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  2. Pie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pie

    A pie is a baked dish which is usually made of a pastry dough casing that contains a filling of various sweet or savoury ingredients. Sweet pies may be filled with fruit (as in an apple pie), nuts (), fruit preserves (), brown sugar (), sweetened vegetables (rhubarb pie), or with thicker fillings based on eggs and dairy (as in custard pie and cream pie).

  3. Pie in American cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pie_in_American_cuisine

    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.

  4. List of pies, tarts and flans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_pies,_tarts_and_flans

    A pie or tart consisting of a pastry and a filling of either fruit, a crumbled butter and sugar mix, or a cooked rice and custard porridge. Västerbotten pie Sweden: Savory A pie filled with a mixture of Västerbotten cheese, cream and eggs. [citation needed] Walnut pie: Worldwide Sweet A pie prepared using walnuts as a main ingredient ...

  5. Pie: A Treat Filled with History - AOL

    www.aol.com/food/pie-treat-filled-history

    Pyramids weren't the only things ancient Egyptians made. Believe it or not, when they weren't building world wonders, they also made pies. As the concept traveled through the Romans, Greeks, and ...

  6. Shoofly pie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoofly_pie

    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.

  7. Pie à la Mode - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pie_à_la_Mode

    Soon, Pie à la Mode became a standard on menus around the United States. [2] [3] When Charles Watson Townsend died on May 20, 1936, a controversy developed as to who really invented Pie à la Mode. The New York Times reported that "Pie à la Mode" was first invented by Townsend at the Cambridge Hotel in Cambridge, New York in the late 1800s ...

  8. Meat pie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meat_pie

    A small African-style meat pie. This pastry became a common dish in medieval times, and by the 14th century, came to be called a "pye" or "pie". Between 1387 and 1400, Geoffrey Chaucer wrote, in The Canterbury Tales, of a cook who "koude rooste, and sethe, and broille, and frye / Máken mortreux, and wel bake a pye". [3]

  9. Boston Cream Pie is Massachusetts' state dessert. Here ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/boston-cream-pie-massachusetts...

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