Showing posts with label Pie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pie. Show all posts

Wednesday, 11 July 2012

Beef & Butternut Squash Pie



Please forgive my delay in posting dear readers, but we lost internet connection for more than a few days due to the recent heavy rainstorms and flooding in East Devon. This pie was something I baked to help us keep morale up as we huddled in the house for days waiting for the storms to end. Sadly as it was photographed at night I've had to use the less beautiful flash photography to document this pie. However be assured it is lip smackingly delicious, and using ready made puff pastry it's also very easy to create, good comfort food for this strange climate change weather.

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Recipe
Adapted from the one given by Neil Morrissey from Taste Of My Life at BBC Food Recipes, see the original recipe here

Serves 4 greedyguts


500g lean beef mince (preferably organic)
1 onion, sliced thinly
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 garlic clove, crushed
200g butternut squash, peeled and diced small
half a small stick of celery, chopped small
75g mushrooms, chopped
1 bay leaf
100ml good red wine
150ml beef or vegetable stock
1 tablespoon tomato puree
pinch of dried herbs de provence or thyme
approx 100g broad beans, optional
375g ready made and ready rolled puff pastry
1 egg yolk, lightly beaten
1 and a half tablespoons plain flour, plus extra for dusting
2 dashes Worcestershire sauce


1. Turn the oven to 200C (180C fan ovens) and get out a good sized ceramic or tin pie dish.


2. In a large frying pan, heat the oil and fry the beef mince over a medium heat for about 5 minutes until browned, breaking it up with a wooden spoon every few minutes.


3. Throw in the sliced onion, garlic, diced squash and chopped celery, and fry for 2 minutes.


4. Add the tomato puree, stir in until well combined for another couple of minutes.


5. Next add the flour, stirring again and letting it dissolve before adding the mushrooms.


6. Once the mushrooms are in, pour over the red wine. Turn up the heat and let the wine come to the boil before turning the heat down again and adding the stock to the filling.


7. Now add the dashes of worcestershire sauce and the dried herbs, give it a good stir, then reduce the heat further and cover the pan with a lid, letting it simmer for about 20 minutes.






8. While this is going on, release the broad beans from their large pods, before boiling them in water for about 5 minutes. Then drain them in a sieve, and when they've cooled take them one by one out of their outer shells using your fingers. Tip the little green inner beans into the beef filling as it simmers, stirring once.


9.Once time is up, take the pan off the heat and put it to one side to let the filling cool a bit. Then ladle the beef and vegetable filling into the prepared pie dish.


10. 10 minutes before the mixture is turned into the dish, take the ready made puff pastry out of the fridge and leave to come to room temperature. Then sprinkle a board with some flour and then roll out the pastry on the board.


11. Cut a lid for the pie out the pastry and then carefully place it over the filling so that the edges of the pastry touch the sides of the dish. Cut the lid a little bigger than the dish, as pastry tends to shrink when baking.


12. Use any leftover offcuts of the pastry to make shapes such as traditional leaves, or my less traditional MOO! Place these shapes over the pastry lid. Remember to make a few slits in the centre of the pastry lid to allow steam and excess moisture to escape from the pie as it cooks.


13. Briefly beat the egg yolk with a fork until bubbly, then brush the beaten yolk over the pastry lid and shapes to give it a lovely golden glow when it comes out of the oven.


14. Bake in the oven for 20-25 minutes. It should come out looking golden brown and smelling irresistible.


15. Serve with mashed potato, steamed carrots and maybe some steamed greens.







This pie was idly baked while listening to Schubert's Unfinished Symphony: No 8 in B Minor

Friday, 6 January 2012

Idle Chicken Pie

January means one thing for some people: detox. Or if not detox, at least a curbing of recent gluttonous excess. Personally I'm not one for depriving myself, being a firm believer in the possibility of eating healthily while still allowing a little of what I love. Mr Eve, on the other hand, is a passionate detoxer, trying every January to cut down on sugar and alcohol. Which leads us to a slight problem this year, for my idle baking is at odds with his dietary resolutions.

So we've come to a deal: I'll only bake the healthiest sweet foods this month, and I'll also branch out into some savoury baking options too. So first up, the tastiest and simplest Chicken Pie ever, using my old family recipe for a truly scrumptious and wholesome supper.




Recipe
My mother's recipe.

Serves 4

350g ready made shortcrust pastry, thawed if frozen
1 roasted chicken, or cooked chicken breast and thigh pieces, room temperature
leftover gravy, room temperature
1 large onion
1 large carrot
1 large leek
large handful of fresh herbs: rosemary, thyme, 1 bay leaf
30g salted butter or margarine
30g plain flour
1 pint whole milk
1 egg white, lightly beaten


1. Turn the oven to 180C (160C fan ovens).


2. Finely chop the onion, leek and carrot then fry it gently over a medium heat.

3. Tear the chicken off the bone, cutting it into small pieces.

4. Place the leek, onion and carrot in a good sized pie dish, along with the herbs and chicken meat.

5. To make the white sauce, melt the butter in a saucepan over a medium heat. When melted add the flour, mixing thoroughly, and turn the heat down a little. Once combined, stir in the milk little by little, until well combined.

6. Reheat the gravy before adding it to the white sauce, and mixing well.

7. Spoon the sauce over the chicken and vegetables in the pie dish, until just covering them.

8. Roll out the pastry to about 2cm wider than the pie dish.

9. Place the cut pastry top over the dish and crimp the edges with the tines of a fork dipped in cold water. Decorate the top with pastry leaves or birds from the leftover pastry.

10. Cut a cross in the middle of the pie top to allow the steam to escape as it cooks. Alternatively if you're using a very deep pie dish you could place a china baking bird in the middle of the pie under the slashes.

11. Brush the pastry with beaten egg, before placing in the oven to bake for approxmately 30-35 minutes. Check after 20 minutes - if it is browning too quickly turn the oven down.

12. When baked, take out of the oven and leave to rest for 10 minutes before slicing and serving with wilted spring greens.




This pie was idly baked while listening to the Tom Waits album Bad As Me.