Thanksgiving Dinner – The Pie

Apologies for the delay in wrapping up Thanksgiving Week here.  I managed to catch a killer cold from my Wife and I’ve spent the last couple days convalescing with my “Man-Cold”.

I was going to tackle the turkey to wrap up the week, but in all honesty, that wasn’t my purview with our dinner, so I’ll leave you with this.  Break out the olive oil and rub down the bird.  Don’t go crazy with the seasoning.  Salt and pepper will work just fine.  Cut up some slices of butter and pull the skin up from the bird and place those dollops of butter underneath.  That’s about it really.  Bake as per the directions on the bird itself, you’ll want to make an aluminum foil tent over the bird for about 2/3rd of your cooking time.  And that’s all the advice I can give on that front besides this: don’t try to eat the whole bird in one sitting.  I learned my lesson the hard way this year.  😦

Okay, with that said, let’s break down the big finish of Thanksgiving Week on the blog, and why not wrap it up with the big finish to dinner itself?  Pumpkin Pie!  I actually made this up the afternoon before our big feed.  It holds well in the refrigerator.  All you’ll really need to do on the big day is whip up some whipped cream (don’t you even DARE think about using pre-fab cream in a can!).  Okay, fine, do what you do.  There’s no judgement here.

First up is the crust.  If you’re ever doing a standard fruit pie, you’ll want to do a blind bake on this.  As pumpkin pie has a much longer bake time than most, you can just whack it all into the oven at the same time if you like.

Basic Pie Crust

This should make enough for a 10″ pie crust. If you want to put a lid on your pie, just double the recipe.

  • 1 1/4 cup flour
  • 1/2 cup unsalted butter (very cold)
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1 tsp sugar
  • 3 to 4 (if not more) tbsp ice water

Put some water and ice cubes in a cup.

Mix flour, salt and sugar.  Cut the butter into 1/2 inch cube and then combine with a pastry cutter, fork or two knives until the flour/butter mixture is crumbly.  Don’t overwork it too much, you don’t want the butter to melt.

Slowly add water until dough forms a ball.  Don’t get it too wet.  Knead once or twice on a floured surface, then wrap in plastic wrap and chill in the fridge for at least 1 hour until ready to use.

After an hour, on floured surface, roll out dough to 1/8″ thick.  Fit into pie plate and trim off excess with knife.  Back in the fridge it goes for 30 minutes.

Take a fork and prick the bottom of the pie a bit.  You’ll want a fair number of little holes scattered across the dough (stops the pie from rising or bubbling away from the bottom of the plate).

Okay.  As we’re making pumpkin pie,  I’ll cut that recipe short as you won’t do any of the blind baking that’s required for that one.  Instead, we now default to the pumpkin pie recipe.

Point of note: I’m not a big pumpkin pie fan.  There aren’t many I have ever come across that I’ve enjoyed, but THIS one I like.  It’s going to feel pretty soupy when you’re making it, but it WILL thicken up just nicely in the oven.

Pumpkin Pie Filling

This will very nicely fill a 10″ pie

  • 1/2 cup brown sugar
  • 1/4 cup sugar
  • 1 tsp cinnamon
  • 1/2 tsp ginger
  • 1/4 tsp cloves
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 2 eggs
  • 12 fl oz can of evaporated milk (350ml for us Canadians)
  • 1 3/4 cups + 2 tbsp of pumpkin puree
  • 1 tbsp flour

Pre-heat your oven to 425 degrees F.

Combine the dry ingredients in a small bowl.

In a large bowl, beat the eggs lightly.  Stir in the pumpkin puree and the dry ingredients from the small bowl.

Gradually stir in the evaporated milk.

Pour into your unbaked pie shell.  This will be a very runny soup at the moment, that’s fine.

Cover the pie with foil and bake at 425 for 15 minutes.  Remove the foil and reduce heat to 350 degrees, you’ll want to bake for another 40-50 minutes or until you can stick a knife in the centre and have it come out clean.

If you’re baking this on the big day, cool for a couple minutes, add your whipped cream and enjoy!  Otherwise, cool on a rack for a good hour or more, then put some plastic wrap up against the filling and chuck it all into the fridge overnight.

I don’t think I rolled my dough thin enough when I was making it as it didn’t give me enough excess to really get a crust up and over the edge of the pie plate.  My dough was also pretty crumbly.  In the ‘add water’ phase, the 3 to 4 tbsp is a suggestion.  It will really depend on the humidity where you are.  I put in 5 tbsp and should have done a bit more I think to really give me a solid dough to work with.  It felt dry to me, I really should have trusted my instincts on that front.  That said, it all worked out and tasted great, so that’s just me being self-critical and learning for next time.

Happy Thanksgiving!

-g

Pumpkin Spice Cinnamon Buns

Here is my conundrum.  Since I began this blog I have a policy of linking to all of the recipes I use as reference.  I may tweak something, but if a solid 95% of the recipe is unchanged, I link there and then just let you know what I’ve riffed on.

