Mini pie! Though they can be a bit tough to find, I love my mini, 7-inch pie plates. I have two, actually: one in the classic heron pattern used by Tai’s Uncle Charlie at Hog Bay Pottery, and one deep-dish 7-inch by Emile Henry that I snagged years ago at a little shop in Bedford Village. And they are not so mini, really: a quarter of the pie is still a hefty serving, and with ice cream the pie could easily serve six. But somehow, a mini pie is much less daunting than a full pie: a mere pound of fruit makes a nicely stuffed mini pie, you can almost eyeball the sugar & cornstarch you need for the filling, and I can nearly always round up enough pastry dough scraps in the freezer to make it work.
Since someone (raises hand sheepishly) in the household enjoys making pie much more than eating it, a mini pie makes sense: there’s only one of us eating it, and unless friends pop by, it’s hard for even my pie-loving husband to go through an entire 9-inch pie in a couple of days. Though he did inquire last night, in a hopeful tone as he was eating pie for dinner, “Rhubarb is a vegetable, right?”
According the to Official Local Kitchen Pie Tester, this little rhubarb pie is cool and refreshing, with just enough sweetness to take the edge off of the tart rhubarb, but not so much that it makes pie too heavy in the hot, humid, Augusty weather we’ve been (not) enjoying. If you, like me, find yourself without air conditioning in your Augusty kitchen, you may need to take some breaks in rolling & shaping the pie dough to let it chill and firm up in the fridge before you can finish. More time for rosé over ice and lime popsicles, I say. Happy weekend, friends!
Crust & filling adapted from Pure Rhubarb Pie in The Pie & Pastry Bible by Rose Levy Beranbaum
SPECIAL EQUIPMENT
- 7-inch pie plate
INGREDIENTS
- one recipe Flaky Cream Cheese Pie Crust
- ⅔ cup raw sugar
- 1 heaping tbsp cornstarch
- 1 lb rhubarb, washed, trimmed and sliced to ½-inch pieces
- zest of 1 lemon
- pinch salt
- Make pastry dough and chill for at least 1 hour, preferably overnight.
- In a medium bowl, combine sugar and cornstarch; whisk briskly until well combined. Add rhubarb, lemon zest and salt. Stir to coat rhubarb in sugar and allow to macerate at room temperature, stirring occasionally, while you roll out the dough.
- Remove pastry dough from the refrigerator and allow to warm up just enough to be workable. Roll pastry dough on a lightly floured surface into a rough circle, ⅛-inch thick. Drape lightly over the pie plate, pressing dough down into the edges of the plate, and trim edges with kitchen shears, leaving about 1 inch of overlap. Gather the scraps and re-roll to form the lattice top. Or, if necessary, gather the scraps into a smooth disc then refrigerate both top & bottom dough until chilled, about 20 minutes. Roll scraps into a rough circle about ⅛-inch thick. With a long knife or pizza cutter, slice into 6 or 7 thick strips.
- Toss macerating rhubarb in the bowl one last time. Pile rhubarb and accumulated syrup into the prepared pie crust. Assemble your lattice top with the classic over-under weaving technique. Trim the edges of the lattice strips as necessary, then fold the overhanging bottom crust up and crimp the edge to seal & decorate. Refrigerate assembled pie for at least 1 hour, or pop in the freezer for at least 20 minutes, so that the pastry dough is very cold & firm before it goes into the oven.
- Preheat oven to 425 degrees F. Place a rimmed baking sheet on the bottom rack of the oven while preheating. When ready to bake, brush the lattice top with beaten egg yolk, or heavy cream (in this case) or milk, then sprinkle lightly with raw sugar. Bake on the rimmed baking sheet (to catch drips) for 10 minutes at 425 degrees F, then reduce heat to 400 degrees F and continue to bake until pastry is nicely browned and filling is actively bubbling, about 45 minutes. Check on pie every 20 minutes or so, and reduce heat to 350 degrees F if pastry is over-browning.
- Remove to a wire rack to cool. Cool completely prior to slicing. Serve with whipped or ice cream.
Serves 4 – 6.
- For a full-sized pie plate, double the pastry dough recipe and triple the amount of filling.
- For a sweet cherry, rhubarb & Meyer lemon pie recipe, see here.
STORE
At room temperature, lightly covered with a clean kitchen towel, for up to days.
SEASON
Spring.
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This is gorgeous. Rhubarb pie is my favorite!
Love your pictures! Do you have rhubarb growing in your garden or available at markets? It’s been hot here in NC as well, no place for rhubarb to grow. Enjoy it!
I don’t have a garden, since we live in the woods and there is not enough sun, but there’s plenty to be found at local farmer’s markets. I’m guessing the season will be short this year, however, as after our unseasonably long and cold winter, we’ve had a very warm and sunny Spring!
Rhubarb is my favourite fruit. I love its tartness in pastries. I planted six of them in my garden. This year, three of them gave flowers. First time I saw that and while this was truly a strange yet pleasurable phenomenon, I didn’t get any rhubarb stems to cook. Your pie is mouth-watering, it makes me wish less rhubarb flowers and more stems in my garden.
The rhubarb flower is like something out of a bad Star Trek set, no? Beautiful but freaky. But I’m with you: flowers are pretty, but stems are delicious!
Have yet to experiment cooking with Rubharb .. This looks great!!!
Looks great but I would never have thought of a 7 inch pie as mini LOL
Ha! I know what you mean – but it IS mini compared to most of my other pie dishes, which seem to get bigger and bigger. To match American waistlines, I guess! 🙂
My favourite pie! I think I should make this soon…
Great photos by the way 🙂
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ahhh, this looks so lovely! and that crust! i have a feeling it adds the perfect salty-sweet crunch. will def try this one!
Can’t wait to try this crust with other fruit fillings as well!
Thanks for the recipe! I always make my hubs a rhubarb pie for his birthday, but my rhubarb wasn’t very far along this year, as our spring was wet and cold. Only had 2 cups ….but as I had a mini pie-plate I thought I could make one. Your recipe clarified the amount of other ingredients to add as well as cooking times and temperatures. I didn’t feel like experimenting with his birthday pie…thanks again! it turned out great!