{"id":2945,"date":"2010-08-09T09:02:57","date_gmt":"2010-08-09T16:02:57","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/shescookin.com\/?p=2945"},"modified":"2013-09-14T15:31:47","modified_gmt":"2013-09-14T22:31:47","slug":"strawberry-rhubarb-pie","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/shescookin.com\/strawberry-rhubarb-pie\/","title":{"rendered":"Let them eat pie!"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"Strawberry<\/a><\/p>\n

Well, that’s NOT what she said! And Marie Antoinette probably wouldn’t have said that because working class folks have been eating pie since the days of the ancient Egyptians, according to the research I’ve read on the origins of pie<\/a>. Recipes for pie came over on the Mayflower, their ancestors being the English tart (one crust) whose pastry was a staple ingredient of Medieval kitchens. The pie served as a baking dish, storage container, and serving dish all in one. The first pies were very simple and generally the savory kind (meat and cheese). Pies traveled well and all manner of pies have been made for individual consumption – these portable pies: pasties, turnovers, empanadas, pierogi, calzones,\u00a0 have been enjoyed by working classes\u00a0 and sold by street vendors over the ages.<\/p>\n

\"rhubarbstalks\"<\/a><\/p>\n

In case you’re not familiar with rhubarb<\/a>, it is a vegetable with stalks similar to celery and was originally cultivated in the New England area.<\/p>\n

Rhubarb pie<\/strong> is particularly popular in those areas where the\u00a0 plant is commonly cultivated, including the British Isles and the New England region of the U.S. Besides diced rhubarb, it almost always contains a large amount of sugar to balance the intense tartness of the plant. In Canada and the United States, strawberry-rhubarb pie<\/em><\/strong> is a popular late-spring pie, generally combining the last rhubarb of the season with the first of the strawberries.<\/p>\n

The Don, being a Yankee and New Englander born in upstate New York, was reminiscing about yanking stalks of rhubarb from amidst the giant green leaves and chomping on the crunchy, tart sticks and decided to plant a couple of rhubarb plants in our garden. Now that the plant, with its platter-size leaves was overcoming my herbs, he asked The Young Baker for a Strawberry-Rhubarb pie like his Gran used to make.<\/p>\n

To make one like Gran, we referred to the tried and true cookbook of Gran’s era – The Fannie Farmer Cookbook.\u00a0 Fannie Farmer (1857-1915), author of the Boston Cooking School Book, was a household word and the voice of authority during that era. Her book was so prized that it was something one could put confidently into the hands of a bride. First published in 1896, my husband brought into our marriage the 1984 edition.\u00a0 To me this venerated cookbook of family favorites of that time period is to American cooking as Julia Child’s Art of the French Cooking is to French cooking.\u00a0 We used the basic pie pastry recipe from The Fannie Farmer Cookbook <\/a>and the filling was adapted from a Food Network recipe<\/a>.<\/p>\n

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