Sunday, April 28, 2013

A Pie Per Week: Creme Brulee

Creme Brulee Pie


Brian:  We recently went to a nice restaurant and somebody in our dinner party ordered creme

brulee.  It is one of my favorite desserts, and one day while thinking about possible pie ideas, I thought to consult my good friend Google.  It turns out there are quite a few great recipes out there to choose from.

Angie:  I was torn between two pie recipes this week.  Since I'll be away with my mom next weekend I thought we should make the more involved pie recipe when I would be around to help!  We had some fun making this pie and it even involved experimenting with my embossing gun.  :)

Brian:  Angie will not be here next weekend, so if I choose to make a crust, I'll be on my own.  I decided to dive in and try my hand at it.  It is funny, when I first read about making pie crust, I was convinced that the key to success was not overworking the dough.  After watching Angie mastering the art, I'm convinced that there is a different secret... ice water.  If the crust starts to crack, you need to add a little water, or it will continue to break up.


Angie:  The crusts are finally getting to be pretty automatic for me after having many challenges in the beginning.  I've found a recipe that really works for me after adjusting it.  We normally use a pastry cutter to cut the ingredients in, but today I actually utilized the "2 fork" method which I've read about.  The two forks really worked well today.

Brian:  For the Creme Brulee recipe, you bake the crusts first, and then you have to cool completely.

Adding the ingredients to the saucepan over medium heat

Angie:  I went to work on adding the
ingredients.  The recipe calls for dissolving the cornstarch into the cream to begin with, and then you add the beaten egg yolks, and the sweetened condensed milk.  The next directions were pretty vague, because it says to cook until thick and bubbly.  Since it didn't specify a temperature, I went for a medium temperature.  Be careful as it will start to burn on the bottom of the pan if you overcook.  The mixture did thicken up nicely.  After you remove from heat, you add the vanilla and butter.

The pie before cooling and the broiler
Brian:  The pies had to cool for two hours before adding the final touch of the sugar.  I love breaking the texture of Creme Brulee, and all this time I had no idea that it was pure sugar!  No wonder it is so good!

Embossing Experimentation!
Angie:  I put the first pie in with the broiler on high, and within as little as 2 minutes the pie started to brown.  I only left it in for a total of about 3 minutes b/c I was afraid it was going to have more of a burnt taste.  I just didn't have as much control of the heating process as one would with a kitchen torch.  I did use my embossing heat gun to add some touch ups to the pie, and for a moment tried to use it exclusively for the second pie.  However, it was just taking too long.  I opted to go with a Lo broiler setting for the second pie.  It was a longer time to cook, but I think it was the better overall result.  I need a torch, or whatever it is one uses to properly burn sugar on top.

Brian:  The family really enjoyed it!  The reviews for the pie, as with any pie, were all over the board.  It had a really great flavor, and happiness is the feeling of your fork breaking the top layer of some creme brulee!

Angie:  I loved this pie.  I loved the texture, the crunch of the sugar on top.  It had a very rich flavor but not overly sweet.

Pie of the Week Recipient

Our pie of the week recipients are Kris and Ken.  They are the parents of our son's girlfriend, and he said that Ken's favorite dessert was creme brulee.  This made our recipient an easy choice.  Their daughter Kennedy is a delightful young lady and it was a pleasure to make the delivery.




Recipe (From Food Network)


Ingredients
3 tablespoons cornstarch
1 2/3 cups heavy cream
1 (14-ounce) can sweetened condensed milk
3 egg yolks, beaten
1 tablespoons butter
1 tablespoon vanilla extract
1 (9-inch) pastry shell, baked and cooled
1/4 to 1/3 cup sugar
Sweetened whipped cream, to garnish

Directions
In a heavy saucepan, dissolve the cornstarch in the cream; stir in sweetened condensed milk and egg yolks. Cook and stir until thick and bubbly. Remove from heat add butter and vanilla. Pour into pastry shell and chill for 2 or more hours. Top with sugar and brown under the broiler. Garnish with sweetened whipped cream around the edge. Refrigerate leftovers.


