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Friday, December 5, 2014

Chess Pie



Try This Easy Sweet Pie ( Chess Pie ). It will become the hit for the Holidays. I love this pie with a very good sweet tooth. It's tasty and will melt in your mouth.

Story:

When I was a child going to school,I think I was in the..... 5th grade. the lunch room would serve this chess pie...and ya'll... I could not get enough.

I was friends with a lunch room lady, she gave me the recipe for this chess pie. The recipe had instructions for how made many pies you could make like 1 pie, 6 pies, or 12 and so on.

I went home and made 1 pie and wow...! it turn out wonderful. My cousin Marie could not believe I baked that chess pie like the lunch room at school.

Now this is a very old southern recipe. It's a very sweet, rich pie which I cannot described as anything but marvelous!!


1 stick melted butter


2 cups white sugar


1 teaspoon vanilla extract


4 eggs


1 tablespoon cornmeal


1/4 cup evaporated milk


1 tablespoon distilled white vinegar


1 (9 inch) unbaked pie shell

Preheat the oven to 425 degrees In a large bowl, mix the butter, sugar and vanilla together. Mix in the eggs, then stir in the cornmeal, evaporated milk, and vinegar until smooth.
Bake for 10 minutes in the preheated oven, then reduce heat to 300 degrees for 40 minutes. Let cool.

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Huckleberry Pie


What is Huckleberries? Huckleberries grow wild throughout the Pacific Northwest in Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Montana. Come mid-August through mid-September adventurous berry pickers scour the sunny slopes just to pick these blue huckleberries. Huckleberries are grouped according to their growth pattern. Some bushes form clusters of berries, while others form single berries on individual stems. The thin-leaf huckleberry is the most sought-after type, according to the United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service, because of its large, sweet berries.




1 recipe pastry for a 9 inch double crust pie

 4 cups huckleberries fresh or frozen

 2 1/2 tablespoons tapioca

 2/3 cup white sugar

 1/4 teaspoon salt

 1/2 cup packed brown sugar

 1 tablespoon cider vinegar

 4 tablespoons melted butter


Roll half the pastry out to fit a 9-inch pie plate. Place bottom crust in pie plate and chill for at least 20 minutes before baking. Roll out top crust and set aside.

Preheat oven to 400 degrees F (200 degrees C).
Mix together the huckleberries, tapioca, sugar, salt, brown sugar, and apple cider vinegar.

Pour mixture into unbaked pie shell. pour melted butter over berries.  Add top pastry and flute edges. Cut vents for steam and place pie on a baking sheet.

Bake at 400 degrees F (205 degrees C) for 15 minutes. Reduce the heat to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C) and bake until the crust is golden and the juices are bubbling, 45 to 55 minutes more. You'll need to bake the pie longer if the berries were frozen. Cool pie on wire rack.