|
++++++++++++++
Prepared Pantry
Bread Mixes
Home Page
Almond Recipes
Popcorn
Recipes
Brownie
Recipes
Easy Bake Oven
2 Ingred. Fudge
Cabbage Recipes
Homemade Gifts
Gift Jar Recipes
Recipes/Cake Mixes
Meat loaf
Recipes
Deviled Egg
Easter Recipes
Newsletter Archive
Download Free
Cookbooks
Top 100 Recipe Sites
Join The E-Cookbooks
Library for Only $19.99
(Lifetime Membership)
Email Me
Prepared Pantry
Audrey's
Blog
Pet Treats
Pet Recipes
|
How to Make Amazing Turnover Pies


To Print
out only the recipe highlight it with your mouse, right
click on the highlighted recipe. Choose the option PRINT.
Change the Print Range from ALL to SELECTION. Press the PRINT
button on the screen.
How to Make Amazing Little
Pies
As teenagers, my friends and I would wander to the
corner store after school and before the bus came. We were ravenous by
3:30 but I only remember buying two things: ice cream sandwiches and those
scrumptious little turnover pies. I only bought berry and lemon. Lemon
was my favorite. I think Hostess® made them.
I
now work for The Prepared Pantry where we have a test kitchen and
develop really good stuff like this. After talking about these little
pies, we decided that we wanted a copycat recipe—something just as good as
the pies we remember as kids and easy to make. So we went to work in our
test kitchen. We expected the fruit filling pies to be easy; we weren’t
so sure about lemon and other pudding fillings.
We were surprised how easy they were—even the
pudding-filled pies. The consensus was that they were much better than
the originals. Every batch was inhaled by our testers.
And they really are easy to make. The dough is easy
(you can even use premade dough from the store) and the filling is simply
pudding made from store mixes or canned pie filling from the store. Even
instant pudding works.
You only need three things to make
these scrumptious little pies . . .
You’ll need a filling. Most cooked pie
fillings work. Fruit pie fillings work. Cream pie fillings work.
Uncooked pie fillings such as custard, including pumpkin, do not work.
You’ll need a dough for the crust. Any pie
crust recipe or dough will work. Our favorite was a recipe for a sour
cream crust and we’ll include that recipe later.
And
you’ll need a dough press. Actually, you can get by without a dough
press but it helps, especially when using puddings for fillings. The
dough press cups the dough leaving a bowl in which to place your filling.
And it makes folding and sealing easy.
. . . and four steps.
There are four easy steps to making your pies: roll
out the dough, add the filling, bake the pies, and glaze them. It’s easy
and it doesn’t take long.
Step 1—roll and cut the dough: Roll the dough
out until it is no thicker than 1/4 inch—a little thinner is perfect.
Using your dough press or a lid from a pan, cut the dough into six-inch
circles.
Step
2—Add the filling: For the filling, use either a fruit filling—a
commercially canned one works fine—or pudding for a cream filling. We
used Jell-O® brand pudding mixes in both instant and cooked varieties.
Both worked. The cooked pudding seemed to set up a little more. The
cooked pudding is less likely to leak during baking if you cool it for an
hour before using it.
We made lemon turnovers, banana cream turnovers, and
chocolate turnovers as well as fruit-filled turnovers.
Place a dough circle on the dough press. The dough
will follow the bowl-shaped contour of the press. Place 1/4 cup filling
in the formed bowl. Brush the edges of the dough with a little water to
help create a seal. Using the dough press, fold the dough over to make a
turnover and press firmly to seal. (A good seal is necessary so that the
filling does not leak out.) Repeat with the other circles.
Step 3—Bake the pies: Place the turnovers on
a lightly greased baking sheet and bake in your preheated oven at 375
degrees for 15 minutes or until lightly golden. Remove the pan from the
oven and remove the turnovers to a wire rack to cool for 15 minutes.
Step 4—Glaze the pies: Make a glaze from
powdered sugar and water. One cup powdered sugar is about right for this
size recipe. Add enough water, about 1 1/2 tablespoons, to reach
drizzling consistency and brush the glaze on the tops of the turnovers
while still warm.
Fruit filled turnovers can be served warm. Cream
filled turnovers should be cooled to let the filling become firmer. Most
cream filled turnovers should be refrigerated.
Oh, and that sour cream crust recipe we
promised . . .
We have used this recipe for piroshki, pies, and
turnovers. It is excellent, makes a very workable dough, and is not
difficult. It’s a perfect, pastry-like dough for these little pies.
3-1/2 cups flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon granulated sugar
1/2 cup cold butter
2 large eggs
1 cup sour cream
1. Sift the flour, baking powder, salt,
and sugar into a bowl. Cut the butter into 1/2-inch cubes and add it to
the flour. Cut the butter into the flour with a pastry knife until it is
the consistency of oatmeal.
2. In another bowl, whisk the eggs and
sour cream together until it is smooth.
3. Add the egg mixture to the flour
mixture and stir into a mass. Remove the dough ball to a floured counter
and knead just until smooth so as not to develop the gluten in the flour.
Cover the dough ball and chill it in the refrigerator for an hour.
There you have it, an easy way to make amazingly good
little turnover pies.
You can
get the dough press used in this article for only $1.00—less
than half price--at the Prepared Pantry.
Dennis Weaver is the author of
How to Bake, a 250 page baking book
available free online. The Prepared Pantry sells
over 50 bread machine mixes,
ingredients, and kitchen supplies.
Copyright The Prepared Pantry and
Dennis Weaver, 2008. Used with permission.
Top 100 Recipe Sites
Return to Home Page

CLICK HERE
to respond to newsletter replies, requests and tips. Please
include date of newsletter, name of recipe and number of servings.
Remember to include your name within the message as well.
Favorite recipes/links of
our members
Mom's
Macaroni & Cheese
Inside
Out Cake
Corn Dog Casserole
Blasted Chicken
The Best
Spaghetti Sauce You'll Ever Eat
Indescribably Delicious Banana Bread
Hummingbird Cake
Orange Soak Cake
by Tona in Bama
Snickerdoodle
Recipe by Prepared Pantry
Lemonade Dessert by
Annette
Cake Mix Cookies
Angel Food
Variations
Honey or
Cinnabon Cake
Dreamsicle Cake
sent in by Terry
Baked Beans with
Pineapple (Crockpot)
Orange Sunshine
Cake
Peanut Butter
Swirl Brownies
Grape Salad
Life and Times of Sigmund
Freud Kitty (Told in his own words)
Newsletter index.
Join our recipe exchange family today
Enter your email address below and click the 'YahooGroups' button to
sign up for for our free recipe exchange newsletter. It is sent each day
except Thursday
CLICK HERE
to respond to newsletter replies, requests and tips. Please include date of newsletter,
name of recipe and number of servings. Remember to include your name
within the message as well.

|