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OT Apple Dumplings



 
 
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  #1  
Old October 2nd 10, 07:00 PM posted to rec.crafts.textiles.quilting
NightMist
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,734
Default OT Apple Dumplings

I posted this in my garden group.
Then DH read it over and told me that so long as I had typed all that I
might just as well post it to my quilt folk so they can tell me what they
do with dumplings. He says that in the interest of science we should
carefully research all permutations.
I think he is just powerfully fond of apple dumplings (G)
Science indeed! *snort*

Story comes first, recipe follows:

Every year my husband tells this story as we make the first batch of
dumplings of the season.

"Once upon a time a very small boy was sitting in his grandmother's
kitchen watching her make apple pies. You know he was a very small boy,
because only very small children listen well enough to hear things that
grown-ups don't.
As he was watching and learning he heard a very small voice cry out, "Oh
no! Oh woe is me!" he looked around and about and under the table and did
not see anyone who might have cried out in such a tiny voice.
As his grandmother put the first batch of pies in the oven, and sat down
to prepare the apples for the next batch, he heard the voice again. "Oh
no! Oh no! Oh woe is me!" He looked around and about and under the table,
and gave his grandmother's lap-dog a hard look. Still he could not see
anyone who could have cried out in such a very small voice.
When his grandmother reached into the basket and filled her bowl with
more apples to peel and slice, he heard the voice again, "Oh no! Oh no!
Oh help! Oh help!" The boy looked all around again, and this time he
found it. The very small voice was coming from the biggest, roundest,
most beautiful apple he had ever seen. It was beautifully golden with a
rosy blush, and still had a leaf attached to the stem, which he could see
was just a-tremble with fear.
The boy reached out and slipped the apple from the bowl, soothingly
stroked the leaf, and then whispered to it "what is wrong?"
"What is wrong!" the apple exclaimed. "Why there I was, minding my own
business, basking in the sunlight while surrounded by my family and
neighbors, when this old woman came along and knocked me right down out
of my tree with a stick! Now she is chopping my whole family all to bits!
What is wrong indeed!"
The boy was nobody's fool and was very fond of apple pie, besides he did
not like hearing his grandmother spoken of so disrespectfully. Still he
did have some sympathy for the apple's plight. So he tried to explain,
"The corn is ripe, and so are the last oats. The potatoes must be dug,
and then the last of the hay must be brought in. The whole family and the
neighbors and the hired man are working all day until the sun goes down
to get all the work done before the cold comes. They are very very hungry
when the day is over, and it is Grandmother's turn to make the pies."
The beautiful apple screamed in terror! "Oh no! Oh no!" it shrieked, "I
don't want to be chopped up and eaten in a pie! Hide me! Hide me quickly!"
The very small boy was startled and looked about him for places to hide
the apple. Finally he took some scraps of dough and wrapped the apple up
in them.
"There, now you will be safe and warm." he whispered to the apple as he
set it beside the pile of dough scraps.
Later that evening when the pies were served the very small boy's father
found an oddity amongst the pie plates.
"Why what on earth is this?" he puzzled while examining a round brown
ball of pastry.
"That is a special treat for my very best helper." said the grandmother.
For she was also nobody's fool, and grandmothers are the only grown-ups
in the world who listen so well as very small children and often see and
hear the same things they do.
And with that she put the beautiful apple hidden in dough into a bowl
with sugar and cream and put it in front of the very small boy. He ate it
up down to the last crumb and the last drop, and resolved to make it a
practice to hide apples more often.

Apple Dumplings

Preheat oven to 375F
Grease a 9x13 inch baking dish

For the pastry (standard shortcrust pastry may be substituted):

2 1/2 cups of sifted flour, minus 3 tablespoons
3 tablespoons of cornstarch
1 cup (2 sticks) of butter, just warm enough to work
a little salt (perhaps a quarter teaspoon)
approximately a quarter cup of ice water

Sift the flour, salt, and the cornstarch together.
Cut the butter into the flour mixture, until it is in pieces slightly
smaller than popcorn kernels.
Add water to make a workable dough, set aside covered in a cool place
while the apples are prepped.

