Showing posts with label sweet potato pie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sweet potato pie. Show all posts

Monday, December 2, 2013

Guest Piper Huguley with Aunt Cee's Sweet Potato Pie

Jan here, and I'm so pleased to introduce you to Piper, our guest in the Cafe's kitchen today!

Take it away, Piper....


Aunt Cee’s Sweet Potato Pie



Look!  The chair is empty and the remote control has been abandoned!  It’s the one time of the year that DH is in the kitchen—he makes sweet potato pie for us!

Hello!  I’m thrilled to guest in the Yankee-Belle CafĂ© today.  A few months ago, I mentioned on Facebook that my husband makes his sweet potato pie for us for the holidays.  Jan asked me to share it with you.  I am happy to do so.  A word of warning though:  this is my husband’s recipe.  I will come in and try to clarify as I can!


This recipe makes 4 pies.
I told you, this was a man’s recipe. Aunt Cee was not a man, but she made a lot of pie.




Ingredients:

Sweet potatoes (8 or 9 medium sized ones)
Cinnamon (3 teaspoons)
A big bag of sugar (3 ½ to 4 cups about 2 pounds, but I always buy a new 5 lb. bag)
Nutmeg (2 teaspoons)
1 stick of butter (This is the same, ½ cup of butter, softened)
1 can of evaporated milk (Yes, the whole can—12 ounces)
3 eggs (No clarification needed here!)
Vanilla extract  (3 teaspoons.  It doesn't matter if it is pure or imitation vanilla extract)
4 regular sized graham cracker crusts or 3 of the larger sized graham cracker crusts

Directions:

Have your wife boil the sweet potatoes.  Go back to the comfy striped chair and watch SportsCenter or better yet, the James Bond Marathon.

(I get my biggest dutch oven pot and fit the potatoes down into it. Don’t be afraid to cut them if you need to, but keep the size of the potatoes in the medium range.  The larger potatoes don’t have the sweetness and have more fibers in them!  Cover with cold water and boil the potatoes until your sharpest knife slides easily through each potato. This can take up to two hours.)

Your wife should line up everything to put into the bowl with the cooked sweet potatoes:


When the potatoes are done, while they are unpeeled,  run cold water over them.  This makes them easier to handle, but you don’t want them to get cold.  Fold up two or three  wadded up paper towels to grab the slightly cooled potato to peel  away skins with a paring knife.  The skins come off easily because of the boiling process.  Put the potatoes into a big bowl (or if you have a mixer like Thor, he can do this job as well. It would be a little overwhelming for Miss Edna.) Throw the skins away.



Pour the entire can of evaporated milk in the bowl.

Put the stick of softened butter in the bowl

Crack the three eggs in the bowl with the mixture.  So in the bowl, you have potatoes, milk, butter and eggs. 

Now.

Call in your husband.  Make sure nothing important is on tv, but it is a crucial time, because the potatoes need to remain hot. 

If you don’t have Thor the mixer to take care of this next step, then you can use a hand mixer.  If the potatoes are hot, the “strings” of the sweet potatoes will come off on the beaters rather than stay in with the pie. 

Start mixing.  While mixing, have your wife put in the sugar, a cup at a time, the vanilla, sprinkle the cinnamon and nutmeg in.  Put in 3 ½ cups of sugar and taste.

(Umm. This is disgusting because of the raw eggs and salmonella danger, but DH swears by this step.  It lets him know if we have a sweet batch of potatoes, and if you need the other ½ cup of sugar or not.  Whatever, I would just put in the 4 cups and take my chances.)

The mixture should look like this:



Note the color.  There is something about the color that is the Holy Grail, DH says.  I am not sure what it is, but I took a picture of it to show you.  Also note: someone watched a little too much of Dr. No or something because the mixture is a little lumpier than usual.  That’s okay, it will still be good, but it is a warning not to let the potatoes cool too much!

Go back and finish Dr. No and hope you didn’t miss the part with Ursula Andress in it. 

Divide the mixture between your 4 pie shells.  You want a nice high pie. It takes about 4 big cooking-spoon sized spoonfuls to fill the pie shells.  Spread the mixture with the spatula in each pie to even it out for baking.  If you have a little extra you can still divide it between the 4 pie shells.  It won’t spill over. 

You can also make sweet potatoes pancakes or muffins or bread with the extra, but I do like all the mixture to go into the pies. Sometimes we give the pies as gifts and you want people to see they’ve received a nice-sized pie. 

