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Can She Bake a Cherry Pie?

cherry pieI will always associate Cherry pie with Washington’s birthday. I grew up on the story of George Washington chopping down the cherry tree, then admitting to the crime when his dad confronted him with the famous (though fictional) line ‘I cannot tell a lie, I chopped down that cherry tree’.  Today is National Cherry Pie Day in honor of George Washington though his actual birthdate is February 22nd (maybe). When I was growing up there was no Presidents’ Day there were two national holidays, Lincoln’s birthday February 12th and George Washington’s. This changed in 1971 as part of the effort to create more three-day weekends.

Pies have been around for thousands of years in one form or another. The English settlers made pies in an enclosed shell that wasn’t intended for consumption. The crust was merely a vessel to cook the filling (sweet or savory) in the hearth. I’m not sure when we transitioned from utilitarian to edible crusts, but I’ll credit the French because they are all about great pastry. Feel free to correct me!

I’m a serious pie fan, and though I do love pecan pie, fruit pies are the ones I like best. I don’t know the last time I made a cherry pie, but if you’re accustomed to store-bought pies, or pie made with canned pie filling, making your own is, well, easy as pie! Fresh cherries are expensive and who wants to pit all those cherries? For pies, unless the fruit is in season and crazy cheap I opt for frozen. 

Lattice tops are pretty, but they also serve a purpose. Berries are full of water, and as they bake they’ll give off a lot of steam. The open spaces in a lattice top lets that steam escape and keeps both the top and bottom crusts from getting soggy. If you cook your filling first, a lot of that water will evaporate, and you can use a solid top crust, but like all pies, they need vents. 

I got this one together with less than an hour of hands-on work, but the crust does need to rest an hour. I use my go-to crust recipe for this. 

Cherry Pie

Cherry Pie

Ingredients

  • 4 cups frozen sweet cherries
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1/4 cup instant tapioca
  • 1/2 teaspoon lemon extract

Directions

Step 1
Put all pie filling ingredients into a heavy bottom pot and cook over medium heat until mixture starts to bubble
Step 2
Put bottom crust into 9" pie pan, allowing edges to hang over
Add filling to crust
Step 3
Cut top crust into six 1 1/2 "strips
Step 4
Brush the edges of the crust with water, then weave the lattice over the top, leaving spaces between strips
Press strips to edges of crust, then working around the edge crimp to a decorative edge
Step 5
Brush milk over the lattice top, sprinkle with sugar
Bake at 375 for 50 minutes or until filling is thick and bubbling

 

 

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  • February 20, 2017 - 10:55 am

    Peggy Gilbey McMackin - Oh what wonderful nostalgia you bring back Nancy! How I loved those cherry pies surrounding George Washington’s Birthday… and one year, in particular, the grocery store was selling just baked small cherry pies for fifteen cents each, I think my mom and me had two each! Last week someone and I were talking about the head silhouettes of Washington and Lincoln that everyone used to tape to their doors! Talk about days of savoring the basics! Thanks for sharing!ReplyCancel

  • February 22, 2017 - 8:20 am

    Lisa @ The Meaning of Me - Cherry pie is my hands-down all-time favorite. But. I refuse to eat cherry pie that is made with the canned filling stuff with all the red dyes in it. Ugh. This looks so easy and so good – cherries, sugar, crust. What’s not to love? I may need to try your recipe this weekend…ReplyCancel

    • February 22, 2017 - 8:50 am

      nrlowell@comcast.net - Lisa, it’s pretty easy! I must confess my favorite pie is blueberry-lemon, and I always use frozen wild blueberries. And instant tapioca is my favorite thickener!ReplyCancel

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