Monday, September 22, 2008

Apple Hand Pies

Happy 1st day of Fall!


I've been craving pie, but every time I make a pie we throw half of it away. Solution - super cute little hand pies!



I mixed a few regular Apple pie recipes to get to this one, thanks to Martha Stewart and the Joy of Cooking! :)



I took the picture on my phone because I left my camera somewhere this weekend, so sorry for the crappy quality!

Apple Hand Pies
Makes 8


Crust:
2 sticks (1/2 lb) of butter, chilled
2 1/2 cups all purpose flour
1 tsp salt
1 Tbs sugar
6+ Tbs water


1. Using two forks or a dough hook (or a food processer, on my Christmas list!) cut the butter into the dry ingredients until it resembled small peas.
2. Add water, 1 Tbs at a time, and mix until the mixture begins to form a dough. It's ready when you can ball up the dough and it sticks together without crumbling, but it shouldn't be wet or sticky. Add water sparingly!
3. Form the dough into two flat discs, wrap with plastic, and refrigerate for at least 30 minutes while you prep your filling.


Filling
4-5 large apples (I use the Alton Brown apple pie mixture - honeycrisp, granny smith, golden delicious, and braeburn)
3 Tbs butter
1 cup sugar
cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg
1 egg


1. Peel, core, and coursely chop apples into 1/2 inch cubes.
2. Melt 3 Tbs butter in a large skillet or saucepan big enough to hold all your apples.
3. Stir apples into melted butter until coated, cover, and cook on medium heat for 5-10 minutes until apples are soft on the outside but still have some crunch.
4. Mix 1 cup of sugar with cinnamon, ginger,and nutmeg to taste. I like a pretty healthy pouring of cinnamon (2 tsp maybe?) and just a small pinch of the ginger and nutmeg.
5. RESERVE 1/4 cup of the spiced sugar mixture.
6. When apples are parcooked, add remaining 3/4 cup of the sugar mixture and turn heat up to high, and cook at a rolling boil for 3-5 minutes until juices become thick and syrupy.
7. When finished, spread apple mixture onto a sheet pan and cool to room temperature.


Building the pies
1. Flour your work surface, and roll out dough to about 1/2 inch thickness.
2. Using a saucer as a guide, cut 6-8 inch circles out of the dough. You can reroll out the excess dough and get as many circles as you can, but remember pie dough gets less tender as you play with it, so go easy. I got 8 circles out of the dough above, plus a little extra that I cut out with cookie cutters to make the little top designs.
3. Spoon 2-3 Tbs of apple mixture onto half of each dough circle, leaving 1/2 inch or so around the edge to seal
4. Beat 1 egg in a separate bowl, and then brush around the edge of the dough circle.
5. Fold over the circle, making a semi-circle, and seal with the tines of the fork.
6. If you're adding cutouts to the top, just paint the back with egg, and then stick it on the top of your dough.
7. Cut 2-4 small vents in the dough for steam.
8. Brush the top of the pies with remaining egg, then sprinkle generously with reserved sugar mixture.
9. Bake at 350 until pies turn golden brown, 15-20 minutes.



WHEW! This recipe is a lot less complicated than it looks with all these steps, I promise! :)

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Yum! I saw your post on the WFD board and was hoping you would include this in your blog! :)

Kristin (kekis) said...

OH.YUM. Does the crust get nice & crispy like fried pies?? My great aunt used to make the best fried pies and there's nothing like them. If this would work as a good sub, I'll have to try to make them!

Rhiannon said...

When you say 6-8 inches do you mean diameter or circumference? I just made these and the dough only made 3 pies and another small one. I also had lots of extra filling. Did I make them too big or maybe too thick?

Carla said...

Rhiannon - It has been a while since I made these, but rereading I think I can see two things that probably caused your issue.
1. I said to mix it to 1/2 inch thick. I roll a lot of pie crusts and I typically do them more like 1/4 inch thick. I'm guessing I did that as well here. That would definitely yield more crusts. (I also reroll the scraps and try to get every last bit into a pie crust).

That would probably yield more crusts, which will give you more space for filling.

If you have a lot of extra filling you can cook it down even farther for some awesome homemade applesauce!

Rhiannon said...

Oh thanks for responding. I figured it was that they were either thinner or smaller. And I have to say, even though they were huge, they were delicious and a bit hit.