This week I tried PW's Peach Crisp with Maple Cream Sauce and Chicken Pot Pie which, in turn, required me to try Perfect Pie Crust.
I will begin with the Peach Crisp. I made it for our Bible Study on Wednesday so I doubled it. That is probably going to be the downside of me cooking these recipes. I will double or 1.5 them and they won't be exactly what she intended. Some of my peaches were nice and ripe and some were hard as a rock, but with a little extra sugar sprinkled over them and plenty of cooking time, they turned out just fine. But with that many peaches, it generated quite a bit of juice which in effect, transformed my "crisp" into more of a cobbler. It was yummy though--even with the lemon juice giving it a bit of a lemony flavor. (I don't care for lemon, but I still liked this.) I baked it the evening before, so I decided to give it quite a bit more heat time right before Bible Study. That seemed to help thicken the juice quite a bit, but I would still call it more "cobbler" than "crisp".
But the real story here, Folks, is not the crisp. It's most definitely the Maple Cream Sauce! I have never concocted such decadence before. I had to substitute FAKE maple syrup for the real that it called for--not quite ready for a second mortgage on this house--but it still was wonderful! I did add a splash of maple flavoring to make up for my cheap syrup and maybe that helped? Anyway, that stuff was amazing! It made everyone forget the crisplessness of the crisp. I am now dreaming up multiple uses for it. It could be added to coffee to create caffeinated amazingness or some chocolate desert to cause an over-the-top effect. Summer and I added some to our hot chocolate this afternoon. Yum!!
On Saturday I made the Chicken Pot Pie. I must confess, that like homemade mac n cheese, I'd never made it before. I'm generally not a fan and I don't make things I don't like--it's that whole "I'm in charge of the kitchen" thing so I'll make what I like. But PW claimed that it was Hall of Fame material. And...it IS in the book, and I am trying to cook everything in there soooo...
Once again, I doubled it--one for us to eat and one to freeze. It was surprisingly fun to make. It was just what this tired out cook needed to restore some kitchen fun. I love, love the smell and sounds of onions sizzling in butter--it makes me feel alive! I used a Costco roast chicken instead of boiling my own--can you blame me? It was fabulous! The gravy was so yummy I knew the pie would be edible.
The biggest disaster occurred when I was putting the top crust on. I had rolled it out, folded it in quarters for the transfer and then set it aside to stir or season or something. When I went to unfold it on top, it was stuck together and wanted to rip apart. I then proceeded to drop it into the gravy filling and got it all sloppy and ruined. But I rinsed it in cold water and added some more flour and rolled it out again. It went on fine and turned out mostly normal.
The finished product was very well received--especially by my boys who had tried KFC's chicken pie and proclaimed mine at LEAST equal to. I know. But they really raved about KFC's at the time and begged to order it again. (Not going to happen because they charge waaay too much for those with a family of 7 ordering, but now I get why. It takes some work! And I'm sure the colonel's workers make them from scratch.) Anyway, my men LOVED it. My girls said they liked it too but I suspect they have my genes in the matter. I liked it too, but meat pies aren't my thing generally. (It could have something to do with a certain childhood incident involving a TV meat pie dinner and resulting illness.) I think this was totally worth the work though. And like I said, it injected some fun back into my cooking. We are all excited to have the spare in the freezer.
There you have it. I'm not sure how this project is going to work with my one other personal goal of losing 15 lbs (actually, I'm pretty sure.)
LOLLL I don't know... still unconvinced. Maybe I should try it, but maybe not. The gravy sounds good though!
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