Grape and Apple Pie

grape-and-apple-pie-1

I don't know why, but I can't stop thinking about Christmas cookies! I am scanning every holiday magazine I have. I am even looking through recipes I saved from when I was in high school. I've become cookie obsessed.
 
We baked about 6 different cookies last weekend. Today we baked some more cookies. My head is spinning with recipes and I smelled like a sugar cookie all afternoon. Another super Thanksgiving pie is this Salted Caramel Apple Pie!
 
Not that that is a bad thing. I could smell sugar cookie dough all day long and be totally content.
 
But before I get to some Christmas cookie recipes, I have this fabulous pie to share from Thanksgiving. I do write my blog for you, my awesome readers. But my blog is also written for selfish motives. For MOI! ME! You see, I need to document recipes here so I don't lose them. I have files of recipes scattered around the house. I'm not the best at organizing them. My blog has become my biggest organizational triumph. Every single incredible recipe I find is kept here for me to look up when I need to.
 
You may be wondering about grapes and apples in a pie? I was too! I only ate grapes and apples in a fruit salad. And they weren't alone in the salad: there were bananas, strawberries, some blueberries. How were these two fruits in a pie? Unbelievably delicious. One of my new favorite pie fillings is grapes and apples.
 
Let's talk about this recipe. I found it in my Thanksgiving issue of Bon Appetit. I had to reread it a couple of times.  The pie recipe said you had to fill the crust with pie weights or beans and blind bake for about 50-55 minutes, or until crust turns golden. Then you add your filling and bake another 50-60 minutes. That would've been about 2 hours baking time. My pie would've been a burnt mess after the first 1 ½.
 
I decided to bake my pie like I usually do. I add the apple filling to the crust (not prebaked) and the top crust or lattice strips and bake for about 50-60 minutes.
 
My pie turned out just fine. Actually, it was more than fine. It was the one dessert everyone was taking a little extra slice from on Thanksgiving. Here are the desserts I made for Thanksgiving. That's a cranberry cake in the middle and the Vegan Maple Pumpkin Pie on the right. grape-and-apple-pie-3
 

grape-and-apple-pie-2
I made a vegan crust for this recipe. If you prefer, you could follow the original recipe and make their crust with butter and shortening. I'm not by any means a pie expert. I try my best with each crust. I know the temperature has to be right when you are rolling out the dough, and that can be a challenge in a warm Florida kitchen. I hope these photos help a little. For more pie tips, check out this link when you can.

Grape and Apple Pie
slightly adapted recipe by: Karen De Masco, Bon Appetit, November 2011

Ingredients

Crust

2 ½ cups all purpose flour
1 cup frozen Earth Balance veggie spread
Ice water
(if your spread is unsalted, add ½ teaspoon of salt)
about 1 tablespoon turbinado for sugar, for sprinkling before baking (use more if you like)

Filling

3 pounds tart, crisp apples (such as Crispin or Pink Lady), peeled, quartered, cored, thinly sliced
1 pound red or black grapes, halved, seeded if needed
¾ cup plus 2 tablespoons sugar
2 tablespoons all-purpose flour

Special Equipment:
A 9"-diameter glass or ceramic pie dish or metal pie pan

Preparation

Crust

Pulse flour, and salt in a food processor. Pulse a couple of times. Add Earth Balance spread; pulse just until coarse meal forms. Add water a tablespoon at a time; pulse until dough forms clumps, adding more ice water by teaspoonfuls if dry. Gather dough into a ball; divide in half. Flatten into disks, wrap in plastic, and chill for at least 1 hour and up to 2 days.

Roll out 1 dough disk on a lightly floured surface into an 11" round. Transfer to pie dish; press gently onto bottom and up sides of dish. Trim dough flush with edge of dish, leaving no overhang. Freeze until firm, about 10 minutes. Add scraps to remaining dough disk; roll out on parchment paper to a 12" round. Slide paper with dough onto a rimless baking sheet and chill in refrigerator.