Put the four pies into a 350 degree oven.  They take about an hour and a half to cook.  The top should be set firm with a little slight browning on top.  If you take them out too soon, the filling will crack. It will be good, but who wants a cracked pie top?  See here:



That little browned part in the middle of the pie let’s you know it is done.  If you don’t like the looks of it, you can pull it off and taste it.  Ahhh.  It’s cooked now. 

Let the pies cool in the refrigerator.  The plastic shell that came with the crusts makes a nice cover for the pie once you remove all the paper and the glue inside of it. Just top with a bow for gift giving. 



My Dad got a little sneak peek—he deserves it! 

Merry Christmas and Enjoy! 

Jan here again. Don't those pies look fabulous? And here's a bit about our guest:

Piper G Huguley is the author of Migrations of the Heart, a five-book series of inspirational historical romances set in the early 20th century featuring African American characters.  Book four in the series, A Champion’s Heart, was a Golden Heart finalist in 2013.  Book one in her new historical series Home to Milford College was a semi-finalist in Harlequin’s So You Think You Can Write contest.  
She blogs about the history behind her novels at http://piperhuguley.com. She lives in Atlanta, Georgia with her husband and son. 

Saturday, November 23, 2013

Thanksgiving: Messing with Tradition or Not

I am trying to keep the Christmas decorations in the closet until after Thanksgiving. But it has been tough. I've been weakening since Labor Day. Not. Well, maybe I've been humming Christmas carols just a little.

Looks like someone tried to turn a Christmas nativity into a Thanksgiving scene. The seasons are blurring.

Still, Thanksgiving is my favorite time of the year. Something about the food coma, family, football, the endless variations of pumpkin pie.  I used to add the start of Christmas movies to my list but those have been going on for a while now too. Yes, I've indulged.



Yep, this is upside down for a reason. Reading a new biography of Rockwell kind of turned me upside down when it came to what I knew about the famous artist and his time.

With all the talk about stores opening on Thanksgiving (ugh, I prefer the after meal walk outside, not walk around the mall) and reading a new biography about Norman Rockwell, I've been thinking about what a "traditional" Thanksgiving really means. Many folks are familiar with his "Freedom from Want" poster featuring a family around a table eagerly awaiting the turkey Grandma is about to set down. Folks take as the representation of a traditional Thanksgiving. When you read the background on Rockwell, you realize how nontraditional he was in real life. 

I know people eat strange things at Thanksgiving and have weird superstitions when it comes to football. Come on, confess.
I grew up going to Grandma's house or visiting my parents' and in laws after we were married. Then my son started having kids. We have rotated between his in laws, his house and ours the past years. Over the years, we've added new must-have dishes to our Thanksgiving feast like my daughter in law's stellar apple pie. It sits beside the green bean casserole, sweet potato casserole, little sweet pickles and olives my mom always had, my mother in law's rolls, ManO's carrots and the turkey.

But sadly, my grandson refuses to eat his mom's apple pie. He is a pumpkin traditionalist and he's only five years old. And his sister follows his lead. So their mommy made a pumpkin pie from a real pumpkin and now they look at her in awe. Another new tradition was born for this holiday season.

What are must haves for Thanksgiving dinner? I checked with friends.  What a list!

  • Two kinds of stuffing (bread or cornbread) was mentioned several times. That one made me chuckle because my mom used both in her recipe.
  • Don't ask people about cranberry relish because everyone's mama has a different recipe. Virginia has cranberry-orange relish like my mom made.  Some folks just hide the Ocean Spray cranberry can or call it "turkey jello" like my friend Kelly's family does.
  • Pie! It's not just pumpkin.  It's sweet potato pecan, peanut butter, lemon meringue. Missy's pecan pie was featured yesterday in Yankee Belle.
  • Pasta shows up at quite a few homes with Italian roots. Lasagna at one. Homemade ravioli at another. And then there was Mary Connealy's family who has spaghetti instead of turkey sandwiches on Thanksgiving night. I wouldn't expect anything less from her brood.
  • Pintos and cornbread, creamed corn, and other veggies are served as much to honor a departed loved one as anything.

Some even spare the turkey. Gasp! And go with ham!

My dad and his wife have a flock of wild turkeys who visit daily to be fed. How do they look them in the eye?
So, what is your Thanksgiving Traditional Dish That MUST be served? Have you ever had an nontraditional Thanksgiving meal or dish and have it flop? Or did a new tradition start?