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FREEZE AND BAKE FRUIT PIE: THE FASTEST WAY TO FRESH-BAKED
– from King Arthur Flour (I ♡ their recipes)
FREEZE AND BAKE FRUIT PIE: THE FASTEST WAY TO FRESH-BAKED
by: PJ Hamel
The first thing I tried was making the crust, shaping it into disks, and freezing. Ditto the filling: preparing the fruit, adding the sugar, spice, and thickener, and freezing.
This method was OK. And it was the best way for a small freezer, as disks of crust and bags of filling are easier to store than entire pies.
But when you want fresh pie, you’re only partway there; once you’ve thawed the crust and filling, you still have to roll, fill, seal, crimp… all that stuff.
I was after something that was absolutely painless, time- and effort-wise. And here’s the method I chose:
Freeze and bake fruit pie: Method #2
Make the entire pie up to the point it’s ready for the oven. Freeze it. When you’re ready for pie, thaw overnight in the fridge, and bake.
Here’s how –
Unless you have LOTS of pie pans lying around (or can settle for the undersized throwaway foil pans), you’re going to want to make the pie, freeze it in the pan, then take it out so you can have your pan back.
First, grease your pan. I’m using a 9”, 1 1/2” deep pan.
Next, line it with parchment, and grease the parchment.
Prepare your pie. I’ve made an apple pie here.
Freeze the pie until you need it
Put the pie into a large plastic bag.
Into the freezer it goes. Freeze the pie for several hours, or until it’s stiff enough to handle easily.
OK, time out. Since you’re going to the effort with the dough and filling, you probably want to make more than one pie at a time, right?
However many pie pans you have (metal preferred; it freezes the pies faster), that’s how many pies you can prepare at a time.
But that doesn’t mean if you only have two pans, you can only make two pies. Make enough dough and filling for, say, four pies. Prepare two pies, leaving the extra filling and dough in the fridge. Once those first two pies are frozen and you have your pans back, prepare the remaining two pies, and freeze them.
OK, back to the frozen pie.
If you have a surfeit of available pie pans, you can certainly leave the pie in the pan in the freezer. But most of us don’t have multiple pie pans. So, once the pie was frozen, I moved this pie from its pan to a plastic bag.
First step: set the pan in a slightly larger pan of warm water, to thaw the underside just a bit.
Parchment helps with the release. Peel it off now; you won’t need it anymore.
Re-bag the pie, and stick it back in the freezer until you need it.
Fast forward 7 weeks. Time to think about Thanksgiving pies.
Take the pie out of the bag, and put it in the same size pan you originally made it in. Put pie and pan back in the plastic bag.
Thaw the pie
Tent the plastic bag up a bit, so it doesn’t rest right on the pastry. A couple of toothpicks stuck into the center of the pie is holding my clear plastic shower cap up nicely.
Place the pie in the refrigerator overnight, to thaw.
Wait a minute – why not simply bake the pie right from the freezer? Isn’t that what Mrs. Smith has you do?
I tried it. And found that by the time the filling had thawed and cooked completely, the crust was unpleasantly dry. Thawing first cuts back on baking time, and yields a moister, more tender pie.
Spray the crust with water and sprinkle with coarse sugar, if desired. I’ve done an under-layer of cinnamon-sugar here, followed by coarse sugar on top.
Now’s the time to straighten up your crimp, if it’s gotten a bit mashed with all the handling.
Bake the pie
Follow your recipe to bake the pie.
Hint: for easiest cleanup, be sure to bake it on a baking sheet lined with parchment.
Ah, nicely juicy…
…VERY pretty…
…and totally tasty!
Pie without angst – it’s love at first bite.
If you’re interested in making this particular pie, check out our recipe for Guaranteed Apple Pie.
Words to the wise:
•This method is appropriate for fruit pies. Please don’t try it with egg- and/or milk-based fillings (e.g., custard, pumpkin, pecan, lemon meringue, banana cream, etc.).
•I found that adding an extra 2 tablespoons flour to the filling helps soak up some of the extra juice the fruit may exude during the freezing/thawing process.
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