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Recipe by: john-lawrence
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See below ingredients and instructions of the recipe
-----------------------------------CRUST-----------------------------------
2 C Flour 1/4 C Scraped suet
1/2 C Shortening Water
1/4 C Lard
----------------------------------FILLING----------------------------------
1 1/4 lb Beef, coarsely ground 1/4 C Rutabaga (swede), diced
4 md Potatoes, diced 1 Carrot, diced
1 lg Onion, chopped Salt and pepper
Put the flour in a bowl and cut in the shortening, lard and suet. Add just
enough water to make a soft dough. Divide the dough into four parts and
roll out each piece into a circle about the size of a dinner plate.
Crumble the meat into a bowl and stir in the potatoes, onion, rutabaga and
carrot. Divide the mixture into four parts, putting some on one side of
each piece of dough. Sprinkle generously with salt and pepper.
Fold the pastry over the filling to make half-moon shaped pies. Seal the
edges and cut a couple of small slits on the top. Bake on a cookie sheet
at 375 degrees F. for 30 to 35 minutes, then reduce heat to 350 degrees F.
and bake 15 more minutes.
NOTES:
* Cornish-style meat pies from the UP -- The pasty (PAH-stee) is a kind of
English meat pie. It was brought to the Upper Peninsula of Michigan by
Cornish miners in the mid-nineteenth century. The UP version differs
slightly from the original Cornish pasty in that it has more vegetables and
less meat and crust.
You can eat pasties hot, warm, or cold. If you wrap them in aluminum foil
when they come out of the oven, they'll keep warm for hours. Or, you can
refrigerate/freeze them and reheat them later. (Maybe the original "fast
food?")
* Most people who live in the UP don't bother to make their own pasties;
they buy them from bakeries and pasty shops (which are as common as
hamburger joints are in other parts of the country). As a former resident,
though, sometimes I get homesick and resort to making them myself. This is
the recipe my mother sent me.
* These have a high cholesterol content. I've tried using an ordinary
vegetable-shortening pie crust, but it invariably turns out too dry and
crumbly to hold together. (Authentic UP pasties have a crust that's thin,
moist, and somewhat chewy, not a flaky crust.) If anyone has any ideas,
I'd love to hear about them. You can also cook the filling by itself in a
casserole dish if you're feeling lazy about making the crust.
: Difficulty: moderate.
: Time: 30 minutes preparation, 1 hour cooking and cooling.
: Precision: measure the crust ingredients.
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