The Apples:

Peel (if desired) and core 6 apples. I prefer to use medium sized
Northern Spy apples, but your favorite pie apple will work just as well.
Set them aside in a bowl of cold water to which as been added a
tablespoon of lemon juice or cider vinegar while you roll the dough.

The Dumplings:

For the filling:

1/2 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup chopped walnuts
1/2 cup raisins ( I like to fry them in a tablespoon of butter for a few
minutes before using them)
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 cardamom capsule ground fine, or a pinch of ginger, as your taste and
spice cupboard determines

combine spice, sugar, and nuts, then stir in raisins.

Roll out half the pastry into a rectangle six times as long as the apples
are high.
Square off and divide into thirds.
Place an apple into the center of each section, fill the core space with
filling mixture. Bring the corners together at the top center of each
apple, dampen and pinch together, then dampen and pinch the edges
together.

Repeat with the other half of the dough and the remaining apples and
filling.

Put the apples into the greased baking dish and bake for 45 minutes to an
hour, depending on the size of the apples.

If you use large apples (such as your average grocery store granny
smith), standard shortcrust should be used rather than the butter crust,
as the longer cooking time required for large apples may result in over
browning of a butter crust.

OPTIONAL: add a teaspoon of brandy to the top of each apple after it is
filled.

Serve warm with milk, cream, or caramel sauce.

A decorative touch for company is to shape apple leaves out of scrap
pastry, dampen the top of each quarter of the dumplings and attach the
leaves before baking.
Alternatively, bake the leaves on a separate sheet after painting them
with egg yolk to which drop or two of green food coloring has been added,
and the attach them to the baked dumplings with caramelized sugar. That
is something I usually save for snobby company, or special occasions.


NightMist
--
I'm raising a developmentally disabled child. What's your superpower?
Ads
  #2  
Old October 3rd 10, 02:21 AM posted to rec.crafts.textiles.quilting
Bobbie Sews More
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,210
Default OT Apple Dumplings

Thank you Night for the story and directions to make this treat!
Barbara from SC who is now in FL
"


  #3  
Old October 3rd 10, 03:31 AM posted to rec.crafts.textiles.quilting
Nana.Wilson
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 137
Default OT Apple Dumplings

Bobbie! I'm jealous! What are you doing in Fl. so early? How's the
weather?
I don't get there till about Feb.

Nana

"Bobbie Sews More" wrote in message
...
Thank you Night for the story and directions to make this treat!
Barbara from SC who is now in FL
"



  #4  
Old October 3rd 10, 04:33 PM posted to rec.crafts.textiles.quilting
Maureen Wozniak
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,090
Default OT Apple Dumplings

On Sat, 2 Oct 2010 13:00:14 -0500, NightMist wrote
(in article ):

I posted this in my garden group.
Then DH read it over and told me that so long as I had typed all that I
might just as well post it to my quilt folk so they can tell me what they
do with dumplings. He says that in the interest of science we should
carefully research all permutations.
I think he is just powerfully fond of apple dumplings (G)
Science indeed! *snort*

Story comes first, recipe follows:

Every year my husband tells this story as we make the first batch of
dumplings of the season.