Filling

Mix apples, grapes, sugar, and flour in a large saucepan; stir to coat. Cook over medium-low heat, stirring often, until fruit is translucent and juices are thickened, 30-40 minutes. Let mixture cool to room temperature.
Preheat oven to 375°. Transfer fruit to crust. Remove remaining dough from refrigerator.  Roll out the dough and cut out your lattice strips. Arrange reserved dough cutouts decoratively over top crust, pressing lightly to adhere. Place pie on baking sheet.
 
Bake pie until crust is golden brown and juices bubble, 50 minutes-1 hour. Transfer to a wire rack to cool. DO AHEAD: Can be made 8 hours ahead. Let stand at room temperature. Serve with ice cream, if desired.

DSCN9560
Here I am feeling my dough. I'm checking to see if it's got the right consistency. Mine needed a little more flour. I tossed a little more on the dough and worked it just a bit.
DSCN0103
Put the dough in between two sheets of plastic wrap (I lifted up the top sheet so you could see how the dough looked). Press the dough flat into a disk and roll out. DSCN0104
Then roll it out towards the left.
DSCN0105
Roll it out towards the right. Continue rolling and rotating until the crust is about 3 inches larger in diameter than the rim of the pie plate
DSCN0106
Remove the plastic wrap on top. Carefully lift the dough from the bottom wrap and place the dough around the rolling pin. Make sure your pin just doesn't start rolling off without you having it ready. I do that sometimes.  Now is when I pray that it just will magically plop on. Place the pin on top of the pie plate and roll it out.
DSCN0108
Phew. This one did ok. Then you crimp. And crimp and crimp all around the crust. It doesn't have to be perfect. Crimp the edges by placing the thumb on the outer side of the crust and the two index fingers on either side of the thumb in the inside of the crust. Push the thumb forward while pulling the index fingers toward you. Keep going in a clockwise direction until you crimp the whole crust. Don't sweat it; do your best.
DSCN0109
Prick the bottom of the pie crust with your fork. Sometimes I forget to do that. Those pies have turned out just fine.
DSCN9565
Add in your filling. Carefully layer your pretty lattice strips. Sprinkle on some turbinado sugar.Turbinado sugar makes every thing so sparkly. 🙂
DSCN9566
Place pie on baking sheet.

Bake pie until crust is golden brown and juices bubble, 50 minutes-1 hour.

There is nothing like the smell of a warm pie just about ready to slice. 🙂
grape-and-apple-pie-5
Transfer to a wire rack to cool. DO AHEAD: Can be made 8 hours ahead. Let stand at room temperature. Serve with ice cream, if desired.

What is your favorite thing to bake for the holiday season? What is your holiday tradition?

32 Comments

  1. Thanks for sharing excellent informations. Your website is so cool. I’m impressed by the details that you have on this blog. It reveals how nicely you perceive this subject. Bookmarked this website page, will come back for extra articles.

  2. Oh, Lora, this is stupendous! I've been thinking of apple cranberry pie but I love it with the grapes (so Italian). Perfect and so pretty!

  3. Just found your blog and was drawn to this recipe - the name sounds so interesting and delicious! Love the level of detail in your photos and instructions... I am such a useless baker that I need all the help I can get! Gorgeous pie.

  4. I have never thought of making a pie with grapes. Hmm, grapes...maybe the aging in the oven would make it taste like wine. Um um good.

  5. What a creative idea for a festive Autumn pie! I have got to find a way to seed grapes, because I'd love to try this!

  6. Lora, I love grapes, but have never baked with them. This is such a beutiful pie! Can't wait to see what Christmas cookies you have in store.

  7. What a beautiful pie, Lora! I've never baked a pie, but I don't mind eating them, preferably with a big scoop of vanilla ice cream 😉

    PS - I love your new site - it looks great!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *