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ANGLO-FRANCAIS PIE
Puff paste or other pie dough
1/4 lb rice
Sugar
1 lb. whole cherries, pitted
1/4 lb. powdered sugar
Egg white for crust
Apricot marmalade
Macaroons, crushed
Take a deep dish, line the edge with puff paste like a common pie;
stew a quarter of a pound of rice with some sugar until quite soft
and sweet; take a pound of ripe juicy cherries, which pick and roll
in a quarter of a pound of powder-sugar, and lay about a quarter of
them at the bottom of the dish; cover these with a fourth part of
the rice, then the cherries again, and so on till your materials are
used, taking care to keep the pie high in the middle; cover it with
a layer of puff paste, which wash over lightly with some white of
egg, and strew a little powder-sugar over; put it in a moderate oven
for an hour and a quarter; then take it out, mask the crust with
apricot marmalade, and a few macaroons, crushed. Serve it either hot
or cold.
The Cook's Own Book, Being a Complete Culinary Encyclopedia, by
"A Boston Housekeeper" (Mrs. N. K. M. Lee), Boston, 1832
Comment: The casual note to "pick and roll" the cherries fails to
mention the most arduous aspect of working with this otherwise
delightful fruit, the removal of the seeds. While the pit will often
come out along with the stem, exceptions must be dealt with either
by knife or a little gizmo called a cherry pitter. (The gadget also
works nicely to remove pits from olives, should we have any martini
drinkers in our audience.)
We should note for the sake of historical accuracy that Mrs. Lee
lists this alphabetically under "Pie, Anglo-Francais" so if you are
looking it up in the original it is under P rather than A. What
exactly gives this pie either French or Anglican character is
unexplained in the text, but we admit it sounds a little classier
than "Rice and Cherry Pie" probably would.
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