Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
For buttery, flaky pie dough every time, follow the advice of Sarah Carey.
A rhubarb colonial pie. Pie in American cuisine evolved over centuries from savory game pies. When sugar became more widely available, women began making simple sweet fillings with a handful of basic ingredients. By the 1920s and 1930s there was growing consensus that cookbooks needed to be updated for the modern electric kitchen.
Australian meat pie with tomato sauce. A meat pie is a pie with a filling of meat and often other savory ingredients. They are found in cuisines worldwide. Meat pies are usually baked, fried, or deep-fried to brown them and develop the flavour through the Maillard reaction. [1] Many varieties have a flaky crust due to the incorporation of ...
A small, double-crust meat pie filled with minced mutton or other meat. Sea-pie Cipaille: United Kingdom: Savory A layered meat pie made with meat or fish, and is known to have been served to British sailors during the 18th century. Sfiha: Lebanon: Savory An open-faced meat pie made with ground mutton. Shaker lemon pie: United States: Sweet
Yields: 2. Prep Time: 30 mins. Total Time: 2 hours 30 mins. Ingredients. 1 tsp. kosher salt. 3 c. all-purpose flour, plus more for the work surface. 1 c. plus 2 Tbsp. (2 1/4 sticks) cold salted ...
Hard sauce (chiefly US) [1] is a sweet, rich dessert sauce made by creaming or beating butter and sugar with rum (rum butter), brandy (brandy butter), whiskey, sherry (sherry butter), vanilla or other flavourings. It is served cold, often with hot desserts.
Pie crust’s secret weapon is its fat content, which helps impart both flavor and delicate flakiness. This recipe uses a mix of butter and lard, which hits a sweet spot between flavor and flakiness.
Lobster Thermidor is a French dish of lobster meat cooked in a rich wine sauce, stuffed into a lobster shell and browned. The sauce is often a mixture of egg yolks and brandy (such as Cognac), served with an oven-browned cheese crust, typically Gruyère. [1] The sauce originally contained mustard, typically powdered. [2]