Saturday, September 9, 2017

Gooseberry pie

It has been a while since I made anything from the recipe book due to my travels and busy month of August in Edinburgh. I arrived in Finland at my grandparent's place and decided that I would make use of the ripe gooseberries. And then I texted Jennifer, who is in Edinburgh, to text me the recipe for the short-crust pastry in Martha's recipe book. So I did bit of a Pamela, combining and substituting two recipes for the gooseberry mixture and for the pastry to create gooseberry pie;)

Combining the flour and almond meal for the pastry
Adding the cubes of cold butter. Next I had a real arm workout crumbing it together with my fingers ;) 
After placing the pastry in the fridge I went out to go and pick the gooseberries from the garden
Picking the largest and darkest gooseberries and dropping them into the bowl <3
I don't know if you can really see from this photo, but there were lots of big, prickly thorns. So I pricked my hand quite a lot ;) It was worth it though! 
After washing all the gooseberries we then had to cut the the top and bottom off. 
My awesome technique for heading and tailing the berries captured on tape ;) We unfortunately couldn't get the video here , but you can get the gist of it.
My first attempt at blind baking! For those who don't know what it is: Blind baking is pre-baking the base of the pie so that it doesn't get soggy when you add liquid as the filling. To do this you line the pie dish with the pastry, line the pastry with baking paper, and then line that with something heavy to weigh it down. I used rice to weigh it down. 
I then cut up the rest of the pastry into strips so that I can add a latticed lid to the pie when I filled it with the berries
After pre-baking I realised that the paper was burning ;) haha
Extra pre-baking without the lining of the rice
The pre-baked pie base ready for the gooseberry filling and latticed lid
I then filled it up with the berries and sprinkled it with cinnamon sugar. I added more sugar than I had done the previous harvest when I had made it because it was super duper tart. Hopefully that amount of sugar was enough. 
I then carefully placed the pastry in a lattice pattern on the top, and added a holly arrangement. Although it ended up looking angel wings ;)  
I then baked it for 35 minutes in the oven on 170 degrees. When it came out it was making a satisfying sizzling noise :D 
I tried the pie, and it was still tart ;) I mean, not as much as last year when I made it, but it needed some cream or ice cream to make it not so bitter. haha. Oh dear, never mind. The pastry tasted amazing!! 

So, in terms of what Tearfund is up to these days, they are fundraising for the devastating floods in South Asia. The daily news is talking all about the devastating storms in America, but we don't hear much about the floods in South Asia. This is Tearfund's description of the floods: 

Catastrophic flooding has devastated huge areas of India, Nepal and Bangladesh, affecting 41 million people. More than 1,200 people have died, nearly three quarters of a million homes have been destroyed or damaged and crops and livestock have been swept away.

They have been distributing food, tents, blankets, clothes, sleeping mats, mosquito nets, cooking utensils and safe drinking water throughout the region. They will then help with the re-planting of crops and in other ways to help get the people there back on their feet. And they need our help to bring hope into this devastation. 

Please consider donating from this link and to remember them in your prayers.

Laura from The Baking Students xx


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