Categories
Recipes

How to Make a No-Bake Cream Pie in 6 Easy Steps

There are two types of cream pie: baked and no-bake. If you’re looking to pull together an easy cream pie in a jiffy, I suggest opting for the no-bake variety. A no-bake cream pie is much easier to make and, since it can be made using store-bought mixes, you can create one in any flavor combination you desire.

How to Make a No-Bake Cream Pie in 6 Easy Steps

Step 1: Select Your Pie Crust

Personally, I prefer crumb crusts for my no-bake cream pies, but you can use a traditional baked crust. If you go with that option, be sure that the crust is not only fully baked but cooled down, as well, before adding the filling.

Step 2: Select Your Cream Filling

The easiest way to do this is to choose your favorite instant pudding mix. You can mix it according to the instructions on the box or, for a fluffier filling, beat it with an electric mixer. To make it even more fluffy, add in 1 cup heavy cream once the pudding starts to thicken and beat until light, fluffy and forming soft peaks.

Step 3: Pour the filling into the crust.

This is the easy step… just pour it in and smooth it out.

Step 4: Select your topping.

My favorite cream pie topping is whipped cream or another whipped topping. Although, some people use meringue.

Step 5: Chill in the refrigerator for at least an hour.

This step helps the ingredients set and makes serving the pie much easier.

Step 6: Garnish and enjoy!

You can put a mint leaf on top of each slice, sprinkle with Jimmies or nuts, or even add some chocolate shavings. How you garnish your cream pie is up to you!

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Looking for a few more pie recipes to try?

Do you want to create your perfect, signature pie, but just can’t find the right recipe? Your Perfect Pie may just be the cookbook for you!

Breaking down the mystique of homemade pie into modules you can mix and match, this simple cookbook is sure to please. Learn more and grab your copy at:

CarmasCookery.com/yourperfectpie

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Categories
Cooking Techniques Creative Cookery

My Pie Philosophy

The following post was partially excerpted from my book, Your Perfect Pie.

cherry pie

To many, pies seem daunting. There are so many places for the pie maker to screw up. But this is just a facade — once you know your time limitations, your personal skill level and a few tips and tricks, pies can be quite simple and easy to make.

Most recipes treat pies like a single entity like you can’t use a different crust or topping. However, this is simply not the case. Pies are modular and provide pie makers with a variety of options to express their individuality and creativity. This book will walk you through my modular approach to pie making and provide you with some recipes to try out your newfound tool for pie-making creativity!

The Four Basic Steps of My Pie Philosophy

There are four basic questions you need to ask yourself before setting out to make your unique and perfect pie. They are:

[one_half] 1. What kind of pie do you want to make?
Will it be a sweet dessert pie? A savory main dish pie? Another type of pie? For which meal and purpose will you use this pie? Breakfast? Lunch? Dinner? Snack? [/one_half]
[one_half_last] strawberry cheesecake pie [/one_half_last]

[one_half] 2. What kind of filling do you want?
Will it require baking? Or will it be a no-bake type of filling? Will you serve it warm, chilled or frozen? Do you have time to prepare it? Or do you need to pull it together quickly? [/one_half]
[one_half_last] apple pie a la mode [/one_half_last]

[one_half] 3. What kind of crust do you want?
The answer to question #1 will help determine your answer to this question. Some crusts lend themselves better to desserts than savory dishes and visa versa. Also, you’ll want to keep in mind how the flavor of your crust (or lack thereof) will affect the overall flavor of the pie. [/one_half]
[one_half_last] pie crust [/one_half_last]

[one_half] 4. How will you top and garnish your pie?
Again, the answers to the previous questions will narrow down your options at this point. For example, you’re probably not going to want to top your beef pie with gingersnap streusel. And, of course, there is nothing that says you have to top or garnish your pie at all! [/one_half]
[one_half_last] pie with merengue [/one_half_last]


 

Create Your Own Unique Pie!

Your Perfect Pie by Carma SpenceDoes pie making daunt you? Are you wary of deviating from any pie-recipe you find, for fear that you’ll ruin the flavor of the resulting pie?

It doesn’t have to be that way!

Pie-Palooza 2017 is brought to you by Your Perfect Pie, a cookbook that breaks down pies into easily made component parts so you can unleash your pie-making creativity. Available on Amazon in both print and Kindle formats. Grab your copy today and start creating your perfect pie!


 

Welcome to Carma's Cookery's Pie-Palooza 2017 - A month of pie legend, lore and love

Miss previous posts? Find links to them here.

Categories
Cooking Techniques

An Introduction to Pies

strawberry tart

In 1902, the English suggested that pies should only be eaten twice a week. The New York Times responded with, “Pie is the American synonym of prosperity, and its varying contents the calendar of the changing seasons. Pie is the food of the heroic. No pie-eating people can ever be permanently vanquished.”

