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![]() Alexis Siefert wrote: > In article >, > zxcvbob > wrote: > > > Alexis Siefert wrote: > > > > > I'm doing a "test" lemon pie tonight (the actual birthday isn't until next > > > week, so I'm trying out a half-dozen or so lemon recipes). Tonight it's a > > > lemon and sour cream pie, and I have two questions. > > > > > > The first is about the actual directions. In short: > > > > > > sugar, cornstarch, salt. Mixed in a saucepan. Milk added. Cooked until > > > thickened. 3 large egg yolks beaten until thick and pale. Tempered the > > > eggs > > > with about 1/4th of the hot milk mixture, then stirred that back into the > > > remaining hot mixture. Cooked over low heat, stirring, until thickened. > > > Removed from heat. Added butter, lemon rind, and lemon juice. Cover and > > > chill. Stir in sour cream. Spoon into pastry shell. > > > > > > "Beat egg whites, cream of tartar, and vanilla at high speed of an electric > > > mixer until foamy. Gradually add remaining sugar, 1 T at a time, beating > > > until > > > stiff peaks form and sugar dissolves. Spread meringue over hot filling." > > > > > > There's my question. The instructions just told me to chill the filling > > > before > > > adding the sour cream, then it's a hot filling again? Am I missing > > > something? > > > > > > Next question -- storing this overnight. No one is going to eat this until > > > I > > > get to work tomorrow. I haven't done a pie like this before, but for some > > > reason I have visions of this turning to liquid in the fridge overnight. > > > What's best? > > > > > > Thanks! > > > Alexis. > > > > > > Your recipe is a combination of 2 different recipes. The one with the > > chilled filling is not supposed to have meringue (just a lemon custard), > > then someone tacked a meringue recipe on the end. You could probably > > get it to work if you used an Italian Meringue (it's cooked with boiling > > syrup before you top the pie with it) > > > > Here's my lemon meringue pie recipe. The meringue usually weeps because > > I don't make it often enough to perfect my technique: > > > > Lemon Meringue Pie (for 10" pan) > > 2 cups sugar > > 2 cups water > > 4 Tbsp flour > > 4 Tbsp cornstarch > > 1/8 tsp salt > > 3 Tbsp butter > > 1 tsp grated lemon peel > > 1/2 cup lemon juice > > 4 egg yolks (save whites for meringue) > > > > Combine sugar, water, starch, flour, and salt in medium saucepan. Cook > > over medium-high heat, stirring constantly, until thick and bubbly. > > Reduce heat to low and cook 2 minutes more. Beat egg yolks slightly. > > Slowly beat about 1 cup of the hot mixture into the egg yolks, then > > return the egg yolk mixture to the saucepan. Bring to a gentle boil, > > cook and stir 2 minutes more. Stir in butter and lemon peel. Slowly > > stir in lemon juice. Pour hot filling into baked 10 inch pie shell. > > Top with meringue and seal to edges; bake in a 350 degree oven for about > > 15 minutes or until meringue is golden. > > > > Best regards, > > Bob > > Thank you, Bob! > > I'd already prepared the recipe when I posted my question (yes, I know, > jump first, ask questions later, not always the best course of action) > and, surprisingly, it worked. I semi-chilled the filling before adding > the sour cream, about 10-15 minutes covered, in the original sauce pan, > in my refrigerator, then I added it to the baked pie crust. The filling > was warm but not hot (which, I know, isn't the recommended temperature > for adding a meringue topping). I made the meringue, topped the filling > with it, sealed the edges with the meringue then baked it. It peaked > and browned beautifully. Better than I'd anticipated, in fact. > > I did some online reading and decided not to put the pie in the fridge > overnight. I cooled the pie on a wire rack, then covered it with a foil > tent (I'd have preferred to cover it with a bowl, but I didn't have one > that would fit over the pie without smudging the edges of the crust). > This morning it was still beautiful looking. No moisture, no weeping, > no beading. Feeling rather confident, I put the pie in the passenger > seat of my car and headed to work. > > The "rather confident" part was obviously my mistake. > > Before stopping for my coffee, I made a quick stop into the bagel shop > for a breakfast bite. Forgetting that the pie was in the car seat next > to me, I got back into the car and tossed my paperback book into the > seat. Directly on top of the foil-tent-covered pie. > > I made Lemon Sour Cream Smush. > > It was delicious :-) Not pretty, but delicious. > > Alexis. My aunt sent me a recipe that she says, their family just loves. It has raw eggs in it. But you freeze it after you make it. Eat it as a frozen desert. She thinks I'm nuts for being afraid of it. hugs, kate |
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