About Your Bakers




Tuesday, April 23, 2013

A Pie Per Week: Cheese Pie



Brian:  One of the common questions we get about our pie blog is "When are you going to stop?"  And the conversation turns to "How many different pies can you possible make?"  And ultimately, I'm not sure how long we will blog or continue "pie day," but the options are seemingly endless to me.  There are probably at least 52 different apple pie recipes out there, and that would be a year of pies alone.  However, I must say I am intrigued by trying unique pies that one normally wouldn't hear of, and cheese pie certainly fits the bill.


Angie:  People are often curious about what puts the "cheese" in cheese pie, and the ingredient is cottage cheese.  However, it also has a secondary tie in that I will discuss later.  Brian pretty much did this pie all on his own, so I'll let him continue.


Brian:  This will definitely go down as the easiest pie we have made yet.  All you need is cottage cheese, sugar, eggs, vanilla, a graham cracker pie crust, and a blender.  You put all the ingredients into the blender and then you blend well.  The biggest piece of advice I was given by by friend Nick, who provided the recipe, is that a hand mixer will not do a sufficient job.  You need to get a blender and blend the heck out of it to achieve the desired consistency.


Once you have the ingredients blended, you simply pour the contents of the blender into the pie shell, and bake the pie for about 40 minutes.  One thing we did find is that for us, 40 minutes was not enough.  The pie was still a bit soupy, so I baked it for an additional 20 minutes to make sure the pie set.  Some cottage cheese pie recipes you will find add flour as a thickening agent, and also lemon zest if you are going for a slightly different flavor.  I liked the pie as is, but would like to experiment with those different variations in the future.  It is a very unique pie, but I really enjoyed it, and you worry about that a bit when you are making it.  It is like, am I really making a cottage cheese pie?  :)


Angie:  The pie had a great flavor, but the texture really is different.  It has a consistency that is reminiscent of baked ricotta, but the flavor was fantastic!  Everybody in our family that tried the pie gave it the thumbs up.  The taste of the pie was a cross between sugar cream pie and cheesecake.  This explains why it is poured into a graham cracker shell, and the similar taste to cheesecake may be another way the pie received it's name.

Pie Recipient of the Week:

Our pie recipient of the week is my friend and colleague Nick.  Nick and I worked together in the home building business, and we now work for a software company specializing in digital marketing.  We often see each other for coffee in the morning, and one day we talked about the blog. He mentioned he had this unique family recipe.  I think we was worried that we may not like it, because it is so unique, but I must say we found it to be quite tasty.


Recipe:

1 Pint Cottage Cheese (small or large curd)
1 Cup Sugar
2 Eggs
1 Tsp Vanilla
Pinch of Salt

Mix all ingredients well with a blender.
Pour into a graham cracker crust, dot with butter and sprinkle lightly with cinnamon.

Bake for 10 minutes at 350, then 30 minutes at 325.





Sunday, April 14, 2013

A Pie Per Week: Cherry Pie



Paul and Mariliyn
Angie:  When we were trying to figure out what kind of pie to make this week I thought it would be fun to pose the question on Facebook "What is your favorite pie?"  I had several responses, but one from our friend Paul Smith really excited me.  "Cherry"  I'd heard his wife Marilyn had an amazing cherry pie recipe so I reached out and asked her for the recipe.  One things that was for sure, we had to go to GFS to get fresh frozen tart cherries.
GFS Cherries

Brian:  We will take a recipe from anywhere, but it is always special when we can find one from a friend or a relative.  We know you can go and search for any pie recipe on Pinterest or All Recipes, but if we can find a family favorite, we are bringing something unique to the party.

Angie:  The other fantastic thing I found was a crust recipe from my grandmother's recipe collection.  It was really easy to work with.  Our pie recipient of the week, whom we will mention later, asked for cooking classes and described the crust as unbelievable.  Pie crust, I may finally be getting the hang of it.  I even did a lattice top on one of them!

