1850s Mock Apple Pie - Old Cookbook Show

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  • Опубликовано: 28 июн 2024
  • 1850s Mock Apple Pie - Old Cookbook Show
    Today we take a look at the early days of the Mock Apple Pie Recipe - I suspect that many people assume that the Depression Era Ritz Cracker Mock Apple Pie is where this pie recipe originates. But it actually starts much earlier and undergoes many changes before the depression Cooking Mock Apple Pie surfaces.
    1857 Mock Apple Pie Recipe:
    Over one and a half cups of bread crumbs pour 4 cups boiling water; add one cup of sugar and one grated nutmeg, small piece of butter, large teaspoonful of tartaric acid; when cool add egg well beaten. bake with two crusts. This is an excellent substitute when apples are scarce.
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Комментарии • 271

  • @GlenAndFriendsCooking
    @GlenAndFriendsCooking  Год назад +27

    This Pie is related to the vinegar pie from a couple weeks ago: ruclips.net/video/7iP43o6SK1g/видео.html
    It's also related to the Green Tomato pie we did a few years ago: ruclips.net/video/upURd8BknNw/видео.html

    • @terichewbaccazulu5908
      @terichewbaccazulu5908 Год назад +4

      yes to the turnip experiment, by the way :)

    • @angelarex9497
      @angelarex9497 Год назад +1

      Fyi-the recipe in the description above seems to be missing the bread crumbs

    • @Mikeyt171163
      @Mikeyt171163 Год назад +1

      Hey Glen, did you see the ingredients on the label of your tartaric acid? Citric acid...?

    • @GlenAndFriendsCooking
      @GlenAndFriendsCooking  Год назад +3

      @@Mikeyt171163 Yeah super confusing - I'm told by the importer that it's Tartaric, but the label is wrong (translation issues?).

    • @znachkiznachki5352
      @znachkiznachki5352 Год назад +2

      What was your bread cube integrity at the end of the bake? I ask because you kept saying 'bread crumbs', as does the recipe, but you used bread 'cubes'. So, I wonder if the bread had been more crumby than cubey, would it have thickened more?

  • @debjordan4399
    @debjordan4399 Год назад +92

    Looking forward to the mock apple pie made with turnip. I really enjoy all your Old Cookbook Show videos.

    • @lesliemoiseauthor
      @lesliemoiseauthor Год назад

      ^^^^

    • @timothyogden9761
      @timothyogden9761 Год назад +4

      Me Too!

    • @manitobasky
      @manitobasky Год назад +6

      I’m more interested if Glen is going to use “real” turnip or a rutabaga… I know someone that makes a mock apple loaf with rutabagas and it is lets just say it is less then optimal.

    • @user-Aaron-
      @user-Aaron- Год назад +4

      ​@@manitobasky I love rutabaga and think it's actually best raw, but the ones you buy at the store are so often at least a little bit bitter when cooked that you have to expect that possibility and either like it or not mind it, or accommodate it. For that reason I can't see him using rutabaga over turnip, but I'm curious and intrigued enough to want to see him make one with both or one of each.

  • @DavidBrown-ye5xv
    @DavidBrown-ye5xv Год назад +68

    Hi Glenn in Appalachia, where I live, dried apple pies were exceedingly common in my childhood. It was a reliable way to winter over apple harvest and a great concentrated apple flavor.

  • @griffsimcox9459
    @griffsimcox9459 Год назад +82

    I Used to work with a lady who would randomly bring baked goods to work to share. One day she brought in an apple crisp ( i am a sucker for apple crisp) it was delicious. later she fessed up to there were not any apples in it. huh? she used zucchini and lemon just wanted to share :)

    • @garden333
      @garden333 Год назад +2

      Agree, it is delicious. I always make mock apple pie, and crisp in the spring. I also make a mock crap cakes with zucchini, and mock pineapple.

