a fresh fruit filling, concentrate and thicken the juices before baking. Cut the fruit, toss it with sugar in a colander, and let the juices drain into a bowl. Cook down the juices until thick, recombine them with the fruit and thickener, and fill the crust.
For a translucent fruit filling, thicken the fruit juices with tapioca instead of flour or cornstarch.
Bake fruit pies or tarts near the oven floor, or directly on a baking stone on the floor, to ensure rapid heating of the bottom crust.
Cream and custard pie fillings may fail to thicken in the oven, or may thicken well but then reliquefy.
For cream and custard fillings thickened with eggs and flour or starch, be sure to heat the flour-egg mixture to 180 to 190°F / 80 to 85°C, either before or during baking. Undercooked egg yolks contain an enzyme that breaks down starch and liquefies fillings.
Quiche fillings are easily overcooked and dried out.
Check quiches frequently during baking and remove from the oven as soon as a toothpick or knife tip inserted in the center comes out clean.
Allow quiches to cool until the custard is firm enough to cut without slumping.
Lemon meringue pies often weep liquid from the meringue surface or the bottom, where it floats the meringue from the filling.
Make a stable meringue topping by using powdered sugar that includes cornstarch and placing the meringue on a lemon filling that's still hot. Or make a precooked meringue on the stove top, then place on the pie and finish it in the oven to warm it through and brown the edges.
Ensure a stable lemon filling by cooking the cornstarch-sugar-egg mixture to 180 to 190°F / 80 to 85°C, and adding the lemon juice afterward off the heat.