Saturday, December 4, 2010

Pie! Or, I can't believe I'm so ignorant of proper wifely knowledge.

We have this wonderful old Betty Crocker cookbook from 1972. My parents have the same one, and I actually learned how to cook from it when I was a young teenager-- I was home by myself most every day one summer, so rather than getting involved with drugs like any normal kid would do, I decided to teach myself how to cook. The dessert recipes in this book are top notch. Many of the main dish ones are as well, but since it was the early 70s, there are a disturbing number of recipes that involve gelatin or cream-of-something soup. Also, the "ethnic" recipes amuse the heck out of me with their bland lack of ethnicity. I mean, just because you put in some tomatoes and 1/8 of a teaspoon of black pepper does not make the chicken Creole!

So anyway, Casey and I were flipping through this cookbook this morning, trying to get some ideas on what we should have for Christmas dinner when my family is coming down. The meat and main dish sections were decidedly uninspiring, so I flipped over to the pie chapter. Because pie is always an inspiration. Then we found this hilariously archaic paragraph heading the section on chiffon pies:

"How many chiffon pies do you know how to make? Just lemon? That's too bad. Too bad when you think how much your family might enjoy a pumpkin chiffon or strawberry chiffon or chocolate chiffon or Nesselrode. When a man eats in a restaurant he's very apt to order the chiffon pie on the menu. And so, come to think of it, are you! So why don't you be original tonight. Bake one of the family's away-from-home desserts at home. It isn't hard with these people-tested recipes."

Oh, man, I don't even know how to make a lemon chiffon pie.

I can't believe Casey married me with my lack of wifely knowledge.

Also, I'm very glad their recipes are people-tested, as opposed to, say giraffe-tested or velociraptor-tested. I'm not sure a velociraptor and I would have the same sort of kitchen procedures. 



So, anyway, because I want some chocolate that doesn't involve soy, and because apparently I can't maintain my married status without top secret chiffon pie knowledge, I'm going to make the chocolate chiffon pie today. Here is the soy free recipe!

Chocolate Chiffon Pie
9-inch baked pie shell  <---- The Pilsbury refrigerated crusts use lard instead of vegetable shortening, so they're soy free, or you can make your own.
1/2 cup sugar
1 envelope unflavored gelatin  <---- See? It was the 70s. Gelatin is inescapable.
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 1/3 cups water
2 ounces melted unsweetened chocolate  <---- Unsweetened baking chocolate doesn't contain soy lecithin.
3 eggs, separated
1 teaspoon vanilla
1/4 teaspoon cream of tartar
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 cup chilled whipping cream <---- Reddi-Whip contains mono- and diglycerides and "natural flavorings," so it may not be soy free.

Bake pie shell. Stir together 1/2 cup sugar, the gelatin, and the salt in small saucepan, stir in water and chocolate. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, until blended. Remove from heat. Beat egg yolks slightly; slowly stir in part of chocolate mixture to temper. [This is to gradually bring the egg up to a warmer temperature without causing it to curdle-- if you just drop it into the chocolate, it won't blend in properly because it will be turning into scrambled eggs.] Return egg mixture to saucepan. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, just until mixture boils. Place pan in bowl of ice and water or chill in refrigerator, stirring occasionally, until mixture mounds slightly when dropped from spoon. Stir in vanilla.

Beat egg whites and cream of tartar until foamy. Beat in 1/2 cup sugar, 1 tablespoon at a time; continue beating until mixture is stiff and glossy. Do not underbeat. Fold chocolate mixture into meringue. In chilled bowl, beat cream until stiff; fold into chocolate mixture. Pile into baked pie shell. Chill at least 3 hours or until set. If desired, serve with sweetened whipped cream [or Cool Whip] and sprinkle with chocolate curls.

3 comments:

  1. Soy-free notes-- The Meijer store brand pie crust is also soy-free. Yay! However, the Meijer store brand Cool-Whip contains soybean oil. Also, all the baking chocolate I found was soy-free, but "processed on equipment that may also process products containing soy." So if you are highly sensitive, you'd probably want to get the special soy-free chocolate instead, or possibly sub cocoa powder plus canola oil. Not sure of the exact proportions for that offhand, but it's always on the back of the Hershey's tin anyway.

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  2. Cooking notes-- Man, chiffon pie is time-consuming. And I even have a stand mixer with a whisk attachment to make the merengue part! And the cookbook says this is the EASY version!

    "We've used chiffon pie shortcuts-- especially for you! For most of these pi...es we simply mix the gelatin with sugar and then dissolve this combination in the liquid. They all cook together. No need to spend time and attention softening the gelatin in cold water first. Just mix and go. So who says chiffon pies are a bother?"

    Well, I do. And I suppose it would have helped if I hadnt originally skipped the whole sentence about putting the whipped cream in the chocolate mix. But judging from the chiffon remnants I ate out of the mixing bowl (probably another thing no proper wife would do), it's totally going to be worth it.

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  3. The entire pie has 2189 calories, based on adding up the ingredients, so approximately 274 calories per slice if the pie is divided into eighths.

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