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In a large bowl, combine the flour, brown sugar, oats and butter; set aside 1 cup for topping. Press remaining crumb mixture into an ungreased 9-in. pie plate; set aside.
Remove the pie weights and parchment and let the crust cool while you make the filling. Reduce the oven temperature to 375℉. For the crumble: In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, brown ...
Shoofly Pie. Thanks to its irresistibly sticky and sweet makeup, shoofly pie is pretty similar to pecan pie! The difference? This Pennsylvania Dutch treat has a rich molasses filling that gives it ...
Recipes for Dutch apple pie go back to the Middle Ages. An early Dutch language cookbook from 1514, Een notabel boecxken van cokeryen ("A notable little cookery book"), letterpress printed in Brussels by Thomas van der Noot, who may also have been the author, [16] documents a recipe for Appeltaerten (modern Dutch Appeltaarten 'apple pies').
Shoofly pie is a type of American pie made with molasses associated with Pennsylvania Dutch cuisine.While shoo-fly pie has been a staple of Moravian, Mennonite, and Amish foodways, there is scant evidence concerning its origins, and most of the folktales concerning the pie are apocryphal, including the persistent legend that the name comes from flies being attracted to the sweet filling.
Funny cake—a combination of pie and cake that is made by baking a cake surrounded by pie crust, marbled throughout with chocolate streaks. Whoopie pie; Montgomery pie—buttery crust with a gooey molasses and lemon filling and a buttermilk cake topping. [7] Moravian sugar cake; Shoofly pie—molasses crumb cake with a pie crust for easier eating.
Shoofly Pie. If you've never heard of this classic Pennsylvania Dutch pie, get ready for some old-fashioned charm! It has a sweet molasses filling and a cinnamon-spiked crumble on top.
Slice of shoofly pie. Shoo-fly pie is a molasses pie common to both Pennsylvania Dutch cuisine cooking [3] and southern (U.S.) cooking. Apple pan dowdy (or Apple pandowdy) is a baked apple pastry traditionally associated with Pennsylvania Dutch cooking, with a recipe dating to (according to Crea) [4] colonial times.