roast the toast: rhubarb & apple butter pandowdy

April 2, 2011

perhaps you’ve noticed by now that i have a thing for old-fashioned fruit desserts?

yeah, i kinda do.

here’s how this one came about:

the other day i was roarin’ about a really great book i have to give away over here and i asked what peeps were looking forward to preserving this spring. a lot of you said rhubarb. rhubarb is something i am never in need of – when may/june comes i can practically swing from mine.

then i realized that may is around the corner and i still had three quarts of rhubarb in the freezer – yikes! i’m not down with frozen fruit from the year before when it’s time for a new year’s bounty to explode. so i raced into my larder and deftly pulled my super chatelaine cape over my ears and head (you did know i had one didn’t you? why yes, it’s specially fitted, slips right over my fur) and i got my paws on that rhubarb.

first let me tell you that a pandowdy is just an old-fashioned name for a bottomless pie. perhaps those victorian gentlewoman rendered a bit pinkish (or peckish?) at the mere thought of a loose and bottomless pie, and so…pandowdy is ever much more, well, dowdy.

armed with this imagination, i figured if i’m making a wayward crust, she’s gonna need some grit.

how’s this for grit?

martha is my go to gal for crust. i made this cornmeal pate brisee. and to ensure my crust rough and ready for a good time, i went a little heavier on the meal – 3/4 of a cup, and lighter on the fine stuff – 1 & 3/4 cups.

(a note about my cornmeal; it’s from a local berkshire farmer, and i can’t get enough of it. yours can be yellow, and not as rough cut. but try to find stoneground, and better still, local!)

follow martha’s recipe and in case she wasn’t 100% clear, once you get the ice cold water in the processor and the dough just barely starts to cling to itself – no more then 30 seconds please – take it out and divide it in half. here’s the clincher: do not play with the dough no matter how enticing she may be. get her into two discs as quickly as possible, they don’t have to be perfectly shaped. wrap them in plastic wrap, put one in the freezer for another use, and one in the fridge to use now. if you happen to have one a little bigger than the other, use that one now.

you can even make the dough a day ahead of time. if you do, take the half you are using out of the fridge 30 minutes before you want to make the pandowdy.

last thing before we get on with it: i had frozen rhubarb, i had canned ancho apple butter. you may have frozen blueberries and canned peach butter, or frozen cranberries and canned pear butter. both would be lovely combos, the pairing is up to you.

…after all, that little hussy needs a cool down.

roast the toast: a now and then series devoted to pumping up the jams,
and other sweet preserves. ’cause a tigress can’t live on bread alone. duh!

  • Jenny says:

    This sounds so delcious! I've been craving a recipe I've never made (but have marked) for rhubarb crisp with custard sauce. I must not miss this season!

  • elizabeth says:

    My rhubarb is just starting to shoot up — this sounds wonderful : )

  • Dawn says:

    How do you do it?? This is another winner! I made a slightly modified version for my book group potluck last night. It was a big hit with fresh whipped cream. I used a frozen puff pastry for the top (my daughter used up all my butter to make cookies this week, so I couldn't do a piecrust as planned). The rhubarb/apple ancho combo was 'magnifique'. We're reading My Life In France, by Julia Child. I think that was French?!

  • tigress says:

    dawn – so glad you gave it a try. it is a great combo, non?

    jenny & elizabeth – yes, you both need rhubarb this season! :)

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