Who says that a savoury pie has to have meat in it to be good? This pie is absolutely fabulous! You can adapt it to use the cheese which you have in the house. It can be a tiny bit fiddly with the making of the pastry, but absolutely worth all of the fiddle! We were all drooling over it in this house!
The pastry is what I would call a "Rough Puff"pastry. It's very crisp and flaky and rises nicely. I actually like it a lot more than store bought puff pastry . . . and it wasn't really hard to do at all. It went together very easily. You simply mix together equal parts of lard and butter. You rub a fourth of it into the flour/salt mixture, add some vinegar and water and then roll it out into a rectangle. Then you dot it with another fourth of the butter mixture and fold it like a book into thirds, chill for five minutes and then repeat another two times, leaving it to chill for half an hour the last time.
The end result is delicious and crisp and just really, REALLY nice! The filling is not that hard either. There is no bottom pastry, just top. You simply caramelize some onions, boil some potato slices, and then layer them in a pie dish with a cheese and cream mixture and a mix of grated cheeses. (SO lots of cheese!
You attach a thin strip of pastry all around the pie dish for the top crust to adhere to, so it seals the pie up nicely . . . then pop on the crust and seal it all around. I decorated mine a bit with trimmings as you can see. I would have been a bit more inventive than just writing the word Pie in trimmings, but I got rather lazy. Little cut out flowers or hearts would be nice . . .
Washed with a bit of egg wash and vented the pie is then popped into the oven for half an hour on high and then a further hour at a lower temperature . . . so that the pastry puffs up nice and golden brown and crisp . . .
And the insides with all those scrummy caramelized onions, and potatoes . . . cream and cheese . . . all meld together in unctuous gloriosity! (I made that word up. Don't you like it?) Altogether this pie is fabulously delicious.
This is a once in a blue moon treat that will have your family oohing and aahing all around the table . . . and please sir-ing for just one more piece. You won't even miss the meat. I gurantee, which makes it perfect for meatless Monday and if you use vegetable shortening instead of lard, quite vegetarian friendly. (I used shortening because my lard was a bit too old and I wasn't sure about using it.It worked out beautifully.)
*Cheese, Potato and Onion Pie*
Makes 9-inch pie Printable Recipe
This may seem a bit fiddly to make, but the end result is well worth the effort. It's delicious!
For the pastry :
75g unsalted butter, room temperature (1/4 cup plus 1 TBS)
75g lard, room temperature (1/4 cup plus 1 TBS)
200g plain flour (1 1/2 cups
1⁄2 tsp salt
1⁄2 tbsp white wine vinegar
about 150ml chilled water (5 fluid ounces)1⁄2 tsp salt
1⁄2 tbsp white wine vinegar
For the filling:
30g of butter (2 TBS)
280g of onions, peeled and thinly sliced (4 medium onions)
1 tsp salt
30g of butter (2 TBS)
280g of onions, peeled and thinly sliced (4 medium onions)
1 tsp salt
2 tbsp caster sugar
2lb 1oz potatoes, peeled, sliced (abput 1/3 inch thick)
140g crème fraîche (5 ounces)
4 tbsp double cream
150g mature cheddar, grated, divided (1 1/4 cup)
50g of Parmesan cheese, grated (1/4 cup)
100g gruyere cheese, grated (3/4 cup Swiss type cheese)
freshly ground black pepper
freshly ground nutmeg
1 free range egg yolk, beaten with 1 tsp water
To
make the pasty, cream together the butter and the lard. Divide into
four equal portions. Sift the flour into a bowl with the salt. Add one
fourth of the butter mixture. Cut it in with a pastry blender or your
finger tips until the mixture resembles fine bread crumbs. Add the
white wine vinegar. Add only enough water to give you a soft dough.
Tip out onto a floured surface. Pat out into a rectangle that is 1/3
inch thick. Dot with another fourth of the butter mixture. Fold the
outer thirds of the pastry over the middle third of the pastry like a
book. Cover and put in the fridge for five minutes. Repeat two more
times. If any of the butter mixture shows through the pastry scatter
over a bit more flour. Cover and chill for half an hour while you make
the filling.
Melt the butter in a large
skillet. Add the onions, salt and sugar. Cook over medium heat,
stirring frequently until the onions have softened and caramelized.
Set aside.
Place the potatoes into a large saucepan of boiling salted water. Cook for 8 minutes then drain well.
Mix
together the creme fraiche and double cream. Stir in 1 cup of the
cheddar cheese and 2 TBS of the Parmesan cheese. Mix together the
remaining cheddar, gruyere and Parmesan cheese in a small bowl.
Take
a pie dish and begin layering as follows: !/4 of the potatoes, 1/3 of
the caramelized onions, 1/3 of the gruyere cheese mixture, season with
some black pepper and some nutmeg. Pour over half of the cream mixture.
Top with 1/4 of the potatoes, 1/3 of the caramelized onions, 1/3 of the
guyere cheese mixture. Season again with some black pepper and
nutmeg. Repeat using another 1/4 of the potatoes, 1/3 onions, 1/3
guyere cheese. Top with the remaining cream mixture and then top with
the final 1/4 of potatoes, again seasoning.
Preheat the oven to 200*C/400*F/ gas mark 6. Have ready a baking sheet which you have lined with foil.
This was a tiny bit more fiddly than most of my recipes, but do trust me when I tell you it is well worth any effort taken. This is repeatable. Totally.
I've been looking for a nice cheese, onion and potato pie
ReplyDeleteJulie xxxxxx
Well it looks wonderful..and that dough!
ReplyDeleteThen you've come to the right place KC!
ReplyDeleteThanks Monique! Could this have Jacques name on it? xx
aww Marie love this pie!!! and I want a piece please! Love the crust!!
ReplyDeleteGloria, you MUST make this pie. It's gorgeous! xx
ReplyDelete