My first lattice pie attempt
Brian:  The pie filling was super easy to make.  You add some cherries, sugar, cherry pie  filling, almond extract, and cinnamon.  I have to admit, I never thought I'd ever see almond extract or cinnamon in a cherry pie recipe.  However, the recipe strongly encourages it, and the flavor of the pie turned out great.  It was a little "soupy," so we will use a thickening agent like cornstarch next time.

The only bad thing about making cherry pie, is that it reminded me of the awful song made by Warrant in the 80's.  I do love 80's metal, that particular song is just like nails on a chalkboard for me.  However, I was able to overlook it for the deliciousness of pie!

Angie:  I've actually seen Warrant in concert performing that song!

Pie Recipient of the Week!

We really have come full circle with our church on this week's blog.  The pie recipe came from one of the former staff members of our church, and the recipient is from our church as well.  Dee plays music in the church and has been our daughter's piano teacher for the last three years.  She is one of those kind of people who gives selflessly of herself.  She and her hubby have three gorgeous, smart, talented daughters.

Dee and her beautiful daughter!
I must admit, this was probably the funniest delivery we've ever had.  I went driving looking for her, because we like it to be a surprise, and I thought I would find her working at the church tonight with the high schoolers.  When I couldn't find her there I had another friend offer to take it off my hands ;)   I drove to her house and knocked on the door.  First her daughter came to the door, and then her husband.  Her husband was joking that she didn't even want to come to the door, but she was so surprised and so thankful.  They were just craving something sweet and about to make some cookie dough, so our timing couldn't have been better.  It couldn't happen to a nicer person than Dee, so I'm glad they enjoyed the pie.

Do you know somebody in the Indianapolis area that deserves a pie?  Do you have a recipe that you would like to share?  If so, please comment, we'd love to hear from you!

Recipe

2 1/2 cups, approximately, frozen cherries

1 can cherry pie filling


1/2 cup sugar

1/2 tsp almond ext (optional - but tasty)


2 crust pie shell - unbaked


Place cherry mixture in unbaked shell - sprinkle w/cinnamon


Dot w/butter


Place top unbaked crust on top of cherries - sprinkle slightly w/sugar


Bake 400 degrees - 45 min. (I put strips of foil around edge of crust to


keep from getting too brown before pie is done)


About Your Bakers

Sunday, April 7, 2013

A Pie Per Week: Chocolate Peanut Butter Pie

Chocolate Peanut Butter Pie

Brian:  Well if you have read any of our previous blogs, you will know that my wife is typically the chief talent around here.  However, this is the week I decided to step up.  One of the major reasons that I did this one from start to finish, is that my wife has a flaw.  Her flaw is that she does not appreciate that peanut butter desserts are the most amazing desserts ever!

Angie:  So yeah, I love peanut butter cups, but I'm not fond of peanut butter desserts.  Brian taking charge of this week's pie was fine with me!  I bought a pecan pie for our daughter Andrea and I to enjoy while Brian and our 2 other peanut butter loving kids have peanut butter pie.  I also, prepared 4 freezer meals.

Nothing bad starts out with 24 Oreos!
Brian:  I gathered a couple of different recipes and the fillings were very similar.  They each called for a package of cream cheese and Cool Whip, and similar amounts of powdered sugar.  One recipe featured twice the peanut butter, and recognizing that more peanut butter is always better than less peanut butter, it was an easy choice to make.

Drizzle the butter onto the cookie mixture
As with most recipes I make, this one is quite delicious and very simple to make.  The first thing you do is to grab 24 oreo cookies and pulse them in a mixer until it is processed completely.  You transfer the cookie mixture to a bowl, and drizzle some butter before adding to the pan.

Angie:  My daughter Emilee helped take most of the photographs today and also pressed one of the pie crusts into the pie pan.  The recipe allowed for several options, but we used the bottom of a measuring cup to press in the crust.

