There is more than one version of Dutch apple pie.
(read the instructions before making / the ingredients list is confusing)
From: The New Pennsylvania Dutch Cook Book
By: Ruth Hutchinson
Illustrated by: Tim Palmer
Published by: HARPER & BROTHERS NEW YORK 1958
Earlier edition published as: The Pennsylvania Dutch Cook Book (1948)
Library of Congress catalog card number 58-8873
“Apple Custard Pie” Credited to: Mrs. Donald L. Helfferich
2 heaping cups stewed sour apples
2 eggs beaten separately
1 cup sugar
1/2 cup butter
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon nutmeg
Pinch of salt
2 tablespoons confectioners’ sugar
Vanilla
Instructions for recipe
Use recipe for
Plain Pastry (No credit given.)
2 cups flour
3/4 teaspoon salt
1/2 cup shortening
5 tablespoons ice water
Sift the flour into a bowl with the salt. Cut in the shortening by holding 2 knives in the hand like scissors. Mix lightly, stirring with a fork while adding water. Try to pour water on dry, floury parts of the mixture. Form into a ball with lightly floured hands. Chill before using. Roll out on floured board, lifting rolling pin instead of pushing, rolling always in one direction. Makes 2 8-inch shells.
Line pie dish with the crust. Chill. Stew and mash the apples. beat egg yolks, blend butter, sugar, and salt, add the egg yolks. Stir in apples and nutmeg. Pour filling into crust, put on top crust, seal and crimp edges of pie, bake in 350° oven for about 45 minutes. Beat egg whites stiffly with pinch of salt, add confectioners’ sugar and a little vanilla. Spread this meringue over the top crust, return to oven, and brown for 15 minutes at 300° – 325°. Makes 1 9-inch pie.
Notes from me:
As I said, the ingredients list is confusing:
Remember to separate the eggs and beat the yolks and whites separately.
.
Reminds me of StelBel.
yeh, me too
,
Women on a guy’s mind. What’s so strange about that?
Is that robot in the background related to Bender?
Kinda racy for “53.
Looks like my cat scan results.
,
That looks like a cross between a pup and a bear cub.
In the beginning it’s a dog but it’s turning into a bear cub on the goose.
Which BTW is much more patient than the ferocious geese I’ve known.
That’s a duck.
Small puppy!
Whatever.
The length of their necks kinda overlaps, so the only way I can tell a short necked goose from a long necked duck is by the beaks.
I can’t see this one well enough… But yeah, it’s probably round enough to be a duck bill.
Obviously I’m no waterfowl expert.
Sigh….
,,
I love Legos!
Mine are random pieces from flea markets and such, so I don’t have many people… And no female ones!
I’d say I want a girl/woman one like that, but I have to keep them all packed away anyway, so I won’t play with them.
Israeli Army I believe.
Aw, Mom! I was gonna come the third time you called me!
When I say you’re in time out, I mean now!
Wow, it’s the sub-Saharan baobabrocolli plain!
I don’t think I need to post a solution unless anybody asks.
Got ’em 🙂
humans
Are we sure about that?
I think the first lady looks beautiful.
Third one looks like the biker who runs down my road helmetless upon occasion. Once he hits forty.
About today’s Cleo …
Of course I can guess… But you can’t pry the answer from me with a… um…. with ….. YOU know….
dutch apple pie
There is more than one version of Dutch apple pie.
(read the instructions before making / the ingredients list is confusing)
From: The New Pennsylvania Dutch Cook Book
By: Ruth Hutchinson
Illustrated by: Tim Palmer
Published by: HARPER & BROTHERS NEW YORK 1958
Earlier edition published as: The Pennsylvania Dutch Cook Book (1948)
Library of Congress catalog card number 58-8873
“Apple Custard Pie” Credited to: Mrs. Donald L. Helfferich
2 heaping cups stewed sour apples
2 eggs beaten separately
1 cup sugar
1/2 cup butter
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon nutmeg
Pinch of salt
2 tablespoons confectioners’ sugar
Vanilla
Instructions for recipe
Use recipe for
2 cups flour
3/4 teaspoon salt
1/2 cup shortening
5 tablespoons ice water
Sift the flour into a bowl with the salt. Cut in the shortening by holding 2 knives in the hand like scissors. Mix lightly, stirring with a fork while adding water. Try to pour water on dry, floury parts of the mixture. Form into a ball with lightly floured hands. Chill before using. Roll out on floured board, lifting rolling pin instead of pushing, rolling always in one direction. Makes 2 8-inch shells.
Line pie dish with the crust. Chill. Stew and mash the apples. beat egg yolks, blend butter, sugar, and salt, add the egg yolks. Stir in apples and nutmeg. Pour filling into crust, put on top crust, seal and crimp edges of pie, bake in 350° oven for about 45 minutes. Beat egg whites stiffly with pinch of salt, add confectioners’ sugar and a little vanilla. Spread this meringue over the top crust, return to oven, and brown for 15 minutes at 300° – 325°. Makes 1 9-inch pie.
Notes from me:
As I said, the ingredients list is confusing:
Remember to separate the eggs and beat the yolks and whites separately.
The pun is obvious:
It’s a ravin’ bar.
A murder of crows. The lawyers approach the bar…
Boo! 😀
I think the hidden answer is the right one…
Otherwise: I hope they hit it.
Yours is the best i’ve seen.
It’s a rooster bar.
A rooster crows.
Geezer points if you recognise that little bit.
“Margaret! Fetch me my crowbar! I’m going hunting for nighthawks.”
Gosh I thought I was totally giving today’s pun away in my first post.
I didn’t realize nobody would get it or anybody would still be guessing!
So much for subtlety.
I guess I have to hit people over the head with a… one of those things…
Like Tigressy said hours later, and Liverlips hours after that….
That’s the easy answer; the one I didn’t want to give.
And that’s how you get an open bar anytime. Or bar open…
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