"Once upon a time a very small boy was sitting in his grandmother's
kitchen watching her make apple pies. You know he was a very small boy,
because only very small children listen well enough to hear things that
grown-ups don't.
As he was watching and learning he heard a very small voice cry out, "Oh
no! Oh woe is me!" he looked around and about and under the table and did
not see anyone who might have cried out in such a tiny voice.
As his grandmother put the first batch of pies in the oven, and sat down
to prepare the apples for the next batch, he heard the voice again. "Oh
no! Oh no! Oh woe is me!" He looked around and about and under the table,
and gave his grandmother's lap-dog a hard look. Still he could not see
anyone who could have cried out in such a very small voice.
When his grandmother reached into the basket and filled her bowl with
more apples to peel and slice, he heard the voice again, "Oh no! Oh no!
Oh help! Oh help!" The boy looked all around again, and this time he
found it. The very small voice was coming from the biggest, roundest,
most beautiful apple he had ever seen. It was beautifully golden with a
rosy blush, and still had a leaf attached to the stem, which he could see
was just a-tremble with fear.
The boy reached out and slipped the apple from the bowl, soothingly
stroked the leaf, and then whispered to it "what is wrong?"
"What is wrong!" the apple exclaimed. "Why there I was, minding my own
business, basking in the sunlight while surrounded by my family and
neighbors, when this old woman came along and knocked me right down out
of my tree with a stick! Now she is chopping my whole family all to bits!
What is wrong indeed!"
The boy was nobody's fool and was very fond of apple pie, besides he did
not like hearing his grandmother spoken of so disrespectfully. Still he
did have some sympathy for the apple's plight. So he tried to explain,
"The corn is ripe, and so are the last oats. The potatoes must be dug,
and then the last of the hay must be brought in. The whole family and the
neighbors and the hired man are working all day until the sun goes down
to get all the work done before the cold comes. They are very very hungry
when the day is over, and it is Grandmother's turn to make the pies."
The beautiful apple screamed in terror! "Oh no! Oh no!" it shrieked, "I
don't want to be chopped up and eaten in a pie! Hide me! Hide me quickly!"
The very small boy was startled and looked about him for places to hide
the apple. Finally he took some scraps of dough and wrapped the apple up
in them.
"There, now you will be safe and warm." he whispered to the apple as he
set it beside the pile of dough scraps.
Later that evening when the pies were served the very small boy's father
found an oddity amongst the pie plates.
"Why what on earth is this?" he puzzled while examining a round brown
ball of pastry.
"That is a special treat for my very best helper." said the grandmother.
For she was also nobody's fool, and grandmothers are the only grown-ups
in the world who listen so well as very small children and often see and
hear the same things they do.
And with that she put the beautiful apple hidden in dough into a bowl
with sugar and cream and put it in front of the very small boy. He ate it
up down to the last crumb and the last drop, and resolved to make it a
practice to hide apples more often.

Apple Dumplings

Preheat oven to 375F
Grease a 9x13 inch baking dish

For the pastry (standard shortcrust pastry may be substituted):

2 1/2 cups of sifted flour, minus 3 tablespoons
3 tablespoons of cornstarch
1 cup (2 sticks) of butter, just warm enough to work
a little salt (perhaps a quarter teaspoon)
approximately a quarter cup of ice water

Sift the flour, salt, and the cornstarch together.
Cut the butter into the flour mixture, until it is in pieces slightly
smaller than popcorn kernels.
Add water to make a workable dough, set aside covered in a cool place
while the apples are prepped.

The Apples:

Peel (if desired) and core 6 apples. I prefer to use medium sized
Northern Spy apples, but your favorite pie apple will work just as well.
Set them aside in a bowl of cold water to which as been added a
tablespoon of lemon juice or cider vinegar while you roll the dough.

The Dumplings:

For the filling:

1/2 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup chopped walnuts
1/2 cup raisins ( I like to fry them in a tablespoon of butter for a few
minutes before using them)
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 cardamom capsule ground fine, or a pinch of ginger, as your taste and
spice cupboard determines

combine spice, sugar, and nuts, then stir in raisins.

Roll out half the pastry into a rectangle six times as long as the apples
are high.
Square off and divide into thirds.
Place an apple into the center of each section, fill the core space with
filling mixture. Bring the corners together at the top center of each
apple, dampen and pinch together, then dampen and pinch the edges
together.

Repeat with the other half of the dough and the remaining apples and
filling.

Put the apples into the greased baking dish and bake for 45 minutes to an
hour, depending on the size of the apples.

If you use large apples (such as your average grocery store granny
smith), standard shortcrust should be used rather than the butter crust,
as the longer cooking time required for large apples may result in over
browning of a butter crust.

OPTIONAL: add a teaspoon of brandy to the top of each apple after it is
filled.

Serve warm with milk, cream, or caramel sauce.

A decorative touch for company is to shape apple leaves out of scrap
pastry, dampen the top of each quarter of the dumplings and attach the
leaves before baking.
Alternatively, bake the leaves on a separate sheet after painting them
with egg yolk to which drop or two of green food coloring has been added,
and the attach them to the baked dumplings with caramelized sugar. That
is something I usually save for snobby company, or special occasions.


NightMist


What a great story. And a very yummy sounding recipe.