    • @michaelreid8857
      @michaelreid8857 Год назад +2

      Interesting use of Zucchini 😮

    • @virginiaf.5764
      @virginiaf.5764 Год назад +8

      ​@@garden333 Crap cakes?

    • @amstrad00
      @amstrad00 Год назад +1

      Yup, mock apple pie made with zucchini is an excellent way to use zucchini in a different way, which can be important if you or someone you know grew too many zucchini in the garden and you're looking for novel ways to use it all up.

    • @Lynn-kh5rs
      @Lynn-kh5rs Год назад +3

      I have a great Mock Apple Pie recipe that I got from my SIL that uses zucchini. The key for the pie is to use a zucchini that has grown to about 3-4 lbs. Once sliced and slightly cooked it had the texture of cooked apples. Spices and lemon juice add the flavor.

  • @22vinebrook10
    @22vinebrook10 Год назад +30

    When I was a teenager in the late 70’s, I made the mock apple pie recipe that was on the Ritz Cracker box. My family and I were amazed by how much it tasted like the real thing, even its appearance was “ close enough.” 😀 Have never made it since, but can still taste it. 😊

    • @Ozefan2580
      @Ozefan2580 2 месяца назад +1

      I remember seeing that recipe on the Ritz Crackers box and being absolutely fascinated. I never made it, but now wish I had.

  • @Your.Uncle.AngMoh
    @Your.Uncle.AngMoh Год назад +18

    When I see "mock apple pie", I think of a regulation pie crust, and the filling is made with chokos/chayotes and a small amount of apple cider vinegar and apple pie spice mix to replace real apples. Seeing as chokos will grow like a weed in a lot of the populated areas of Australia, many houses would have a choko vine growing on the wall of the outside toilet. A great Depression-era food when you couldn't afford apples- fresh or canned. The same went with people eating a lot of rabbit, which was- and still is- a major pest species. If your dad or brothers didn't go out trapping them, someone in your neighbourhood did. My paternal grandmother would always shudder and say "Yuck, underground mutton" at the mention of it. Having been born in 1920, I assume Grace and her seven siblings probably ate their fair share of it.
    Maybe a quarter of a teaspoon of xanthan gum as a thickener, but that wasn't invented until the 1960s. Cornstarch, or something similar that they would have had back in the mid-19th Century?
    Another great video, Glen. You, Max Miller, and B. Dylan Hollis should all get together. And rope in John Townsend while you're at it!

    • @cherylrosbak4092
      @cherylrosbak4092 Год назад

      Oh, that's an excellent use of chokos. Too bad we can get them often where I live.

  • @donnacameron4515
    @donnacameron4515 Год назад +14

    In the “Little house on the prairie” book series ma makes a mock apple pie with a cut up green pumpkin. I imagine it would be similar to the turnip use. Pa was surprised by the way. 😂😂

    • @cindyglass5827
      @cindyglass5827 Год назад

      Donna ... interesting, cute, tfs : ) !!

    • @Ozefan2580
      @Ozefan2580 2 месяца назад

      I recall that, too! There were a lot of great food ideas I those books....like using carrot scraps and squeezing them to produce just enough liquid to color their homemade butter.

  • @emilybilbow4990
    @emilybilbow4990 Год назад +13

    Let’s be honest… if you add sugar, butter and spices to most neutral tasting foods it’s going to be decent!!! Lol ❤️

  • @critterjon4061
    @critterjon4061 Год назад +15

    I love these different “mock” recipes and I hope you do more of them

  • @billcondron9967
    @billcondron9967 Год назад +3

    In the Little House books, Laura Ingalls Wilder also made several references to vinegar pie. So those have also been around long before the Great Depression.

  • @shirleyrose3279
    @shirleyrose3279 Год назад +4

    A few more breadcrumbs or a little less water maybe. I made mock apple pie with zucchini, lemon juice sugar and spices. Very close.