For this one I used two completely different sources, changed a bit, and mashed them together.  For the sake of continuing my trend of full disclosure, here is the recipe I followed (for the most part) for the dough.  Here is the recipe I followed (for the most part) for the filling and glaze.  Now, for the sake of a having a comprehensive one-stop-shop for this recipe, here’s my take on it all…

Pumpkin Spice Cinnamon Rolls

The Dough:

  • 3/4 cup warm milk (heated to 110 deg F)
  • 2 1/4 tsp yeast
  • 1/4 cup white sugar
  • 1 egg yolk (at room temp)
  • 1 egg (at room temp)
  • 1/4 cup unsalted butter, melted
  • 1 cup whole wheat flour
  • 2 cups all purpose flour (bread flour if you’ve got it)
  • 3/4 tsp salt

Take your eggs out and leave them on the counter.

Warm up the milk and put it in a bowl.  Sprinkle the yeast in there and let it sit for a few minutes.  If it doesn’t look a little frothy after a while, you already screwed up.  Toss it and start over.  The right temp for the milk is important.

Add the sugar, egg, egg yolk and butter.  Stir it up a bit until it’s well mixed.  Sift in your flour, add the salt, and then stir until the dough begins to form.

Sprinkle some flour on your counter, then get to work kneading the dough.  Get your hands in there and work it.  I punch it a bit, fold it in on itself, just give it a good working over until it’s well mixed and just a bit sticky.

Get a big bowl, spray it with some cooking spray, then put the dough in there, put some plastic wrap on top and put it in a warm place to rise for about 90 minutes.  (I turn my oven on at 180 degrees F, then turn it off as soon as it’s reached heat and just let the dough proof in there).

The dough should double in size.  Once that’s done, flour your countertop, dump out the dough and roll it out into a big rectangle that looks like your HDTV flatscreen (longer than it is tall).  You want the dough about 1/3 of an inch thick?  Now you’re ready for the filling.

The Filling:

  • 4 tbsp melted butter (don’t mix in the pumpkin!)

 

  • 1/2 cup pumpkin puree
  • 1 tbsp milk
  • 1/4 cup brown sugar (packed down)
  • 1/4 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1/8 tsp ground nutmeg

Okay.  First of all, take the melted butter and paint your rolled out dough.  Leave about a half-inch a short edge ‘butter free’.

Next, mix up all the ingredients with your pumpkin spread.  Give it a good stir, then, again, like you’re saucing a pizza, paint your rolled out dough.  Leave that ‘butter free’ buffer zone free of your pumpkin spread as well.

Now…the fun part.  Grab your dough on the opposite end of your ‘butter free’ buffer zone, and start rolling.  You want a pretty tight roll on this.  When you get to the ‘butter free’ zone, that dough should stick to the backside of the rolled up dough and seal things up (that’s why you left it butter free!).

Next, you’ll want to cut your fancy new dough log into slices about… 1 inch thick.  I find a bread knife works best for this.  Saws through nice and clean and doesn’t crush the slices too much.

Take your slices, and lay them flat in a greased cake pan (I use cooking spray).  8×8 or 9×9.  You should be able to get 9 of these in there like a tic-tac-toe arrangement.  If you still have some dough left?  Grease another pan up and drop in as many as you have left over.  I got a solid 12 slices, so 9 in my one pan and 3 in my ‘reject pile’ pan.  (The rolls from the ‘ends’ of the log that weren’t all pretty).  Cover up your cake pans with plastic wrap and let the dough puff up and proof a bit longer.  30 minutes.

Pre-heat your oven to 350 while the buns are on their last rise.  Once your 30 minutes has run out, take off the plastic and whack ’em into the oven uncovered for about 25 minutes.  Once the edges start going golden brown, take them out.  Being a bit ‘underbaked’ is good.  Makes ’em chewier.

The Frosting:

  • 4 oz cream cheese (basically a half-block of philly), softened
  • 1.5 cups powdered sugar
  • 1 teaspoon pumpkin pie spice
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract

Soften the cheese in the microwave, then using your hand blender (or whisk and some elbow grease) start mixing it up until it’s creamy.  Add the sugar a bit at a time.  Once that’s all mixed in, add the vanilla, then add the pumpkin pie spice to taste.  I went heavy with that.

Your buns should cool a bit before you frost them, but once they’re ready, just slather this stuff on and give them some love.

That’s it!  Enjoy!

My mother-in-law complimented me on these you guys.  That’s an internal happy dance right there.

-g

p.s. – if you can’t find pumpkin pie spice at your grocery store (I couldn’t, and I looked at 3 different stores…) here’s what you can whip up as an approximation.

Pumpkin Pie Spice:

  • 3 tbsp ground cinnamon
  • 2 tsp ground ginger
  • 2 tsp ground nutmeg
  • 1.5 tsp ground allspice
  • 1.5 tsp ground cloves

It will make more than you need for this, but you can use what remains for your next batch (and there WILL be a next batch) or to sprinkle over your coffee like a Basic B…

Enjoy!

-g