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Rounding out the pie participants in this best-of list, Lauren G. Bland, executive pastry chef at Old Edwards Inn & Spa in Highlands, North Carolina, thinks that no list of ultimate Southern ...
Made with roasted chestnuts and cherries macerated in rum, Nesselrode pie is a cozy, nostalgic holiday treat you may remember from childhood. Popular beginning around the 1940s at many New York ...
I use 2 ½ cups of flour for two discs that make one 9-inch double-crusted pie or two 9- or 10-inch tarts or single-crust pies. Salt: Don’t forget the salt! I use salt to season everything ...
Lemon buttermilk pie. A 19th-century recipe for buttermilk pie is made by beating sugar with eggs, then adding butter and buttermilk. The custard is poured into a pastry-lined tin over a layer of thin apple slices. [15] To make a buttermilk lemon pie, eggs, flour and sugar are beaten together, then buttermilk and lemon are added.
Cumberland rum nicky is a sweet shortcrust pastry tart or pie, commonly filled with dates and stem ginger, flavoured with rum, and sweetened with brown sugar.Rum nickies are associated with the historic county of Cumberland (now part of Cumbria) in northwest England, and the ingredients used in their manufacture reflect the county's former significance as a major import and trading centre for ...
The molasses could be sold as cheap sweetener, but most plants preferred to use it to make Rum. Each planter, or more specifically his Rum burner, was convinced that his special recipe for making Rum - or the kill-devil, as it was called - was the best. The longer the mask was allowed to ferment, the stronger the Rum became.
Transfer the crust to a 9-inch deep-dish pie plate. Tuck the edges of the crust under and crimp as desired. Thoroughly prick the bottom and sides of the crust with a fork and freeze for 30 minutes.
[1] This molasses was either used for table use or in the production of rum. To make rum, sugarcane juice is fermented with yeast and water and then distilled in copper pot stills. The liquor was given the name rum in 1672, likely after the English slang word rumballion which meant clamor. [2]