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PIE OF UNCOOKED APPLES
Tart apples, sliced
2 sheets pie crust
Butter
Nutmeg or lemon
Sugar
To eat immediately, the following is excellent. Lay the slices into
the plate upon an under crust; fill it quite full; sprinkle the rim
with a little flour, to prevent the upper crust from adhering to the
under one. Bake forty minutes, or till the apple is tender, and then
slide off the upper crust and add a small bit of butter, some nutmeg
or lemon, and sugar to your taste. Mix them well with the apple with
a silver spoon, and return the upper crust to its place.
From The Young Housekeeper's Friend by Mrs. [M. H.] Cornelius,
1863.
Comment: Apples in the 19th century came in a dazzling array of
varieties, most a specialty of a particular geographical region
where the peculiarities of genetics and pollination had brought
forth a sport. The over-bred, oversized, mushy, tasteless fruits of
today, selected more for their ability to look "perfect" and
withstand long shipping, were unknown. This dessert would have been
a treat available only once a year, at the time when the apples were
coming ripe on the trees. Those to be preserved for winter would
have to be either canned or packed into barrels where, with luck and
dry conditions, they would slowly wrinkle but not rot.
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