  • @laurietuzzato5501
    @laurietuzzato5501 Год назад +3

    Like the new eyeglass frames. Corn starch or flour might assist with thickening or less water. 1 1/2 cups possibly.
    And I love how you impart food history. You area natural teacher. Thank you.

  • @ragingblazemaster
    @ragingblazemaster Год назад +7

    That crust looks PERFECT!

  • @RonOhio
    @RonOhio Год назад +5

    I look forward to seeing it made with turnips, and I hope you will bake a pie with dried apples. My grandmother made incredible fried pies using dried apples. I can remember her slicing the apples, and placing the slices on a screen door laid on the porch roof with cheesecloth over them.

  • @The7humpwump
    @The7humpwump Год назад +8

    My favorite videos by you are the deep dive series like KFC and coke. This seems like a mini deep dive…the turnip cliff hanger has me holding my breath until the next installment

  • @OzSteve9801
    @OzSteve9801 Год назад +3

    We have a fruit in Australia called choko. They take on the taste of whatever you cook them with so they make a great extender for apple pie if you don't have enough apples. It works with rhubarb or any other fruit that you put it with and can equally be used with other vegetables if you don't have enough in a recipe. Growing up in the country in the 60's and 70's I remember lots of people had choko vines in their garden. I still see them in the supermarket but people seem to have forgotten them now fruit and vegetables can be obtained virtually all year.

  • @13c11a
    @13c11a Год назад +1

    Cinnamon in apple pie is a relatively new thing. I've noticed that all the old cookbooks I've collected call for nutmeg and no cinnamon. Incidentally, over 50 years ago I made a mock apple pie with Ritz crackers and a much better cook and baker than I argued with me at the time that I was pulling her leg. She was positive that the pie contained apples. As I remember, it was delicious and passed the taste test as being a real apple pie. The texture was identical to a real apple pie as well. Thanks very much.

  • @linkin20la
    @linkin20la Год назад +5

    Hi Glen. You should try and make a mock apple pie with chayote. I read a story once about people in Australia saying McDonald's uses chayote instead of apples in their pies. Apparently chayote takes the flavor of anything around it and it has a similar texture.

  • @julie9577
    @julie9577 Год назад

    OooOOoOOOOoooHhhhh! I'm excited about the turnip mock apple pie! Thanks for everything you do Glen!

  • @dianeb95
    @dianeb95 Год назад +7

    😂 loved the dance when Julie guessed apple! Thanks for the interesting info on the nutmeg. I may have to look for one in the store next time. I’ve only ever used the ground McCormick stuff.

    • @virginiaf.5764
      @virginiaf.5764 Год назад +2

      But I loved the sideway glance he gave to the camera after the first bite LOL.

  • @798081aa
    @798081aa Год назад

    ❤❤ We love your videos so much!! You remind me of my professors from Humber College, Ontario 🎉🎉 it’s so lovely to watch your videos and enjoy my time in the kitchen! Thank you guys so much 😊

  • @cherylgaston7229
    @cherylgaston7229 2 месяца назад +1

    Before my parents married in 1956, Mom made Dad an "apple pie" . It was years before she told him it was the mock apple/Ritz cracker pie. Long after I became an adult he was still talking about how good it was and you couldn't tell it wasnt apples.

  • @swc2019
    @swc2019 Год назад +4

    Yes! You didn't tell Julie what you made; you just let her guess! You should do that more often!

  • @hollywebster6844
    @hollywebster6844 Год назад +7

    I really enjoy the food history and experiments that you present on your channel. While it is doubtful that I will ever be moved to make a turnip pie, I will watch every video you post about such a culinary adventure!

  • @LooseChange7325
    @LooseChange7325 Год назад +3

    Happy Sunday!

  • @carbondragon
    @carbondragon Год назад +3

    I love these old historical recipes even when they're bad. Plus your cooking style encourages me to try to figure out the theory behind the stuff you make and that is useful. It's kind of amazing how a recipe can mimic another flavor in totally crazy ways. People are very adaptable.

  • @lenalyles2712
    @lenalyles2712 Год назад +3

    My mother made a mock apple pie using turnips, we didn't have a good apple or potato crop that year, but had a bumper crop of turnips. Very good flavor using cinnamon and nutmeg.

  • @jameshill2450
    @jameshill2450 Год назад +8

    Maybe the bread wasn't stale enough, that's why it's so wet. I imagine 1850s bread would have been a bit harder/denser than ours in the first place, so our day-old bread is probably closer to what they would start with and then it gets stale from there.

    • @GlenAndFriendsCooking
      @GlenAndFriendsCooking  Год назад

      It was very dry, very stale - weeks. We keep the ends of our home made bread, dry it and use it for bread pudding. Some of those chunks could have been months old.

  • @surlyogre1476
    @surlyogre1476 Год назад

    Thanks, Glen, for the tip about using a pizza stone to crisp up a bottom crust.

  • @clbudd
    @clbudd Год назад +3

    I know an older gentleman that used to make a mock apple pie from green tomatoes. I never knew the difference until he told me.

    • @GlenAndFriendsCooking
      @GlenAndFriendsCooking  Год назад +1

      Yes! we did a Green Tomato "Apple Pie" a couple of years ago: ruclips.net/video/upURd8BknNw/видео.html
      Thanks for reminding me.

  • @rabidsamfan
    @rabidsamfan Год назад +3

    Thank you for explaining nutmeg!

  • @bryanparkhurst17
    @bryanparkhurst17 Год назад +5

    I've always been fascinated with the human obsession of deriving substitutes. Sometimes the word "mock" makes a mockery of the intended dish.

  • @annies2416
    @annies2416 Год назад

    So interesting. Thanks Glen!

  • @ericbarlow6772
    @ericbarlow6772 Год назад +3

    I’m from the foothills of North Carolina and my mother recalls her grandmother (my great grandmother) taking the cores out of apples and stringing them up on her porch and drying them that way. She would take her dried apples and make pie with it. It’s interesting how technology has totally changed our culinary culture.

  • @sharlenezuhlke1561
    @sharlenezuhlke1561 Год назад +2

    I did not know that about nutmeg. Thank you!

  • @NannaCarlstedt2
    @NannaCarlstedt2 Год назад

    Thank´s Glen!

  • @just_a_stump
    @just_a_stump 8 месяцев назад

    No way! I live in Watertown! So cool!

  • @phyllisreinking4208
    @phyllisreinking4208 Год назад +3

    Can’t wait for the turnip mock apple version! I never knew turnips had that chameleon trait but I do love them boiled with lots of pepper and a spoonful of bacon grease.

  • @mnoxman
    @mnoxman Год назад +3

    Just to point out that in the 1850- 1900 there were a number of "panics" and "depressions". In 1873 there was a long depression. So it is a 'depression pie' just not the depression that is forefront in our collective memory.