Although Europeans have been eating pies since at least the 1400s, Americans eat more of them that any other group of people. In fact, some pies are especially associated with the United States. In addition to the apple pie, which makes use of this common American fruit, there is also the pumpkin pie and the Pennsylvanian Dutch shoofly pies made with molasses. There are even types of pies associated with specific regions of the U.S.

During this month of March 2017, Carma’s Cookery will be publishing a plethora of information about pies, from memories to tips to recipes. Each day you’ll find something new about pies.

But What Makes a Pie a Pie?

pecan pieA pie is any dish with a crust, either on the top, the bottom or both, and the crust can be made from crumbs, meringues, biscuits or pastry. Pies are almost always cooked in a shallow dish with sloping sides.

One of my favorite types of savory pie (non-dessert pie) is the pizza! I learned how to make a tasty yeast-based crust from my grandmother and developed a rich and flavorful sauce from a recipie I learned in a Junior High cooking class. I’ve been able to make my own pizza for people from around the world — literally, I made it when I was an exchange studen in England for my fellow youth work campers from England, France and India!

pizza pieA tart is another type of pie. Tarts are always open-faced and usually have a pastry-style crust. Small tarts are sometimes called tartlets. Originally, pies were deep dish and filled with meats, while tarts were meant for dessert. However, after the American Revolution, when sugar became scarce and housewives needed to be thrifty, shallow pies of all types were developed because they required less filling.

A quiche is also a type of pie. Made with eggs and milk or cream, it is usually filled with cheese and veggies and meats. Back in the 1980s, when the book Real Men Don’t Eat Quiche came out, my father got onto a quiche-making binge. He’d make tons of them and freeze them. Then we’d have them every night for dinner. I have to say, it took be awhile to get my taste for quiche back! But when they are fluffy and cheesy, I just can’t get enough!

quiche

I hope you’ll continue to come back to this blog and read more about pies from my many special guests. Each one is an expert in pies, pastries, baking or some other related topic.

NOTE: Part of this article was excerpted from my book, Your Perfect Pie.


 

Create Your Own Unique Pies!

Your Perfect Pie by Carma SpenceDoes pie making daunt you? Are you wary of deviating from any pie-recipe you find, for fear that you’ll ruin the flavor of the resulting pie?

It doesn’t have to be that way!

Pie-Palooza 2017 is brought to you by Your Perfect Pie, a cookbook that breaks down pies into easily made component parts so you can unleash your pie-making creativity. Available on Amazon in both print and Kindle formats. Grab your copy today and start creating your perfect pie!


 

Welcome to Carma's Cookery's Pie-Palooza 2017 - A month of pie legend, lore and love

Miss previous posts? Find links to them here.

Categories
Food Fiction & Essays

Vintage pies

Source: www.reminisce.com
Source: www.reminisce.com
When my Abuela died, I inherited all her cookbooks, recipes and clippings. Sometimes I enjoy perusing all those recipes and adverts from the 1950s and 1960s — how carefree we were about cholesterol, fat content and other health concerns!

Well, if you don’t have old clippings to peruse yourself, you’ve got the next best thing: Reminisce— North America’s top-selling nostalgia magazine.

They currently have a post that takes a look back at baking ads from the 1950s. Some of the ingredients these ads push may be hard to find to day, others are still staples on our grocery store baking shelves.

To view the full vintage ad slideshow, go to: www.reminisce.com/1950s/vintage-ads-we-do-the-work-you-bake-the-pie.

Categories
Taste Tests

Product Review: Banquet Dessert Bakes, Coconut Creme Pie

Banquet Dessert Bakes
Product image from Banquet Dessert Bakes
Banquet Dessert Bakes is a line of simple, make it yourself with a few extra ingredients dessert mixes. I recently tried their Coconut Creme Pie. Here are my observations:

Prep Time
It took very little time to prepare the dessert. I probably completed the whole process, including cleaning up in about 15 to 20 minutes.

Crust
All you had to do to create the crust was add water. However, what resulted was a chewy crust that stuck to the pie tin and made it very difficult to serve decent looking pie slices. It tasted fine, but I would recommed either experimenting with adding less water than the box suggests or just using a ready-made crust.

Filling
Now, to be upfront, I love coconut. I want my coconut-flavored foods to be rich in coconut flavor, which is why I ended up using coconut powder in the coconut cream pie I developed. To my surprise, Banquet’s coconut creme filling did not disappoint. It had a rich, creamy and very coconutty flavor, with little bits of coconut mixed in.

The box recommends that you refrigerate 30 minutes before serving. I would recommend that you give it closer to an hour to allow the filling to fully set.

Overall
I’ve give this dessert 4 out of 5 stars. It tasted great, but the crust needs work.

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