I came to pie later in life. My people were cake people you
see, skilled in the language of layer cake pans, 10X sugar and sprinkles. My first cake was carrot cake, made from a recipe in the venerable, verdant Farm Journal cookbook. There were
forays into pound cakes, with detours through sour cream, chocolate and lemon
before deciding on my standard shattery-crust cream cheese pound cake. Rich
cheesecakes would follow, chock full of candy, eggs and dairy goodness. But pies eluded
me until marriage, when my husband presented me with a set of hand-turned walnut rolling
pins. An angled pastry pin, perfect for rounding out a disk of pie dough. The too-pretty-to-use decorative pin with the lovely rounded ends. And my favorite, the Clydesdale of
the kitchen, ideal for thwopping a resistant pizza dough or pounding out super-chilly puff pastry.
Rolling pins. Lucy Mercer/A Cook and Her Books |
The gift of the rolling pins, seen here in their display case in my kitchen along with grandma's red-handled rolling pin (perfect for Kitty's Beaten Biscuits) and Little Bit's pint-sized pin, gave me the encouragement I needed to tackle pastry crust. At my husband's suggestion, I made a buttermilk chess pie from Southern Living magazine, and have been turning out pies ever since. Apple pies, peach pies, blueberry pies. Lemon meringue, French silk, and the pie my family looks most forward to each January, Bellwether's Kumquat Pie.
So what pie should I bake for my friends, the monthly #LetsLunch crowd? I intended to bake up a Southern peach pie with the late season fruit I bought at an interstate off-ramp vegetable stand. Those peaches became roasted peach jam instead, so I turned to my second favorite pie, sweet potato pie. Truth is, every Thanksgiving, I'd rather have sweet potato pie than pumpkin or pecan pie. This recipe is adapted from Damon Lee Fowler's charming and reliable cookbook "Beans, Greens and Sweet Georgia Peaches."
Sweet Potato Custard Pie. Lucy Mercer/A Cook and Her Books |
Sweet Potato Custard Pie
Pie Crust
These are instructions for making
pie crust in a food processor, my favorite way to blend the fat into the flour.
I keep a small can of Crisco in the bottom drawer of my refrigerator, so it’s
always well-chilled for pie crust making. No excuse not to make pie, right?
2 cups all-purpose, unbleached
flour
½ teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon sugar
½ cup vegetable shortening, very
cold
About 1/3 cup ice water
1. 1. Place
the flour, salt and sugar in the bowl of the food processor. Pulse five times
to mix the dry ingredients. Add the shortening, pulsing until the flour
resembles coarse meal or grits. Add a few tablespoons of ice water and pulse.
Continue adding ice water until dough comes together.
2. 2. Lightly
flour a clean counter top and remove dough from bowl of food processor. Using a
light touch, press dough into a round disk, wrap in plastic and chill for at
least an hour or overnight. After chilling, the pie crust is ready for rockin’
and rollin.’
Sweet Potato Custard
Pie
About five or
six medium sweet potatoes
1 cup sugar
4 tablespoons
unsalted butter, softened
3 large eggs
A pinch of salt
1 generous
tablespoon vanilla
1.
To roast sweet potatoes: rinse off tubers, place
them on a foil-lined baking sheet and prick the tops with a fork. Roast in a 400
degree oven for about an hour. Let the sweet potatoes cool, then remove the
pulp from their jackets. Mash the pulp.
2.
Stir together the sweet potato pulp, sugar and softened
butter in a bowl. Add the eggs, salt and vanilla, stirring well. Pour into a
pastry-lined pan and bake in a preheated 375 degree oven for 40 minutes. Let
cool, then slice and serve.
#LetsLunch is a fine group of food bloggers who post monthly on a given subject. I'm hosting this month and I chose the theme of pie. There is power in pie and here are the stories to prove it:
Annabelle‘s Chocolate Pie at Glass of Fancy
Anne Marie‘s Apple Pie Sandwiches at Sandwich Surprise
Betty Ann‘s Calamansi Pie at Asian In America
Grace‘s Easy Apple Pie with Lard Crust at HapaMama
Jill‘s Guava and Cream Cheese Empanadas at Eating My Words
Lisa G‘s Sweet Ricotta Noodle Pie at Monday Morning Cooking Club
Lisa K‘s Great-Grandmama’s Chocolate Pie at The Little Good Ride
Linda‘s Biscoff Banana & Pear Galette at Spicebox Travels
Lucy‘s Sweet Potato Custard Pie at A Cook and Her Books
Mai‘s Caramel Apple Pie Sundae at Cooking in the Fruit Bowl
Margaret‘s Cushaw (Squash) Pie at Tea and Scones, Too
Nancie‘s Edna Lewis’s Tyler Pie at Nancie McDermott
Naomi‘s Huckleberry Pie Ice-Cream at The Gastro Gnome
Rebecca‘s Summer-Fall Hand Pies at GrongarBlog
Sara‘s Herb Pie from Ottolenghi and Tamimi’s “Jerusalem” at Three Clever Sisters
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