  • @kusinanijunior
    @kusinanijunior Год назад

    THIS IS BRILLIANT! THANKS GLEN FOR ALL THE INFO..KEEP SAFE

  • @elmerkilred159
    @elmerkilred159 Год назад +7

    I usually use turnips in beef and vegetable soups and stews. I would have never guessed that you could use it as a sub for apples. This actually makes some logistical sense, because turnips you can leave in the ground longer than you can store apples. Apples also have to be stored higher in the root cellars because of the gas that they release forces other vegetables to ripen faster. (Its like ethylene gas or something that is used to ripen grocery store Rutgers tomatoes that are picked and shipped green).
    So, about the apples in the 1850s; You have droves of people leaving the East Coast of the U.S. to the West (Manifest Destiny, "Go West, and Grow with America...") People are heading to Westport (City of Kansas, AKA Kansas City) to take wagons across "a great desert" to Santa Fe, New Mexico, San Francisco... on the Oregon Train, Santa Fe Trail. Kansas did not have native apple trees, and anything that would have shipped into Westport would have been old or local tree varieties might not have been as great as cultivars of apples from orchards back East. Here is the problem of growing an apple from seed. 1. It takes a minimum of 8 years to grow a small fruit bearing apple tree. (most nurseries have 6 year old tree starts). 2. The seeds have to go through a process of cold moist stratification, so unless you own an Ice house, you have to really plan this out. 3. Apple trees will not survive extreme winter freezes. (They're grown mostly in hardiness zones of 7 to 6). 4. One of the reasons for a substitute of lemons may be due to the accessibility of growing citrus in places like California, Mexico/Texas, Florida. Until Westward Expansion with the rail, (post U.S. Civil War 1865 + 8 years) getting a good apple probably was a serious undertaking. 5. You can pack crates of turnips filled with dirt to travel for months, and you probably have a good substitute for apples for apple pie.(I have to see the next episode).
    Probably more of a post than you will ever read, but it got the wheels turning. Great video! Thank you!.

    • @cindyglass5827
      @cindyglass5827 Год назад +3

      Elmer ... interesting points & info, Thanks for sharing - I learn so much from reading peoples comments on here : )
      Q : How long could turnips ''last'' if packed in Dirt in the winter (as in a very cold winter) [as in a garage or shed we have] OR would they freeze ?

    • @elmerkilred159
      @elmerkilred159 Год назад +1

      @@cindyglass5827 I have had turnips grow though the winter and produce greens in raised beds. One of the storage methods for root crops in root cellars are to bury them in sand, or soil and they are supposed to store for up to 6 months. I'm guessing that Turnips would be the same. (I'm sure that there is a learning curve to it).

    • @cindyglass5827
      @cindyglass5827 Год назад

      @@elmerkilred159 Hmmm, ... ok : ) Thank-you !

    • @hecate235
      @hecate235 Год назад

      Another thing is if you grow apples from seed, you have no idea what you're going to get. Apples don't "breed" true, the varieties we love are all cuttings (clones) from an original tree. Every apple seed is a shot in the dark, but that's why there are so many varieties.

  • @sus1221
    @sus1221 Год назад +3

    I'm so glad you're going to try the turnip version. Looking forward to that video!

  • @fefelarue2948
    @fefelarue2948 Год назад +2

    I use Cream of Tartar for my lemons desserts; it extends the citrus flavor.

  • @Beehashe
    @Beehashe Год назад +4

    That’s half a Townsends worth of nutmeg!

  • @srice6231
    @srice6231 Год назад +2

    Turnips are also an easy thing to grow in a garden! Plus they do not have a lot of carbs....although the sugar and crust do.😂 I look forward to your making this with turnips!

  • @johnnydonaldcarr1847
    @johnnydonaldcarr1847 2 месяца назад

    Interesting idea

  • @DeliaLee8
    @DeliaLee8 Год назад +2

    omg - I learned so much today! -- tartaric acid/cream of tartar, that the aril on the nutmeg is mace (and is beautiful). Thanks for another great video. PS hmmm....turnip? I look forward to what you find out. :)

  • @ThornAndel
    @ThornAndel Год назад

    That was interseting, I learned somethng today. Thanks.

  • @Suree.Lifestyle
    @Suree.Lifestyle Год назад

    January through March is peak for Florida citrus. By the 1870s, there were railroads everywhere, and the transcontinental railway was completed in 169

  • @Minnesota_Mama_Bear
    @Minnesota_Mama_Bear Год назад

    Interesting 💚🤘

  • @richardcummings7079
    @richardcummings7079 4 месяца назад

    My grandmother made mock apple pie for us when i was a kid in the early 50's. I have her hand written recipe.

  • @ladylilac4363
    @ladylilac4363 Год назад +3

    This is so interesting! Can you try the Ritz one too. I remember the recipe on the box as a child and thought it was so strange lol.