Peanut butter, cream cheese, and powdered sugar.
Brian:  The next thing you do is combine the cream cheese and peanut butter together.  This needs to be processed smooth and then you add powdered sugar.  After the powdered sugar is processed you add the Cool Whip and whip until smooth.

Adding the Cool Whip and getting fluffy
Angie:  Make sure you turn the mixer up high and process it until it is whipped nice and fluffy.  It is advised to scrape the sides mid-way through mixing, stir the mixture, and then continue processing.

Brian:  WARNING!  Don't taste the beaters or you may be derailed for an extended period of time.  It is very easy to consider abandoning the pie all together and having a bowl of peanut butter pie fluff.  You will miss out on the combination with chocolate, and the true joy that comes from sharing.

Angie:  Today at church our pastor was talking about men and how most of them are not able to share their feelings.  I have the greatest husband.  He is in touch with his feelings and he makes pie.




Brian has mad pie skills.  They are more than just pies... they are works of art.

Denzel the Bulldog!
Brian:  Our pie recipient of the week is our neighbors Duane and Tonya.  They had a tough week this week with a utility line break, and we found out that they had never tried peanut butter pie.  They have the cutest bulldog, Denzel, and pie makes everything better right?
Utility Line Blues
Tonya and her cute blinking daughter.  :)

Recipe from Pioneer Woman:


Ingredients

 FOR CRUST
25 whole Oreos
4 Tablespoons Butter, Melted
 _____
 PEANUT BUTTER FILLING:
1 cup Creamy Peanut Butter
1 package (8 Ounce) Softened Cream Cheese
1-1/4 cup Powdered Sugar
1 package (8 Ounce) Cool Whip, Thawed

Preparation Instructions

Crust:
Crush the Oreos until they’re fine crumbs. Pour melted butter over the top and stir with a fork to combine. Press into pie pan and bake at 350 degrees for 5 to 7 minutes, or until set.
Remove from oven and allow to cool completely.

Filling:
Beat the peanut butter with the cream cheese until smooth. Add powdered sugar and beat until smooth. Add in the thawed Cool Whip and beat mixture until smooth, scraping the sides as needed.
Pour filling into crust, evening out the top with a knife or spatula. Chill for at least an hour before serving.

About Your Bakers 

Sunday, March 31, 2013

A Pie Per Week: Hershey's Chewy Brownie Pie

Hershey Chewy Brownie Pie



Easter Celebration at the hangar
Brian:  We just returned from our trip to Florida, driving all Friday night, so we were pretty tired on Saturday.  We knew we were going to celebrate Easter in Bloomington on Sunday, so we were trying to think of a pie that would be moderately easy to bake.  We were short on Z’s and short on time. 

Angie:  Ever since Brian and I have started to blog and share our pie recipes on Facebook, lots of family and friends have started sharing recipes with us to try.  One that appeared on both of our walls in the last week was a Hershey Brownie pie.  It looked really good, and also seemed pretty easy to make.

The two sizes of Hershey's Candy bars.
Brian:  This pie reminded me of Derby pie, minus the pecans, in many ways.  It is really very simple to make, as most “cookie pies” are.  I did struggle a bit with getting the ingredients, as I am not a very detail oriented person.  When buying ingredients, I only grabbed one of the 6.5 oz. Hersheys Cookies and Cream candy bars.  As each pie would require 6 oz., I had to return to the store.  Unfortunately, I grabbed the 4 oz. size instead.  Doh!  I’m blaming it on the sleep deprivation.  J


Melting the butter, chocolate and combining sugar
Angie:  We decided to add some mini chocolate bars to make up the difference, and began making the pie.  Essentially you put the pan on medium heat and slowly start combining all the ingredients.  There is no crust to prepare, so once you pour all of the ingredients into the greased pan, you just need to set the timer and wait. 

Sweetened condensed milk is poured on top.
Brian:  We baked both of the pies and headed to Bloomington to celebrate Easter.  We set up banquet tables, there is a full kitchen to either create or heat up dishes, and we get the opportunity to enjoy good food and fellowship.

