I've used various apples for making pie, and some worked better than others, but I've never kept track. Anyone remember what pies worked best for flavor and texture in their apple pies?
Granny Smith is the go to apple for all the apple pies my wife makes. IMO the tart apples taste best after being cooked in pies or cobblers. Also, the crust is actually the key for a good apple pie.
Crust is just one of the components of a killer pie. you can't have a good pie with substandard filling or crust. It HAS to be perfect. When it comes to cooking I'm a perfectionist.
It does in my book.Apple pie qualifies as breakfast food. Right?
Your family will thank you for your pie experiments.
Try whole wheat pastry flour for the crust. the flavor is nutty and it develops less gluten.
I do a combination of apples for their different flavors and texture. My go to mix is:
1. Granny Smith - very crisp and good tartness
2. Honeycrisp - delicious flavor but still crisp texture, not as much as granny
3. Braeburn - milder flavor but good sturdy texture
4. Pink Lady or Gala - Great sweet flavor with a sturdy texture
I tend to stay away from any of the mushy apples for my pies, like my apples to hold their structure. Ive found this combo of apples gives a great balance of strong tartness and sweetness with a great texture
As for bourbon, it would be great and compliment the flavors great. Instead of just putting it in the pie mixture, I have used it in the crust (tip I picked up from Good Eats). The alcohol doesnt produce gluten as much and gives a delicious flavor. I do tend to use bourbon or whiskey because I have it on hand, but try using Apple jack, its an apple brandy that adds that nice flavor with a touch of apple flavor
I tend to pile my pies at least a few inches up and over the top of the plate to account for apple shrinkage.
A tip for the shrinkage of apples (especially if you are doing a pie crust top vs a crumble or lattice) is to sprinkle the sliced apples with sugar and let sit for awhile, the sugar will draw out juices (which can be used in the pie filling or boiled down to a glaze to wipe the top crust down with). This pre-collapses the apples mostly so the shrinkage wont happen in the oven and leave that pocket of air between the filling and top crust.
I do this and still have some shrinkage (mostly from the mushy apples i add)