Maureen

  #5  
Old October 3rd 10, 06:25 PM posted to rec.crafts.textiles.quilting
ME-Judy[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 92
Default OT Apple Dumplings

Thanks so myuch for posting that cute story AND that YUMMY sounding
recipe!
Copied the recipe and it's now in my cookbook, waiting for the apples!
ME-Judy

On Oct 2, 2:00*pm, NightMist wrote:


Apple Dumplings

Preheat oven to 375F
Grease a 9x13 inch baking dish

For the pastry (standard shortcrust pastry may be substituted):

2 1/2 cups of sifted flour, minus 3 tablespoons
3 tablespoons of cornstarch
1 cup (2 sticks) of butter, just warm enough to work
a little salt (perhaps a quarter teaspoon)
approximately a quarter cup of ice water

Sift the flour, salt, and the cornstarch together.
Cut the butter into the flour mixture, until it is in pieces slightly
smaller than popcorn kernels.
Add water to make a workable dough, set aside covered in a cool place
while the apples are prepped.

The Apples:

Peel (if desired) and core 6 apples. I prefer to use medium sized
Northern Spy apples, but your favorite pie apple will work just as well.
Set them aside in a bowl of cold water to which as been added a
tablespoon of lemon juice or cider vinegar while you roll the dough.

The Dumplings:

For the filling:

1/2 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup chopped walnuts
1/2 cup raisins ( I like to fry them in a tablespoon of butter for a few
minutes before using them)
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 cardamom capsule ground fine, or a pinch of ginger, as your taste and
spice cupboard determines

combine spice, sugar, and nuts, then stir in raisins.

Roll out half the pastry into a rectangle six times as long as the apples
are high.
Square off and divide into thirds.
Place an apple into the center of each section, fill the core space with
filling mixture. Bring the corners together at the top center of each
apple, dampen and pinch together, then dampen and pinch the edges
together.

Repeat with the other half of the dough and the remaining apples and
filling.

Put the apples into the greased baking dish and bake for 45 minutes to an
hour, depending on the size of the apples.

If you use large apples (such as your average grocery store granny
smith), standard shortcrust should be used rather than the butter crust,
as the longer cooking time required for large apples may result in over
browning of a butter crust.



  #6  
Old October 3rd 10, 09:15 PM posted to rec.crafts.textiles.quilting
Ursula Schrader
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 137
Default OT Apple Dumplings

Thank you for the nice recipe and the lovely story.

U.



  #7  
Old October 4th 10, 05:53 PM posted to rec.crafts.textiles.quilting
Allison
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 500
Default OT Apple Dumplings

I think that in the interest of science we should all try the recipe!!

I'm keeping this one to try asap!!

Many thanks,
Allison


NightMist wrote:
I posted this in my garden group.
Then DH read it over and told me that so long as I had typed all that I
might just as well post it to my quilt folk so they can tell me what they
do with dumplings. He says that in the interest of science we should
carefully research all permutations.
I think he is just powerfully fond of apple dumplings (G)
Science indeed! *snort*

Story comes first, recipe follows:

Every year my husband tells this story as we make the first batch of
dumplings of the season.