  • @CookingwithCatLover0330
    @CookingwithCatLover0330 Год назад

    Turnups? Interesting. I may need to make this pie. Thank you.

  • @cathyconklin5135
    @cathyconklin5135 Год назад

    My family is from water town! Wow❤

  • @elmerkilred159
    @elmerkilred159 Год назад +1

    I'm really liking this 1850s theme!

  • @seano4977
    @seano4977 Год назад

    Half a nutmeg? John Townsend is going to love this. 🤣

  • @stillhuntre55
    @stillhuntre55 Год назад +2

    As someone who can't eat apple, the mock apple that's been working for me is rhubarb and zucchini

  • @brutus1119
    @brutus1119 Год назад +2

    My grandmother used to have a recipe for Apple pie made wholly or partially with chokos. They have a very similar texture to Apple when cooked and little taste of their own. They used to grow in back yards everywhere, usually over a fence or a shed. I've looked everywhere but I can't find the recipe ☹

    • @virginiaf.5764
      @virginiaf.5764 Год назад +1

      There are quite a few recipes for chayote (choko) pies online. I'm sure you could find one similar to your grandmother's.

  • @beverlycosgrove8827
    @beverlycosgrove8827 Год назад

    my mother used to make a mock apple pie, using choko& tartaric acid..as choko"s don,t have much flavour, but did look like apple when cut up in slices.choko,s were easy to grow , most familys had a vine growing over the back fence. back in the 50s 60s in australia.

  • @asdisskagen6487
    @asdisskagen6487 Год назад

    I love the history lesson mixed in with interesting recipes and a relaxing cooking video. Better entertainment than Hollywood puts out 😂

  • @christinasteyer8980
    @christinasteyer8980 Год назад

    Can't wait for the turnip pie!!

  • @aslandus
    @aslandus Год назад +1

    I assume one of the tricks with this sort of mock apple pie is that most of the flavor people associate with "apple pie" comes from the spices, not the fruit itself, so replacing the fruit with... Well, basically anything that can get the right texture and the right profile of acidity and sweetness is a relatively simple way to make an "apple" pie even when apples aren't available.

  • @DunyahDances
    @DunyahDances Год назад +1

    I think I agree with the chef who said this pie should stay in the 1850s. Nutritionally it's a big zero. Still, a very interesting video and I enjoyed watching and learning.

  • @williamthomson638
    @williamthomson638 2 месяца назад

    Good old Johnny Applebee's. 😊

  • @ragingblazemaster
    @ragingblazemaster Год назад

    My favorite part of Sunday morning! Hi friends!

  • @david.mcmahan
    @david.mcmahan 6 месяцев назад

    Zucchini can make a very convincing mock apple pie especially if you get the spices right.

  • @kajellio
    @kajellio Год назад

    I grew up in Watertown, NY! It's fun to see when it gets mentioned in different places.

  • @rt3box6tx74
    @rt3box6tx74 Год назад

    I once found a chuckwagon cook's recipe for Ritz cracker pie.

  • @Lynn-kh5rs
    @Lynn-kh5rs Год назад

    The best Mock Apple Pie I've ever had my SIL served me. It used an over large zucchini. The zucchini was one that was missed in the garden and had grown to about 3-4 lbs. Since the flesh was so thick once it was cut it looked liked apple slices in the pie. I believe it used lemon juice for the acid. Like you mentioned with the turnips, the zucchini took on the flavors of the spices put into the pie. The taste and texture really did mimic an apple pie.