Angie:  Holidays in my family are a big deal, all of them.  If you ask my mom what her favorite holiday is, she'll say, the next one!  I love this about my mom and my family.  We love to be together, cook together, eat together.  Towards the end of our time together we always pull out our phones and get our next one on the calendar!  Since winters in Indiana are long and cold and this Easter was going to have good weather we decided to grill out.  Burgers, brats, potato salad, baked beans...  It was like the first taste of spring.

Hershey Chewy Brownie Pies
Brian:  After enjoying a nice Easter meal, we broke out the pie.  I enjoyed it, but the pie was a bit too rich for my taste.  When the ingredients include a chocolate bar, chocolate chips, sugar, butter, and condensed milk… you know it is going to be sweet.  I definitely advise having a nice cold glass of milk available to go with it.

Angie:  One word.  Rich.  This is the richest pie I've ever tasted.

Pie of the Week Recipient:
Our pie of the week goes to our good friends and neighbors Graeme and Tracy.  We have lived across the street from each other for years and have watched our kids play together since before some of them were born!  With a family of 6, we are confident the pie will not go to waste.

Graeme, Jayden, and JoLynn


Recipe From fahrenheit350.blogspot.com

Ingredients
6oz. Hershey's Cookies 'n' Creme Chocolate Candy Bar
½ cup sugar
½ cup butter
1 cup flour
½ teaspoon baking powder
½ teaspoon vanilla
2 eggs
Pinch of salt
7oz. sweetened condensed milk 
¾ cup mini semi sweet chocolate chips

6oz. Hershey's Cookies 'n' Creme Chocolate Candy Bar
½ cup sugar
½ cup butter
Melt over med low heat until melted
Whisk in 2 lightly beaten eggs and ½ teaspoon vanilla

Add:
1 cup flour
½ teaspoon baking powder
pinch of salt
Stir until mixture is incorporated and smooth

Pour into greased 9" springform pan
Bake at 350°, 20 minutes
Remove from oven
Immediately pour 7oz. sweetened condensed milk over top of brownies
Layer with ¾ cup mini semi sweet chocolate chips
Let cool


Sunday, March 24, 2013

A Pie Per Week: Strawberry Pie



Henscratch Farms
Brian:  Angie and I decided to keep the pie blog going, even though we are on vacation.  However, as I am a huge Indiana University basketball fan, I was sorely needed at the TV today.  I thought we may be celebrating the team's season instead of a victory based on how we were playing, but I'm happy they won.  I think it is only fitting that we have a Cream and Crimson colored pie today.  :)



Brian's dad and Aunt Sue's granddaughter
Brian Celebrates the IU Victory
Angie:  This was definitely primarily a solo venture today, but we did have some family fun.  My inlaws live in Sebring, Florida, and we always are sure to visit Henscratch Farms.  Henscratch Farms is a winery that sells jellies, jams, chow chow, and other local food items.  Fortunately for us, they also offer the ability to go and pick your own strawberries.

Brian:  Henscratch features lots of live farm animals, including chickens that they have roaming freely.  They offer little cups of food that you can feed the chickens with, and that is always lots of fun with the kids.  They also have a pig named Harley.  We went today with my mom and dad, my twin brother, two of my aunts.  My Aunt Sue also brought her granddaughter, and we all had a really good time.  I also got a chance to learn what muscadine and scuppernong jelly are.  Muscadine is a red grape variety and scuppernong is a white grape variety, and that is the short version.  Yay useless trivia!

The inside view of a paper bag full of strawberries.
Angie:  After we picked the strawberries, although we did get a fair amount, we did not have enough for the amount of pies we had planned.  So we ventured out to a farmstand to augment are handpicked varieties. We also made the decision to go with a store bought crust, just because we were on the road.  We have heard of a recipe made by one of the local residents that features an egg, and I'm not leaving here without it!

