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| Pie: 300 Tried-and-True Recipes for Delicious Homemade Pie | 
enlarge | Author: Ken Haedrich Brand: HARVARD COMMON PRESS Category: Book
List Price: $27.95 Buy Used: $9.65 You Save: $18.30 (65%)
New (28) Used (19) from $9.65
Avg. Customer Rating: 25 reviews Sales Rank: 21677
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 608 Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.2 Dimensions (in): 9 x 7.9 x 1.9
MPN: 52495 ISBN: 155832254X Dewey Decimal Number: 641.8652 EAN: 9781558322547 ASIN: 155832254X
Publication Date: September 2004 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: New, NEVER READ, may have minor wear from being on a retail store shelf. We are a smoke free business, ship daily and your satisfaction is guaranteed with our no hassle return policy. We recommend upgrading to expedited shipping for orders that need to arrive in 3-5 days. Standard shipping arrives in 7-14 business days.
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| | Pie by Ken Haedrich | | | HARVARD COMMON PRESS |
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Product Description The most comprehensive and straightforward book ever written on the topic, Pie is a complete guide to how easy it can be to make perfectly praiseworthy pies. After providing an overview of the pie making process, Ken walks you through pastry making, using a food processor, an electric mixer, or simply your hands. You will learn how to choose the proper pan for a nicely browned bottom crust; how to roll out the pastry; how and why to prebake crust; how to prevent burned edges, and even how to decorate your pie. Includes 300 no-fail recipes for: Classic and new fall pies: Very Cranberry-Pear Pie, Spiced Pumpkin Indian Pudding Pie, Brown Sugar Apple Pie Berry pies: Strawberry-Rhubarb Crumb Pie, Sour Cream-Blackberry Pie, Wild Blueberry-Maple Pie Summer fruit pies: The Ultimate Four-Cherry Pie, Lemonade-Peach Pie, Fresh Plum and Port Pie Nut pies: Molasses Walnut Pie, Butterscotch Pecan Pie, Trail Mix Peanut Butter Pie Custard pies: Three Sisters Coconut Buttermilk Pie, Classic Chess Pie Icebox and ice cream pies: Watermelon Chiffon Pie, Classic Lemon Meringue Pie, Creamsicle Ice Cream Pie 639 pages
Amazon.com Review At 640 pages and nearly two inches thick, Pie, the big book with the shortest possible title, is difficult to read in bed. It's hard to hold up. It weighs on the stomach. But bed is where you will want to take it, night after night, following author Richard Haedrich's lead through fruit pies, berry pies, nut pies, custard pies, turnovers, ice cream pies, and more. Headrich has the most reassuring voice in food literature, and his lifelong passion--the making and baking of all manner of pies--soon begins to fit the reader like new skin. The first 60 pages are given over to general directions (for example, Haedrich is a firm believer in reading a recipe through to completion before lifting a finger; he rolls his dough on wax paper) and the making and shaping of crust. You will find everything you need to know about creating terrific pie crusts including a friendly pat on the back and the sage advice that great crust comes with experience. This is all but permission to bake several pies a week for the rest of your life. The 300 some recipes in Pie will help you on your way. There are 21 crust recipes alone, everything from that perfect flaky crust to Choco-Nut Press-In Pie Crust. Ever hear of the Balaton, what sounds like the perfect pie cherry? Haedrich doesn't just give you a cherry pie recipe (there are actually nine), he tells you all about cherries (there's a box titled "Crash Course in Cherries"). And talking about cherries leads to talking about regions of the country, the people in the landscape, the fruit on the trees. You will travel endless miles of back roads with Pie. Haedrich feeds you information in easy bursts, like conversational asides, as recipe leads, as sidebars, as boxes, as how-to notes the author calls "Recipe for Success." In just the pages on cherry pie you'll find out about product sources, sanding sugar, pitting cherries inside plastic bags, lattice pie crusts, baking with kids, knotting cherry stems with your tongue, IQF (individually quick frozen fruit), and much more. And cherry pie isn't a chapter all its own, but a small part of the chapter called Summer Fruit Pies. All told there are 13 chapters in Pie. Books like Pie don't happen overnight, or even over a year of nights. Haedrich didn't apply his considerable food writing skill to a subject he simply pulled off the shelf. While the tone may be easy going, there's nothing casual here about either the task or the accomplishment. Pie represents a considerable chunk of one man's life wedged between the covers of a book. The tens of thousands of bits and pieces of valuable information, quotes, lines of poetry, not to mention the recipes and careful instruction comes from years and years of both accumulation and winnowing down to the very best. And all along, page after page, there's that implacably friendly, reassuring voice, leading, encouraging, enlightening. How often do you crack open a cookbook and wind up with a new best friend? Such is the nature of a great book. Such is the magic of Pie and Ken Haedrich. --Schuyler Ingle
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| Customer Reviews: Read 20 more reviews...
I Love Pie October 3, 2008 So many excellent and easy-to-make recipes! The author guides you through the best ways to make each pie, and even gives you hints for making it special. Read each recipe all the way through because sometimes they may take longer than anticipated... but they ALL have come out great so far. (My friends want pie every time they see me now!)
Not what I expected July 26, 2008 Not exactly what I was looking for. If you like classic pies, nothing really out of the ordinary, then you'll love it.
mmm July 20, 2008 i like pie.
this cookbook is an excellent resource vis-a-vis the aforementioned predilection.
Oh, excellent EXCELLENT! March 12, 2008 For the first time in my life I am now making completely awesome pies FROM SCRATCH. I totally won my family's thanksgiving bake-off this past holiday season.
Mmmmm, pie.
Easy As Pie February 27, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Finding a great pie anywhere is extremely difficult. In fact, it is rare that I would even ask for pie as a dessert choice because they are usually not very good. However, my hankering for pie reached a frenzy after watching the movie "Waitress". For those unfamiliar with that movie, its main character explains her feelings through coming up with creative pies. When the movie's credits began, my longing for pie took hold of me. I was convinced, after many attempts, that there was no really great pie out there, so I decided to make my own. After a great deal of research, I found this book. It is really outstanding. The writing is fun and easy to read. It is well organized and takes the stress out of baking a pie for a first timer like me. Ken makes it seem so simple that during the past month I have made over 20 pies, ranging from fruit to nut to cream pies. I took a class about baking pies, but it did not hold a candle to Ken's book. Those twenty pies have mostly been baked for other people. The joy a fresh baked pie gives to someone makes me feel like I am making a difference. People love getting homemade pies, so much so it almost brings them to tears. My husband's co-workers, people at the gym, employees at stores that I frequent, and neighbors have been the beneficiaries of most of them. The reviews have been outstanding! People have said that they are they best pies they've ever eaten. At first I thought they were just being nice, but those platitudes have come from non-pie lovers and even the most finicky eaters. People are so excited about getting pies that I just can't stop making them! I would like to say that the best place to get a great pie is my house. However, that sounds a little conceited and is not one hundred percent true. The truth is, if you want to have a great pie make one of your own using "Pie: 300 Tried and True Recipes for Delicious Home Made Pie". You will not be disappointed. The only problem is that you might not be able to eat pie at a restaurant again. On the bright side, you will always have something great to bring to a potluck, cook out or give as a gift. Pie really is the best desert out there. It combines all the best of creativity, complexity, and bakery goodness. Is it time to pity the pie? I think not. It is time to make pie! So "pie it forward"
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