Friday, 9 December 2011

Mince Pies

I have never made my own mince pies before, but this year seemed as good a year as any to try it out! I didn't make my own mincemeat as I had left it too late to do it justice. Instead I used a cheap, pre-made jar of mince meat as a base, and then added my own stamp. To the basic mince meat, I added roughly chopped cherries and a large glug of Amaretto. I tasted it and although it was nice, the flavour was a little flat. When I started making my pies, the zhoushed mince meat had been maturing in the fridge for about a week. It had a really deep flavour with a hint of Bakewell Tart!

I decided that, for the purposes of learning by doing, I would make my own shortcrust pastry. This was quite a daunting task, I've never been very good at pastry, but I followed an American recipe which seemed to help. I find it much easier to work in cups as my scales are not very accurate! I followed Jamie Oliver's tip of putting my hands in cold water before rubbing in the butter to avoid the dreaded melting greasy mess and it worked like a charm. The recipe also called for chilled butter, but thanks to my other careful preparations, the room temperature butter worked fine. 

The pastry was indeed, very short and before I put it in the fridge to cool, I was worried that it hadn't come together properly and that I would end up with fragile, holy pies. I realise now the mistake I have made in the past with pastry! Pastry requires patience. It's so important no to go in, all guns blazing, as I had before. This is not a job to be rushed. In the past, I have even neglected to chill the pastry before rolling out and the pastry has ended up unmanageable and unwieldy. If I start baking more regularly (and if we get a bigger house!), I think I will invest in a granite board which I can chill in the fridge before working with the pastry. If patience is the number one rule, then keep it cold is number two. I chilled my hands again before rolling out, and handled the pastry as little as possible. 

The pastry rolled out beautifully, honestly it was perfect! The best pastry I have EVER made and I think my Nana will be proud when I take them round on Boxing Day. I have opted to make my pies on a flat tray. I used another Jamie Oliver technique which was meant to be for people who didn't have a pie baking tray, not for people like me who just can't be bothered faffing around with greasing each individual dip with butter!

Jamie's technique works for any size of pie. I made miniature pies, around 3 centimetres across. Although I have a lot of cooking and baking equipment, unfortunately that doesn't include round pastry cutters, so I had to improvise! For the size of pie I wanted to make, I used a glass. 

I cut out an even number of disks, and then put half aside. The remaining disks I rolled out so they were slightly thinner and slightly larger than the others. These would form the lids for the pies. Next I put a teaspoon of mince meat in the centre of the smaller disks. Any more and I suspect the filling would have burst out! The next step was moisten the edge with a little water, Mary Berry style with my finger! Then I covered the filling with the lids and sealed with the prongs of a fork. The next, and possibly most important thing (a fact I learned afterwards), was to cut a small slit in the top of each pie. When I took them out of the oven, the filling had burst out slightly through the top and I can't help thinking that had there been no air slit, I would have ended up with exploding pies! I gave the pies an egg wash and sprinkled a little sugar over the top for sweetness as the pastry was a savoury shortcrust.

They looked quite uniform, but rustic and I really liked the fact that they didn't look like shop bought pies. I wanted them to look home made.


Adjudicator's Verdict - 7/10 - Nicely cooked and enjoyed the flavour 

My Observations - 6/10 - A good bake, crunchy pastry which worked, but not sweet enough. Next time I will try doing a sweet shortcrust pastry. Also there wasn't much of a sheen which was a shame. 

About From My Grown Up Easy Bake Oven

I'm a housewife in training... Step by step I hope to learn to run a household... I'm not very good at it, but then again, I'm sure even my own Super Mum wasn't perfect to begin with and had to learn things like - How to stop condensation turning into mould and How to remove Chocolate Ice-Cream from terracotta sheets...


I have already started learning... I have already perfected the 6.00pm rush - which takes place about 30 minutes before Nickie's due home and I have to clear up whatever mess I've been making!


Now if I am to be a perfect housewife, I must become a perfect cook. I can imagine myself in twenty years, telling my nieces and nephews (I said housewife, not mother), about the time I spent three hours making a lovely butternut squash and red pepper soup, roasting all the veg and even skinning the peppers... It smelled lovely in the pan and I was hoping for complex, rich and almost fruity flavours - unfortunately the last minute addition of paprika was all we could taste...


But it's all a learning curve I suppose. I've decided to start documenting my attempts including photographs, recipes, notes on successes and of course failures starting with my Christmas bakes. There might even be the odd restaurant review from the days when I just can't look at another pan!


Enjoy...