Sweet Cherry Pie Recipe
Here is the long awaited Cherry Pie recipe. It's a fantastic and yummy recipe. The crust is light and flaky and the cherries are tasty with a hint of almonds. (See my two apple pie recipes for an example and pictures of making the crust.)
The secret is to use fresh cherries and to gently precook them. Never overcook your fruit. Do not use canned cherries. That is just not done, especially in cherry season and don't be tempted by frozen unless you hanker for a pie in the middle of winter. I use sweet cherries in my pie, Bing or Rainier. If you use Columbia River Tart Cherries, for example, or any tart cherries, you may want to up the sugar a 1/4 or 1/2 cup.
The first step is to wash your cherries. Don't forget to do this.
It's a great excuse for a still action water shot.
Next, pit the cherries. If you want to spend a lot of time pitting these by hand with a paring knife, go right ahead. For one pie, you need to pit about 4 cups.
Or you can buy this handy and very dandy cherry pitter and save yourself a lot of time and agony.
The next step is crucial, cook your fruit.
Mix together:
4 cups frozen cherries, pitted, naturally. Measure these after pitting.
1 cup sugar
4 1/2 Tablespoons quick cooking, not instant, tapioca
1/2 teaspoon lemon juice
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 cup Amaretto
Mix into cooked cherries:
1/2 cup sliced blanched almonds
Butter as needed to dot. (optional)
Sugar for sprinkling on top of the lattice. (optional)
(Preheat your oven to 400F.)
Cook this mixture over a very low heat until the cherries release their juice. Then cook a little more until it starts to thicken. Do not cook for more than 1/2 hour. Let the cherries cool completely before using. Mix in 1/2 cup of sliced, blanched almonds. This will give the pie some additional texture. I also like to dot the pie with butter before I put the lattice on top.
Roll out your pie dough you made the day before, grease your pie pan well, gently lift the rolled out dough and put it into the pan, use the extra to give your pie a crust edge and then pour in the cherry mixture and cover with a lattice top.
The lattice top is a little tricky. You can simple follow the pie dough recipe for bottom and top and then cut that dough into a lattice or you can first make some marzipan. Then combine the marzipan with a quarter cup AP flour and roll out and use that for your lattice top. Or, finally, you can follow the pie dough recipe, cut it in 1/2 and then add in about a 1/2 cup of marzipan and mix together. You will find that you'll need to add another quarter cup of flour.
Anyway you make it, cut the strips into 1/2 inch widths, lay across the pie, I like 4 strips and then 3 running the other way. Pinch the strips into the edge of the pie. If you are feeling ambitious, you can interlace the strips. I do both. I interlace when I'm feeling ambitious. ;-) I also like to sprinkle some sugar over the lattice if you want. It makes the pie extra special if you do this.
Just a warning, cherry pies, if made the right way, with a ton of cherries, always overflow. So, put this on a sheet pan with, if you have it, some parchment paper underneath. No mess, no foul.
Preheat your oven to 400F. Bake for 15 minutes and then reduce to 350 for about 35-40 minutes. Let this pie cool completely before you cut it. Rack it! As we say in my kitchen. Then, enjoy your terrific pie.
Labels: Cherries, Cherry Pie, Crust, Pie, Recipe
9 Comments:
That's a great cherry pie & I love that you pre-cooked the cherries just a wee bit. I wish I had a handy dandy cherry pitter...maybe one day!
They're about $5. I think I got mine for $2. Worth every penny. Enjoy the pie.
%-} I'm showing my age. I found them on amazon for $12.99. You can probably get them cheaper but again, worth every penny and the shipping, too.
Wow Mark...love the lattice top...infact I have this association (in my head) of something sweet and lattice. ;p
Great recipe thanks for sharing.
You are welcome. It's a great lattice especially if you make it from almost pure marzipan.
I heart using marzipan for the lattice-so creative! Rainer Cherries are on sale here so I might have to be giving your method a try. :D
You can use straight marzipan but I think it comes out best if you mix at least flour in if not salt, eggs, flour. No shortening is needed because of the oil. Almond pastes may have egg in it already.
I want a cherry pitter! The height of kitchen gadgets, but makes this job so much easier! Lovely pie!
It is indeed the absolutely pinnacle of kitchen gadgets. Cheap, simple and very useful. I've had mine for almost 30 years. :-)
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