  • @Bojambo
    @Bojambo Год назад +1

    I asked ChatGPT about the cookbook title, because I was confused:
    The title "Cook not Mad" can indeed be puzzling at first glance, but it can be understood better when considering the historical context and language usage of the time. The cookbook, officially titled "The Cook Not Mad, or Rational Cookery," was published in 1831 in both the United States and Canada. It is recognized as the first cookbook published in Canada.
    The title "Cook not Mad" can be interpreted as suggesting that the cook (or the person preparing the food) is not mad or irrational, but rather sensible and logical in their approach to cooking. The term "mad" was used in the 19th century to describe someone who was deemed insane or irrational. The title essentially implies that the recipes and techniques presented within the cookbook are practical, rational, and grounded in common sense.
    In essence, the title is an early marketing tactic, meant to attract potential readers by asserting that the cookbook offers sound, reasonable advice for cooking, as opposed to the potentially irrational or overly complicated methods that may have been present in other cookbooks or culinary practices of the time.

    • @GlenAndFriendsCooking
      @GlenAndFriendsCooking  Год назад +2

      Ha! Even ChatGPT is promoting the myth that it was the first cookbook published in Canada... It wasn't.

  • @carolwilliams7052
    @carolwilliams7052 Год назад +2

    Do you have "The American Woman's Cookbook" ed. by Berholzheimer (sp)? It really is based on a good deal of French cooking. There are many copies out there, but sales listings don't always indicate the publishing date. My 2 copies (one was my mom's; the other, my aunt's) were both published during WW2 and have a very functional section at the back regarding recipes with alternatives to rationed foods (example: lima bean loaf). If you're going to seek a copy, be sure to think about getting one of those !!!

  • @Magius61
    @Magius61 Год назад

    I have heard legends in my area of a mock apple pie that employed turnips as the base.

  • @paulbeaudet8461
    @paulbeaudet8461 Год назад +1

    I wonder if the disapearance of "depression" recipes as the depression starts is due the techology to refigerate and store fresh foods longer became widespread at the same time.

  • @Tiger351
    @Tiger351 Год назад

    Interesting that you mentioned Turnips and McDonald Apple pies, here in Australia they're disparagingly called "Hot Choko pies" as it was found that up to 80% of the filling locally back in the 80's was in fact Choko with added "Apple flavour".

  • @joanneholinaty7325
    @joanneholinaty7325 Год назад

    Hi we always use zucchini for mock Apple pie. Thank you for all that you do we love you show

  • @ColinLeuze
    @ColinLeuze Год назад

    Yay! After one of your videos, we did 'A Cook Not Mad' for cookbook club- in Watertown, NY. Great book.

  • @sandrafournier8196
    @sandrafournier8196 Год назад

    Thank you for taking the time to share your knowledge.

  • @joanneentwistle7653
    @joanneentwistle7653 Год назад +2

    Have you tried some of the recipes in the Canadian Settler's Guide by Catherine Parr Trail? It is not strictly a cookbook but does have some recipes in it

  • @revlorebg2
    @revlorebg2 Год назад

    In the Little house Books, Ma makes mock apple pie out of green pumpkin. I always appreciate your take on these old recipes and l learn a lot of history this way.

  • @larry1873
    @larry1873 Год назад

    good

  • @LukeEdward
    @LukeEdward Год назад

    Fresh nutmeg is so much the key to great taste! Anyone who buys nutmeg ready ground doesn’t know what they’re missing.

  • @heatherandrews1780
    @heatherandrews1780 Год назад

    Maybe you could add a cornstarch slurry to thicken it.

  • @shortsweettoo
    @shortsweettoo Год назад

    😊😊

  • @bokkenka
    @bokkenka Год назад

    I have a few apple trees in my yard. I pick a couple bushels every fall. I wrap them in newspaper and store them in milk crates in the root cellar. I still have a bunch from last fall. I wouldn't eat them like a fresh apple, but they are fine baked. I just had a couple yesterday with my pancakes.

    • @michaelreid8857
      @michaelreid8857 Год назад

      I would suggest making some apple compote with them.
      Ready to use on top of Pancakes, or as an Apple Crisp!

