
*Note: start by making the pie dough first, then make the filling.
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3 cups
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all-purpose flour
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¼ cup
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sugar
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1½ tsp
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Salt
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10 oz
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very cold (frozen is fine) unsalted butter, cut into tablespoon-size pieces
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⅓ cup
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very cold (frozen is even better) vegetable shortening, cut into 4 pieces
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About ½ cup ice water
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Put the flour, sugar and salt in a food processor fitted with a metal blade; pulse just to combine the ingredients. Drop in the butter and shortening and pulse only until the butter and shortening are cut into the flour. Until you have some pieces the size of fat green peas and others the size of barley. Pulsing the machine on and off, gradually add about 6 table spoons of the water add a little water and pulse once, add some more water, pulse again and keep going that way. Then use a few long pulses to get the water into the flour. If, after a dozen or so pulses, the dough doesn’t look evenly moistened or form soft curds, pulse in as much of the remaining water as necessary, or even a few drops more, to get the dough that will stick together when pinched. Big pieces of butter are fine. Scrape the dough out of the work bowl and onto a work surface.
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Good for Almost Everything Pie
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4 pounds (about 6 verylarge) |
apples
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¾ cup
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sugar
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Grated zest of 1 lemon
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2 tbsp
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quick-cooking tapioca (or potato flour)
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¼ tsp
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Salt
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½ tsp
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ground cinnamon
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⅛-¼ teaspoon
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freshly grated nutmeg
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2 tablespoons
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graham cracker crumbs (or dry bread crumbs)
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2 tablespoons
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cold unsalted butter, cut into bits
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FOR THE GLAZE (optional)
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Milk or heavy cream
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Decorating (coarse) or granulated sugar
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GETTING READY: Butter a 9-inch deep-dish pie plate (I use a square pan).
Very lightly moisten the rim of the bottom crust with water, then center the top crust over the apples. Either folds the overhang from the top crust under the bottom crust and crimps the crust attractively, or presses the top crust against the bottom crust and trim the overhang from both crusts even with the rim of the pie plate. If you’ve pressed and trimmed the crust, use the tines of a fork to press the two crusts together securely.
Bake the pie for 15 minutes. Lower the oven temperature to 375 degrees F, and bake the pie for another 50 to 60 minutes (total baking time is between 65 and 75 minutes), or until the crust is gorgeously browned and the juices bubble up through the top crust. After about 40 minutes in the oven, if the top crust looks as if it’s browning too quickly, cover the pie loosely with a foil tent.
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