Monday, February 28, 2011

Moist Pie Crust Mix (from Make-A-Mix Cookery)

5 lbs all-purpose flour
2 Tbsp salt
1 (3 lb) can vegetable shortening
3 cups cold water (I use milk to make the crust stronger)
extra flour for rolling

Combine flour and salt in a very, very large bowl. Mix well. With pastry blender, cut in shortening until evenly distributed. Mixture will resemble cornmeal in texture. Add cold water all at once and mix lightly until the flour absorbs all the water and texture resembles putty. If dough is too sticky, add more flour, until the dough barely clings together in the bowl.

(Here is where I modify the recipe) Divide the dough into 16-18 balls. You can wrap each ball/loaf in plastic wrap and aluminum foil at this point for freezing, or prep them a little more (as follows) before freezing. Roll each ball into a pie crust large enough to fit a pan. Place a slightly larger piece of wax paper over the crust and roll both together. Place the finished rolls into a large bread or freezer bag (or wrap in aluminum foil) and freeze for later use. Use within 12 months.

If you have disposable aluminum pie plates, I like to actually line the pie pans with the dough and crimp the edges, ready for baking; and then place each pan in a gallon sized freezer bag and stack the bagged pans in each other for freezing. The pan freezing method is the most convenient way when you're ready to actually cook a pie with them. However, I would also freeze some rolled for those recipes that don't use a pie pan. (i.e. hot dog roll ups)

You then always have frozen pie crusts available for pies (see the pumpkin pie recipe that follows), quiches (Abigail submitted a great recipe that follows) or anything else you care to use it for. Try cutting a crust into triangle wedges (pizza style), brush with brown mustard, and roll a hot dog up croissant style in the crust for a tasty, easy, meal/snack (Bake until flaky and browned).

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