  • @andrewclarke106
    @andrewclarke106 Год назад

    Choko or chayote or pear squash, whatever you might call it is what I've always know as a common accompaniment with apples to make apple pie

  • @laurajohnson2674
    @laurajohnson2674 Год назад

    Whaaaat??? Turnips??? I never knew this. And the nutmeg vs mace thing either. So fun to watch and learn from you.

  • @crystalwright1504
    @crystalwright1504 Год назад

    I found it interesting that he mocks the pie but continues on with instructions for what I assume is mock capers using nasturtium buds...? I love these discussions, Glen. Thanks for all of your hard, time-consuming research on our behalf.

  • @Halak014
    @Halak014 Год назад

    Turnip sound like it will be an cool revisit of this

  • @cleementine
    @cleementine Год назад

    Laura Ingalls Wilder made reference to an apple pie made without apples (I don't quite remember what was used instead, ) in one of her "Little House on the Prairie” books.

  • @pennymcdonald1723
    @pennymcdonald1723 Год назад +1

    I think choko would be a good substitute.

  • @rebeccaturner5503
    @rebeccaturner5503 Год назад

    Dried apples take up a lot less storage room and can last for 2 years. And as you said they keep better in warmer climates

  • @wildtwindad
    @wildtwindad Год назад

    It took a cultural change paired with a big competition to produce edible apple varieties, as it was only recently historically that apples for human consumption, not animal feed/booze production were raised.

  • @SurfDetector
    @SurfDetector Год назад +2

    At 4:16 I was interested to see on the label of the Tartaric acid jar, the ingredient was listed as Citric Acid.

    • @stephaneethier
      @stephaneethier Год назад

      I was a bit surprised to see that, too! I know that both these carboxylic acids are loosely related (tartaric acid is a derivative of succinic acid, which is part of the citric acid cycle), and they’re both found in citrus, but they’re not the same…

    • @JimLambier
      @JimLambier Год назад +1

      Citric acid is also sold as dishwasher cleaner. So could this recipe be called "dishwasher cleaner pie"?

    • @jill552
      @jill552 Год назад +1

      It’s a mock tartaric acid. Goes with the mock apple pie.

    • @annethomson4920
      @annethomson4920 Год назад

      ​@@JimLambier yikes 😂

  • @marilyn1228
    @marilyn1228 Год назад

    I'm stoked about you using the turnip.

  • @JDoors
    @JDoors Год назад

    My Mom made an apple pie ... or so I thought. I overheard the adults talking about how it was a "mock" apple pie and from context I understood "mock" meant there were no apples! What? It was an apple pie! It looked like an apple pie, it tasted like an apple pie ... I overheard it was made with Ritz crackers and I sneaked into the kitchen to find and read the recipe on the Ritz cracker box. I wouldn't have believed it if I hadn't read it myself (I'm nerdy). Never had it since and I don't know if it would fool grown-up me, but that. was. an. apple. pie. 😄

  • @HarryRutherford
    @HarryRutherford Год назад +1

    The British in India used unripe mangoes to make ‘apple’ pies.

  • @Silverstiletto
    @Silverstiletto Год назад

    I would also be tempted to put in a package a gelatin.

  • @BlackFrostQueen
    @BlackFrostQueen Год назад

    I look forward to the turnip video. This recipe was very interesting.

  • @tanshihus1
    @tanshihus1 Год назад

    Instead of the turnip, you should consider using sliced Daikon. Been thinking about trying it since the vinegar pie last week. Haven't made my mind up about using fresh or pickled.

  • @superomgcheese
    @superomgcheese Год назад

    This was a great episode. It's this kind of thing that made me interested in the channel and why I keep checking back for more. The experiments where you are either trying to replicate something (Coke or KFC recipes), or an old, interesting, recipe where some effort is made to actually reproduce the true original recipe, as is, and results be dammed, is fascinating. That said, I'm curious about the results with the turnip. Some good general cooking advice in this one too.
    Enjoyed it. 👍