Most all of the Americans I have met here try to assimilate into the culture via language, customs, traditions, travel, friends but once in a while a little something that reminds you of home can evoke unexpected emotions, at least they did for me, along with a little melancholy, pride and comfort, like getting a big hug from across the ocean. Funny what a mere hotdog can do...
So the evening's menu consisted of:
Hamburgers
Hot dogs
Heinz ketchup
French's mustard
Pickles, onions
Kraft individually wrapped slices of cheddar-colored cheese
Cole slaw
Rice and beans
Pasta salad
Lay's ruffle chips and Knorr's onion soup mix dip
Pringles, Bugles
Peanut butter and jelly sandwiches on Wonder bread (!!!)
...and a big old fashioned apple pie 🙂
Good Old Fashioned Apple Pie
I made this pie for the 4th of July party. I was going to make potato salad but I had a centerpiece full of apples that I didn't want to go bad so apple pie it was. It's one of those foods that immediately transports me back six thousand miles and thirty years. I can picture perfectly my grandmother sitting in her kitchen in her impeccable knit suit protected with a 'housecoat', looking out on the garden where my grandfather was always working, peeling the apples in a spiral without breaking the peel, quartering and coring them by pulling the blade of the knife toward her crooked thumb (I always cringed but she never cut herself), poking the crust with a fork then deftly crimping the dough in a perfect pattern around the pie dish.
My flatmates were here when I took the pie out of the oven and they helped me pack it up for the trip across town to the festivities. Yesterday morning, my flatmate Pierre greeted me with a big smile and a request for another apple pie. He said it smelled so good and he'd never had a real American apple pie so off to the market I went for a bag of apples relishing, pun intended, the thought of sharing something so quintessentially American with a French person, and one that has shared so much of his French culture with me. We had three other French people over for dinner that night and they all were very confused by the pie as it neither resembled nor tasted like a French apple tarte but all the plates were licked clean 🙂
Ingredients:
- 5 granny smith apples
- 1 cup sugar
- 1 to 2 tbsp cinnamon (to your taste)
- 1/2 to 1 tbsp ground nutmeg (to your taste), I use my long microplane to grate the nutmeg, much faster and easier
- 1 tsp sea salt
- 1/2 lemon squeezed (please use a real lemon and not that fake plastic lemon-shaped thing that squeezes out something that could no doubt substitute for rocket fuel)
- 1 vanilla bean, insides scraped and added to the apples. You can save the pod and add it to a cup of sugar, seal and save, to make vanilla sugar. or you can use 1 tsp vanilla extract.
- 2 tbsp butter
- 2 portions of pate brisee (or your favorite pie dough)
- cream for brushing crust
- caster sugar for sprinkling on top
Dough:
- 200g flour (7oz)
- 100g butter (very cold (3.5 oz) cut in small pieces
- 5g salt (.25 oz)
- 1 tbsp granulated sugar
- 60 ml water, very cold (2 oz)
1. Sift flour, sugar, salt
2. Using a dough scraper or pastry cutter, cut in butter until very small chunks
3. Add water and combine until you can form a ball
4. Wrap with clear film and chill. Don't take out of the fridge until ready to roll out. Or... you can do what I did and run to the store to buy 2 packages of pre-made already-rolled-out dough 🙂 it's not nearly as good but if you don't have the time or desire to have you or your kitchen covered in flour, it's a great back-up.
Pie:
1. Heat oven to highest bake setting.
2. Peel, core and cut apples into 1-inch chunks
3. Toss with sugar, cinnamon, nutmeg, salt and lemon juice
4. Roll out one portion of dough and place in pie pan.
5. Add apples on top of the dough. There will be a lot of juice in the bottom, go ahead and pour it all in!
6. Dot the top evenly with small pieces of butter
7. Roll out second portion of dough. You can cover the whole pie and poke holes with a fork or you can cut strips and create a beautiful lattice top crust or you can do what I did and whip out a lattice cutter that cuts a perfect lattice every time.
8. Fold over and crimp the edges of the top and bottom crust.
9. Brush the top crust with cream and sprinkle caster sugar all over the top ensuring it's on the crust.
10. Turn oven down to 350F / #5 and cook for 45 minutes (or til crust is golden brown and apples are bubbling)
11. Let it cool and serve with the best vanilla ice cream you can find or better yet, make it yourself!