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Apple pie is one of a number of American cultural icons. There are many variations on the basic apple pie that may add raisins, dried cranberries, or caramel candies to the filling, or replace the traditional pastry top crust with iced cinnamon rolls or streusel toppings like nut streusel or oatmeal streusel. Cinnamon is commonly used, and ...
A recipe for apple mincemeat appears in a 1910 issue of The Irish Times, made with apples, suet, currants, sugar, raisins, orange juice, lemons, spice and brandy. [6] There is also a similar recipe using green tomatoes instead of apples to create mincemeat in the 1970s book Putting Food By. [7]
Mace’s versatility means the spice also works well in drinks, including the Tom and Jerry, a riff on a classic Christmas eggnog with roots in 19th-century England.
Not every apple is a good "baking" apple—and I’m not just talking about all-American apple pie. I’m talking cobbler , cake , tarts , muffins , and all sorts of apple-infused baked goods .
Cortland. The Cortland apple is a cross between a McIntosh and a Ben Davis apple, with the look of an extra-large McIntosh. The flesh is crisp and the flavor is tart and mellow.
An apple pie is a pie in which the principal filling is apples. Apple pie is often served with whipped cream , ice cream ("apple pie à la mode "), custard or cheddar cheese . [ 3 ] It is generally double-crusted, with pastry both above and below the filling; the upper crust may be solid or latticed (woven of crosswise strips).
Toss the apples in the zest and juice. In a large sauce pan, cook the butter until brown and nutty. Add the apples and stir. Add the remaining ingredients and cook until the apples are al dente.
It is not widely available at retail outside its growing regions but still serves as an important processing apple in those areas. The Northern Spy is known for taking as much as a decade to bear fruit, unless grafted to a non-standard rootstock. In spite of this, it makes an excellent root stock for grafting other varieties to become standard ...