Award-Winning Maple Blueberry Pie

Award-Winning Maple Blueberry Pie
Rikki Snyder for The New York Times
Total Time
2½ hours, plus chilling
Rating
4(171)
Comments
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Paul Arguin, an epidemiologist, relaxes by making pie. This one, with its generous amount of fruit and sweetness from maple syrup, won the blueberry-division prize in the 2017 National Pie Championships. A few tricks raise it above other blueberry pies. One is the crust, which has a touch of cinnamon and maple sugar, and uses cider vinegar and just a little shortening for structure. Dr. Arguin cooks the filling in a sous-vide machine, which keeps the berries whole but tender. For the top crust, he borrows an idea from cake makers who work with fondant. Four planks of dough are pressed into an inexpensive silicone mat molded to look like wood grain, then peeled off and set on top of the pie. Home cooks without fancy equipment, take heart. The berries can be cooked slowly on the stove, and four strips of plain dough for the top crust work just as well. —Kim Severson

Featured in: A Match Made in Baking and Blue Ribbons

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Ingredients

Yield:8 servings

    For the Crust

    • cups/340 grams all-purpose flour
    • teaspoon cinnamon
    • 1tablespoon maple sugar
    • 1teaspoon salt
    • ¼teaspoon baking powder
    • 4tablespoons/57 grams cold shortening
    • 12tablespoons/170 grams cold unsalted butter, cut into cubes
    • 2teaspoons cider vinegar
    • 6tablespoons/89 milliliters cold water

    For the Filling

    • 6cups/907 grams blueberries
    • 1Granny Smith apple
    • 2heaping tablespoons minute tapioca (a little less if you prefer a softer filling)
    • teaspoon salt
    • teaspoon cinnamon
    • ½cup/100 grams sugar
    • cup/79 milliliters maple syrup
    • ¾teaspoon maple extract
    • 1tablespoon lemon juice
    • 1egg yolk
    • 1tablespoon heavy cream
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (8 servings)

555 calories; 26 grams fat; 13 grams saturated fat; 1 gram trans fat; 8 grams monounsaturated fat; 3 grams polyunsaturated fat; 77 grams carbohydrates; 5 grams dietary fiber; 35 grams sugars; 6 grams protein; 347 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Make the dough: In the bowl of a food processor, mix the flour, cinnamon, maple sugar, salt and baking powder. Add the shortening and process until well incorporated. Add the butter and pulse until pea-size nuggets of butter remain. Add the vinegar and water, and pulse until dough is just holding together. Divide into 2 disks. Wrap in plastic and chill in refrigerator overnight.

  2. Step 2

    Make the filling: If using a sous-vide machine, place the blueberries into a vacuum-sealable bag. (If not, see Step 4.) Peel and core the apple and grate with a box grater. Squeeze the grated apple to remove the juice. Disperse the grated apple among the blueberries in the bag.

  3. Step 3

    In the bowl of a food processor, grind the tapioca, salt, cinnamon and sugar until the tapioca is fine. Then add to the bag. Stir the maple syrup, maple extract and lemon juice together and pour into the bag. Seal the vacuum bag. Cook in water bath at 150 degrees for 1 hour. Remove and cool on the countertop for 5 minutes.

  4. Step 4

    If using a stovetop, prepare the ingredients in the same way as the sous-vide method, but place all the ingredients in a saucepan with a lid, and stir well to combine. Cook over medium-low heat, stirring gently and occasionally, just until the berries soften and begin to give off their juice, about 20 minutes. Remove and cool on the countertop for 5 minutes.

  5. Step 5

    Assemble the pie: Roll out one of the dough disks on a lightly floured surface to make a top crust, and cut into 4 large strips. Press the dough into a wood-grain impression silicone mat and freeze for about 15 minutes. Or, simply place the 4 strips on a baking sheet lined with parchment and freeze.

  6. Step 6

    Roll out the second dough disk and place in a 9-inch pie plate. Pour maple blueberry filling into it. Place 4 crust strips on top of pie, slipping one end under another to form an attractive pattern. Trim and crimp edges.

  7. Step 7

    Chill pie in the freezer while heating oven to 425 degrees. Stir the egg yolk and heavy cream together and brush over the top-crust strips. Place the pie in the oven on the bottom rack and immediately reduce heat to 400 degrees. After 15 minutes, rotate pie and cover edge with a pie ring or strips of foil to prevent the edges from overbrowning. Bake for an additional 40 minutes. Let pie cool slightly before slicing.

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Ratings

4 out of 5
171 user ratings
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Comments

Hello Jan,
In my experience pre-cooking the blueberries makes them perfect, if you do not pre-cook blueberries they make for a wet, soppy pie. I cook mine on the stove-top with a grated apple for the pectin and spices add to my pre-baked shell for a simple pie or add to my pie dough and bake per usual. In each case I have had no problems. The stove-top method allows you to control the consistency of the blueberry mixture, if the apple is not enough, just add a little cornstarch. Happy Baking!

So it seems you are double cooking the blueberries - once in water bath and then again in overn - doesn't this make the blueberries mushier than if you just put them in pie crust?

You haven't grown up enjoying local maple syrup over blueberry pancakes. Fresh blueberries dropped onto pancakes baking on the griddle, then spread with butter and maple syrup.
Once that experience is parked in your brain, you'll know.

Can I use cornstarch instead of tapioca? If so, how much?

@Babs Also interested in this sub! Have you tried?

Felt like too much salt in the dough, usually use 1/8 tsp kosher salt. Couldn't taste the other spices.

Tapioca wasn't enough to set filling....but tasted great. Will try again.

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Credits

Adapted from Paul Arguin

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