Tags: Dessert, Meringue, Nigella, Nigella Slater, Pie, Rhubarb, Shortcrust Pastry
Mar 8th, 2009 by paul
This is the time of year when forced rhubarb starts to make an appearance. I thought this recipe looked like an interesting one to cook – three distinct parts – pastry, filling and meringue. This is a quick recipe in that the constituent parts are quick. However, you need to allow extra time to cool ingredients and blind bake. Even so, it was easy to prepare this in parallel with cooking a main course. This meant I could pop the prepared pie into the oven to bake whilst we ate the main course.
Short Crust Pastry
Normally, to make short crust pastry, you mix together plain flour with half it’s weight of fat (butter, lard or vegetable substitute like Trex) and bind it together with a little water (just as much as needed to make it clump together into one ball).
However, inspired by a great comment made by, Rob, in response to my banana bread, I opted to use a Nigella recipe (from How to Eat) where the water is substituted for the juice of half an orange. In fact, it was because the recipe did this that I wanted to try it.
Remember, you can vary the amount of pastry you make to suit the size tin you have. This recipe had a very thin pastry base – I’d have liked it a little thicker. I suggest you make half as much pastry again if you’d like a thicker base to your pie.
I blitzed together the flour, fat and salt, before slowly adding the juice until the pastry bound together.
Nigella prefers to do the following:
I tried Nigella’s suggestion of rolling the pastry between two sheets of cling film (to cut down on mess and make the pastry easier to handle. However, I felt this was more hassle that it was worth – the cling film kept splitting into shreds which I had to pick out of the pastry.
Use the rolled pastry to line a greased 20cm pie tin.
Cover the pastry with tin foil or baking paper and add baking beads (or dried pulses as a substitute) to stop the pastry rising in the oven. Bake for 15 minutes.
Remove from the oven, remove the foil/baking paper and beads from the tin. Then use more foil/baking paper to cover the edges of the proto-pie (to stop them burning) and put back into the over for another 12 minutes.
Rhubarb Filling
• 800g rhubarb
• Juice of the other ½ of the orange used to make pastry
• 2 tbsp plain flour
• 2 egg yolks
• 150g caster sugar
• 30g melted butter
This makes a lovely light sharp filling, with the rhubarb pretty much unadulterated. The rich egg yolk mixture sets the filling.
Meringue
I’m not a fan of pavlova but love soft gooey meringues, hot out of the oven.
This was a truly lovely pie. The orange in the pastry was subtle, but did make it beautifully light and fruity. The rhubarb filling was sharp and refreshing, with a lovely curd like texture – semi-set and gooey. The light sugary sweet soft meringue complemented tartness of the rhubarb and the subtle orange pastry set the whole thing off wonderfully.
Pie Debate:
After finding out that I’d missed national pie week, I’ve been researching pie technology a bit more. Now I may need to reconsider what I define a pie to be. I would say that this rhubarb meringue pie is a Pie because it has a pastry base and meringue lid to seal in the filling. So a pie has to have a pastry base (ruling out anything with just a pastry/potato top) with a lid to seal in the goodness.
I was really excited when you posted this – I suddenly remembered my mum making it when I was younger and I couldn’t wait to give it a go. This weekend we were babysitting my dad so I thought I’d take advantage of their nice big kitchen and do some cooking. It tasted amazing, the sharp rhubarb and sweet meringue work really well. It didn’t look quite as good as yours though – I don’t think I beat the egg whites enough so it ended up a bit flat and deflated. Oh well, will just have to try it again…
I’ve got plenty of the first 2009 rhubarb from my garden and I was tired of crumble so I wanted to try something different. Not very fan of meringue but I gave this recipe a try and although it tastes delicious and the rhubarb flavour it’s amazing, I think this pie it’s chunky and too sweet for my taste . I’ll need to do an extra workout tomorrow to burn it!
I’d like something lighter but I guess with rhubarb as ingredient it won’t be easy.