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Lattice-Topped Apple Pie

  • Prep Time: -
  • Cook Time: -
  • Serves: 8
Food & Wine

Recipe Provided By: Food & Wine

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Average (217 Ratings): 4 out of 5 stars

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Ingredients

  1. 1 1/4 cups all-purpose flour, plus more for rolling
  2. 1/3 cup cake flour
  3. 2 tablespoons sugar
  4. 1/4 teaspoon salt
  5. 4 ounces cream cheese, chilled
  6. 4 ounces cold unsalted butter, cut into 1/2-inch pieces
  7. 1 tablespoon ice water
  8. 1 large egg yolk
  9. 1 teaspoon cider vinegar
  10. 4 pounds large apples - peeled, cored and cut into eighths
  11. lemon, juiced and zested
  12. 3/4 cup sugar, plus more for sprinkling
  13. 3/4 teaspoon cinnamon
  14. 1/4 teaspoon salt
  15. 1 pinch ground mace
  16. 4 ounces unsalted butter
  17. 1/2 cup apple cider

Nutrition Info

Per Serving

  • Calories: 579 kcal
  • |
  • Carbohydrates: 79 g
  • |
  • Dietary Fiber: 7 g
  • |
  • Fat: 29 g
  • |
  • Protein: 4 g
  • |
  • Sugars: 51 g

About: Nutrition Info

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Cooking Directions

  1. MAKE THE PASTRY: In a large bowl, stir the all-purpose flour with the cake flour, sugar and salt. Add the cream cheese and use your fingertips to break up the cheese into the mixture until it resembles coarse meal. Cut in the butter with a pastry blender until pea-size clumps form.
  2. In a small bowl, mix the ice water with the yolk and cider vinegar. Gradually add the ice water mixture, stirring with a fork. Turn the pastry out onto a lightly floured surface and press it into a 10-inch log. Starting at the far end of the log, use the heel of your hand to quickly smear the pastry away from you, a little bit at a time. Use a pastry scraper to gather up the pastry and repeat the smearing process one more time. Gather the pastry together. Cut off one-third of the pastry and pat each piece into a disk. Wrap each disk in plastic and refrigerate for at least 30 minutes or up to 2 days.
  3. MEANWHILE, MAKE THE FILLING: In a large bowl, toss the apples with the lemon juice and zest, 3/4 cup sugar, cinnamon, salt and mace. In 2 large skillets, melt the butter. Add the apples and any accumulated juices and spread them in each skillet in a single layer. Cook the apples over moderate heat for 5 minutes, stirring occasionally, until lightly browned in spots. Add 1/4 cup of the apple cider to each skillet, cover and cook, shaking the pans occasionally, until the apples are tender, about 5 minutes. Remove the lids and let the apples cool. If the juices are not thick and syrupy, simmer uncovered for 2 to 3 minutes longer. Let cool completely.
  4. On a lightly floured surface, roll out the large pastry disk to a 12-inch round. Ease the pastry into a 9-inch glass pie plate. Trim the overhang to 1/2 inch and refrigerate. Roll out the smaller pastry disk to a rough 12-by-8-inch rectangle; trim the edges. Using a pastry or pizza cutter and a ruler as a guide, cut eight 12-by-1-inch strips. Line a baking sheet with parchment or wax paper. Weave the strips into a lattice on the baking sheet and brush the lattice with water. Sprinkle with sugar and freeze just until firm, about 10 minutes.
  5. Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F. Fill the pie shell with the cooled apples and their juices and flatten them slightly with a spatula. Brush the rim of the pie shell with water and slide the lattice on top. Press the edges together to seal. Trim any overhanging lattice. Fold the rim over onto itself and crimp decoratively. Bake the pie for about 1 hour, until the crust is golden all over and the filling is bubbling. Cover the rim with strips of foil if they become too brown. Transfer the pie to a rack and let cool completely.

Yield: 8 servings

3. Still Hungry?

Greg Patent likes to use an assortment of tart and sweet apples in this dense, apple-packed pie. Some varieties to look for are Greening, Cortland, Winesap, Braeburn, Jonamac and Granny Smith.

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Average (217 Ratings): 4 out of 5 stars

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4 reviews
  • WHO EVEN MENTIONED ONIONS?

    sandyfantoo - October 27, 2007 04:13:12 PM PST
    I made this recipe and like the addition of cream cheese in the crust! It gives the pie a "richer" flavor, and the crust is a little heavier, as would be expected. As for the onion comment, there is NO mention of onions in this recipe! Please, for your own safety, put down the crack pipe and pay attention!

    4 of 6 found this review helpful.

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  • sorry, but.....

    michifornian83 - October 27, 2007 02:45:17 PM PST
    It must be the health conscious or something, but you just cannot make a truly "perfect" pie crust using butter alone. You need to use lard to get the really flaky good crust.

    7 of 13 found this review helpful.

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  • Beautiful but oooooo so fattening

    barbkaynes - October 27, 2007 03:05:55 PM PST
    This is the perfect PIE for the YOUNG AT HEART. For us older folks this is the PIE our DOCTORS would SAY is SINFUL. Too many fats, carbs and calories. When I'm a full-fledged SENIOR I will enjoy the FRUITS OF THE LABOR again. ENJOY ALL!!

    3 of 6 found this review helpful.

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  • Well.....why not indulge in once in a life SIN?

    noor_el_salvador - October 27, 2007 03:37:42 PM PST
    While in college, I used to gain some dollars making apple pies. But never ever had the idea of putting cream cheese in the pastry, or cooking apples before...as I was scared the whole thing would be over cooked and end up in a sticky sweet something.
    But, why not to try this for once? Why not to eat a whole 597 calories once and then stop eating for the whole day?
    let us do it pals!

    2 of 5 found this review helpful.

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