Brian:  The rest of the pie making was all Angie.  I helped preheat the oven and did get some of the crusts out of the oven, but Angie did the rest.  In my defense, IU really, really needed me to cheer for them.

Strawberries in the Pie Shell
Angie:  We ended up with 4 quarts of strawberries.  I washed and cut the tops off of all of them.  Then I took whole berries and placed them in the pre-baked pie shells.  I really wish I'd made them from scratch as they would have tasted so much better, I will definitely make them the next time!  I took the remaining strawberries and mashed them in a large saucepan with sugar and heated until boiling.  I added the water and cornstarch and simmered for 10 minutes then poured the mixture over the strawberries in the pie shells.  The other strawberry pies I've mostly seen are the ones with that big packet of glaze you buy in the produce department.  That glaze always tasted like those fluoride trays you get at the dentist, yuck.  Wow this is so much better!!

Mashing strawberries while adding sugar.
Adding the Cornstarch


Brian:  The picture of the pie looks soupy, but it really wasn't.  The flavor was good.  There is a famous cafeteria style restaurant in Indiana called Gray Brothers Cafeteria, and people always rave about the strawberry pie.  That pie does feature a sweeter tasting crust, and that combination with this strawberry pie recipe will be a winner, winner, chicken dinner.

Recipe from AllRecipes.com


INGREDIENTS:
1 (9 inch) pie crust, baked
1 quart fresh strawberries
1 cup white sugar
3 tablespoons cornstarch
3/4 cup water

DIRECTIONS:
1.Arrange half of strawberries in baked pastry shell. Mash remaining berries and combine with sugar in a medium saucepan. Place saucepan over medium heat and bring to a boil, stirring frequently.
2.In a small bowl, whisk together cornstarch and water. Gradually stir cornstarch mixture into boiling strawberry mixture. Reduce heat and simmer mixture until thickened, about 10 minutes, stirring constantly. Pour mixture over berries in pastry shell. Chill for several hours before serving.


Pie Recipients of the week go to Brian's family, that we have talked about throughout.  The picking of the strawberries, and the eating of the pie, made a great family day.  The nice warm temperatures helped as well, as there is snow on the ground in Indiana, as we are having an unseasonably cold Spring.

Brian's twin brother Brent, and his mother Kathleen.
Your Bakers

Sunday, March 17, 2013

A Pie Per Week: Butterscotch Pie

Butterscotch Pie

Pi Day at ExactTarget
Brian:  It was a busy week at the Richardson house.  Pi Day, which is set aside to celebrate our mathematical friend π, was held this week.  To celebrate Pi day, people frequently eat pie, and my employer actually provided pie to employees as part of the event.  Angie, thought it would be fun to provide some pie to her co-workers as well.  There was one small problem, Pi day is 3-14 (like the number 3.14,) and I made a mistake in scheduling.  I had our production start on Tuesday night, which was a day early.  Doh!  There is actually a National Pie day as well, and my goal is to not make the same mistake when that event rolls around.  J

ExactTarget Logo Pie
Angie:   I came home Tuesday night all excited about making apple pie for my husband’s office and for my co-workers.  Because this was an extra event, we will include the apple pie recipe at a future time.  Brian was working late so it was my sole duty to make these pies.  When he came home and I was showing him the pies, my oldest daughter came in and mentioned that Pi Day was Thursday, not Wednesday, and I had made the 3 pies a day early.  Uh oh.  I felt like the pie should be fresh baked so yes, I came home the next night and made 2 more apple pies.  We gave 4 away and kept one.  I was really proud of the pie for my husband’s company.  It turned out really neat, featured their company logo, and won a prize!

