cookbooks

Apple Pie Recipe

When apples are very small and green, they are nice stewed whole, with

the skins on, and strained when soft, and sweetened. Pare, quarter, and

take out the cores of the apples, when of a large size. If they are not

ripe, stew them with just water enough to prevent their burning. When

soft, sweeten and season them to the taste. When apples are ripe, they

make better pies not to be stewed before baking. Fill your pie plates,

cover them with a thick crust, and bake them from half to three-quarters

of an hour. When baked sufficiently, cut the upper crust through the

centre, remove it carefully with a broad knife, put a piece of butter,

of the size of a walnut, into a pie, sweeten it to your taste, and if

the apples are not tart enough, squeeze in the juice of part of a

lemon--flavor the pie with either nutmeg, rosewater, or grated lemon

peel. Apples cut into quarters, without paring, and stewed soft in new

cider and molasses, make good plain pies. The apples should be strained

after stewing, and seasoned with cinnamon or nutmeg. If made quite

sweet, it will keep good several months. Dried apples should have

boiling water turned on to cover them, and stewed till very soft. If

they are not tart enough, turn in sour cider, when they are partly

stewed. A little orange peel stewed with the apples, gives them a fine

flavor. Season them, when soft, with sugar and nutmeg, and strain them

if you like.

Vote

1
2
3
4
5

Viewed 1828 times.


Other Recipes from Practical Cookery.

Observations Respecting Meat
Roast Beef
Beef Steak
Alamode Beef
Beef Liver
To Corn Beef
Mutton
Veal
Veal Cutlets
Calf's Head
Force Meat Balls
Calf's Feet
Calf's Liver And Heart
Collops
Plaw
A Fillet Of Veal
Lamb
Shoulder Of Lamb Grilled
Lamb's Fry
Turkey
Goose
Chickens
Fricassee
Pigeons
Ducks