"Once upon a time a very small boy was sitting in his grandmother's
kitchen watching her make apple pies. You know he was a very small boy,
because only very small children listen well enough to hear things that
grown-ups don't.
As he was watching and learning he heard a very small voice cry out, "Oh
no! Oh woe is me!" he looked around and about and under the table and did
not see anyone who might have cried out in such a tiny voice.
As his grandmother put the first batch of pies in the oven, and sat down
to prepare the apples for the next batch, he heard the voice again. "Oh
no! Oh no! Oh woe is me!" He looked around and about and under the table,
and gave his grandmother's lap-dog a hard look. Still he could not see
anyone who could have cried out in such a very small voice.
When his grandmother reached into the basket and filled her bowl with
more apples to peel and slice, he heard the voice again, "Oh no! Oh no!
Oh help! Oh help!" The boy looked all around again, and this time he
found it. The very small voice was coming from the biggest, roundest,
most beautiful apple he had ever seen. It was beautifully golden with a
rosy blush, and still had a leaf attached to the stem, which he could see
was just a-tremble with fear.
The boy reached out and slipped the apple from the bowl, soothingly
stroked the leaf, and then whispered to it "what is wrong?"
"What is wrong!" the apple exclaimed. "Why there I was, minding my own
business, basking in the sunlight while surrounded by my family and
neighbors, when this old woman came along and knocked me right down out
of my tree with a stick! Now she is chopping my whole family all to bits!
What is wrong indeed!"
The boy was nobody's fool and was very fond of apple pie, besides he did
not like hearing his grandmother spoken of so disrespectfully. Still he
did have some sympathy for the apple's plight. So he tried to explain,
"The corn is ripe, and so are the last oats. The potatoes must be dug,
and then the last of the hay must be brought in. The whole family and the
neighbors and the hired man are working all day until the sun goes down
to get all the work done before the cold comes. They are very very hungry
when the day is over, and it is Grandmother's turn to make the pies."
The beautiful apple screamed in terror! "Oh no! Oh no!" it shrieked, "I
don't want to be chopped up and eaten in a pie! Hide me! Hide me quickly!"
The very small boy was startled and looked about him for places to hide
the apple. Finally he took some scraps of dough and wrapped the apple up
in them.
"There, now you will be safe and warm." he whispered to the apple as he
set it beside the pile of dough scraps.
Later that evening when the pies were served the very small boy's father
found an oddity amongst the pie plates.
"Why what on earth is this?" he puzzled while examining a round brown
ball of pastry.
"That is a special treat for my very best helper." said the grandmother.
For she was also nobody's fool, and grandmothers are the only grown-ups
in the world who listen so well as very small children and often see and
hear the same things they do.
And with that she put the beautiful apple hidden in dough into a bowl
with sugar and cream and put it in front of the very small boy. He ate it
up down to the last crumb and the last drop, and resolved to make it a
practice to hide apples more often.

Apple Dumplings

Preheat oven to 375F
Grease a 9x13 inch baking dish

For the pastry (standard shortcrust pastry may be substituted):

2 1/2 cups of sifted flour, minus 3 tablespoons
3 tablespoons of cornstarch
1 cup (2 sticks) of butter, just warm enough to work
a little salt (perhaps a quarter teaspoon)
approximately a quarter cup of ice water

Sift the flour, salt, and the cornstarch together.
Cut the butter into the flour mixture, until it is in pieces slightly
smaller than popcorn kernels.
Add water to make a workable dough, set aside covered in a cool place
while the apples are prepped.

The Apples:

Peel (if desired) and core 6 apples. I prefer to use medium sized
Northern Spy apples, but your favorite pie apple will work just as well.
Set them aside in a bowl of cold water to which as been added a
tablespoon of lemon juice or cider vinegar while you roll the dough.

The Dumplings:

For the filling:

1/2 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup chopped walnuts
1/2 cup raisins ( I like to fry them in a tablespoon of butter for a few
minutes before using them)
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 cardamom capsule ground fine, or a pinch of ginger, as your taste and
spice cupboard determines

combine spice, sugar, and nuts, then stir in raisins.

Roll out half the pastry into a rectangle six times as long as the apples
are high.
Square off and divide into thirds.
Place an apple into the center of each section, fill the core space with
filling mixture. Bring the corners together at the top center of each
apple, dampen and pinch together, then dampen and pinch the edges
together.

Repeat with the other half of the dough and the remaining apples and
filling.

Put the apples into the greased baking dish and bake for 45 minutes to an
hour, depending on the size of the apples.

If you use large apples (such as your average grocery store granny
smith), standard shortcrust should be used rather than the butter crust,
as the longer cooking time required for large apples may result in over
browning of a butter crust.

OPTIONAL: add a teaspoon of brandy to the top of each apple after it is
filled.

Serve warm with milk, cream, or caramel sauce.

A decorative touch for company is to shape apple leaves out of scrap
pastry, dampen the top of each quarter of the dumplings and attach the
leaves before baking.
Alternatively, bake the leaves on a separate sheet after painting them
with egg yolk to which drop or two of green food coloring has been added,
and the attach them to the baked dumplings with caramelized sugar. That
is something I usually save for snobby company, or special occasions.


NightMist

 




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