Our good friend Valerie!
Brian:  To be true to our code, to keep a pie and give away a pie, we did give one to our good friend Valerie.  Apple is her favorite, so she got a special surprise delivery at work.  We also gave away one of the small pies from last week’s derby pie to our neighbor Erin.  I would like to point out, in order to stay committed to my goal of just having one dessert per week, I did not partake.  I have lost weight by only having dessert once per week, but not as fast as I would like.  So, I've decided to be a little more restrictive.  I can only eat pie on Sunday, if I have averaged a one pound per week loss.  I have posted a chart for the next several months and what my weight needs to be each Sunday.  This weight loss thing just got real.

My brother Mark and Paula Dean.
Angie:  This week I decided to use the Queen of the South’s pie crust recipe, Paula Deen.  I actually had the opportunity to see Paula perform in Atlanta with my brothers, mom, and John.  We all went together to the Metropolitan Cooking and Entertaining Show.  We met Paula and her husband in our hotel lobby.  She was very gracious and posed for pictures.  Back to the pie…   The crust came together really nicely and rolled out like a dream and I was so excited that I might have found THE recipe for me.  However, after it baked the crust dropped down the inside of the pie pans.  So my crust quest continues…

Crust before it decided to shrink.


Brian:  It was really strange.  When Angie rolled out the dough, it overlapped perfectly with the pie crust.  It virtually looked like every homemade crust we had ever used, but after cooking it in the oven, it just shrunk up like a “lay flat only to dry” shirt you accidentally put in the dryer.  One part of the instructions she didn't follow, was to let it set in the refrigerator for 30 minutes.  Could that be the "flaw in the slaw?"

Butterscotch Cooking... mmmm
Angie:  The filling and cooking instructions are very similar to that of sugar cream pie.  We were given several great recipes, and I ended up using a hybrid of them for this pie.  One of the recipes stated to cook the filling after it reaches a boiling point for two minutes, and the other recipe encouraged waiting until the mixture thickened.  I opted to cook it for additional 5 minutes, constantly stirring to ensure that it would not burn.

Brian:  Much like the apple pie, I was not as much a factor in the baking this time.  I was really interested in helping with the crust, but since this was a new recipe, I made sure to let Angie work with it as she is the true talent of this duo.  I was more of a sous chef, gathering ingredients, separating eggs, and helping to keep things moving.  I took on my role of “trophy husband,” but I really am interested in learning how to make crust.  The kids on the playground might beat me up if they hear I have to get my wife to bake my own pies.  How embarrassing would that be?

Angie:  I loved the taste and texture of the crust, yum!  The filling was very sweet and not the creamy texture I’ve had before.  The flavor was fantastic!!

Brian:  I enjoyed the pie, but I agree with Angie that the filling was really sweet.  It almost had a caramel taste, but since I like caramel, that was just fine with me. 

Pie Recipients
This week pie recipient is Jen.  We became friends in Bloomington about 18 years ago, and both families ended up moving to the same part of Indianapolis.  Butterscotch is her favorite, so we made sure to include her next.
Jen is pictured on the left as this week's recipient.  Erin is on the right with Keaton, Raenah, and a photo-bombing Levi.




Our friend BJ does not like crust, so we made him a crustless pie. Otherwise known as pudding.  He shared.

What pie should we make next?  Please feel free to comment with any suggestions, and if you have a family recipe you would like for us to try, please include that as well.

I was given recipes by three different friends this week, Jennifer, Laurie and Vonda.  I didn’t stick to one in particular, but sort of melded the three and ended up with the following…

Butterscotch Pie
1c light brown sugar
1/3c corn starch
1/3t salt
2c Milnot, scalded – I put in microwave for 3 minutes
3 eggs, separated
2T butter
1t vanilla

In a heavy saucepan over medium to medium high heat, blend sugar, corn starch and salt. Slowly stir in hot milk. Cook and stir until mixture thickens, about 10 minutes.  Remove from heat and add 1/3 of well beaten egg yolk, stirring constantly.  You do not want scrambled eggs yolks here!  Stir in the rest of the egg yolks.  Stir and cook for 2 more minutes. Remove from heat.  Add butter and vanilla. Pour into baked pie shell. Cover with meringue, place in preheated 350 oven and brown the meringue.