We have a glut of soft fruit in our garden at the moment. I
experimented with this and must admit that the pie that came out of it tastes
very nice indeed but some things will need tweaking, in particular the amount
of Agar Agar in the berry mix as this is rather acidic, which interferes a
little with Agar Agar’s ability for jellification.
The
amount given below should be about right.
The recipe for the dough is loosely based on a recipe that I
found in my Grandmother’s finishing school cookery book, a fascinating document
about how eligible young women were meant to cook for their future husbands and
family. Interesting reading, to say the least.
What you need
- 150 g soft butter
- 150 g sugar (brown)
- 1-2 eggs
- a pinch of salt
- 1 tsp clove powder
- 1 tsp cinnamon
- 1 tblsp cocoa poweder
zest of half a lemon
- 200 g ground almonds
- 250 g flour
- 400-500 gr mixed berries (raspberries, blue berries,
gooseberries, red or black currants)
- sugar to taste
- juice of half a lemon
- 1 small glass of fruit schnapps
- 16 g (about) Agar Agar
- optionally some of the egg from above for glazing
What you do
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- To make the dough, stir
the sugar and soft butter into a creamy mixture, fold in all the other
ingredients (eggs to almonds in the list above) and lastly sift the flower in.
The dough will probably be a little sticky.
- Put in the fridge to
cool down for at least 30 minutes
- Soak the Agar Agar in
water, about a finger deep and allow to stand for about 20 minutes. Then simmer
it gently for about 2 minutes until it clears.
-
In the meantime, place
the berries into a pan with some sugar and heat gently. Once the mixture becomes
juicy add more sugar, the lemon juice and the schnapps.
-
Simmer gently until
the fruit is pretty soft, then blend. (If you like, but through a sieve to
remove pips.)
-
Allow to cool down,
then stir in the agar agar. The mixture should have a consistency like fairly
solid jam. The alternative is, of course, to use jam or to add sugar at about
75% of the weight and cook until it is like jam. However the problem is that
the filling loses the fruity sharpness that is special to this pie.
-
Butter a round cake dish,
divide the dough into three roughly equal pieces, two of which are rolled out between
two sheets of greaseproof paper to a round of about 4 mm; the third is to be
formed into a long sausage. If the dough gets too soft or sticky, refrigerate again.
-
Place the first round
into the bottom of the cake form (28 cm diameter) then create a rim with the
sausage.
-
Pour in the berry mixture
and close with the second round. Glaze with leftover egg if you like.
-
Bake in a preheated
oven at about 200° for 30 to 40 minutes.
It tastes best a day after baking and keeps well in the fridge