BBQ Pork and Apple Pie

I am an experimental cook, I follow recipes, but I also use my own knowledge and intuition to tweak things. The problem with this is sometimes I don’t remember how I made something, and then I cannot recreate it. I need to take notes I guess. So a year or two ago I made a really nice braised pork loin dish with an apple gravy, and I forgot what all I did with it and have been trying to recapture the flavors. This this dish, I think I might have succeeded.

I bought the new Feast of Ice and Fire cookbook from the A Song of Ice and Fire book series (Game of Thrones on HBO). In addition to all the very nice photography from the blog, which I had seen before, the cookbook is neat because it includes both a traditional (medieval) recipe, and a modern version.

One of the recipes is a pork and apple pie, this piqued my interest both because of my desire to reclaim my lost pork and apple success, and the fact that I’ve also been interested in savory pies lately. The recipe essentially called for mixing onions, pulled pork, ritz crackers, cheddar cheese, various seasonings, and apples in a covered pie. I took inspiration from this, but didn’t follow the recipe. I used my own seasonings, and cut both the ritz crackers and the cheese as unnecessary calories, I wanted to focus on the pork and apples.

BBQ Pulled Pork and Apple Pie

  • 1 pork loin
  • BBQ rub, white wine, and vinegar for marinade
  • 1 big sweet onion
  • BBQ Sauce
  • Butter or other fat (duck, chicken, turkey, lard)
  • 2 granny smith apples
  • some kale, beet greens, spinach, or other leafy green you have lying around
  • pastry dough

So I made pulled pork, and how I do this is I take a pork loin, rub it with a BBQ rub (usually bought at the store), marinate it in a zip top bag in white wine and vinegar and salt for a day, then put it in the crock pot (marinade with it) to braise for 8 hours until it is falling apart. This can be, and was in my case, done ahead of time.

When I wanted to make the pie first I made the filling. I took a very large sweet yellow onion and sauted it until carmelized, then I added the torn up pork I had made previously, maybe a quarter cup of homemade pear butter, enough of a sweet store bought BBQ sauce (Sweet Baby Ray’s in my case) to get the consistency I wanted, which was pretty wet, like a good pulled pork sandwich. I also added some finely chopped kale from my garden which I add to almost all dishes in the summer month as a nutrition boost. Don’t be afraid of leafy greens, kale, spinach, or beet greens can be added to almost anything.

Then I made my pie crust, which was a relatively standard pastry pie crust, a few minor tweaks.

Pie Crust Dough

  • 1/2 cup water
  • 1/2 cup butter (or other fat, I used duck fat since I had some saved)
  • 3 cups flour – I used 2 of all purpose, 1 of whole wheat, to make it healthier
  • 2 egg yolks
  • Tablespoon of smoked paprika (I thought it’d go well with the dish)
  • 2 teapsoons of salt, bland crust is not fun, you can use less (no) salt if you use salted butter

What you normally do to make your crust flaky is you take cold butter, dice it, and cut it in the flour (with paprika and salt) so the flour forms crumbles. You definitely want to add cold fat to your flour, whatever kind of fat you use, you can do this in a food processor (gently). Basically you want it to have a crumbly texture, then you can add the water and the eggs and other stuff and make it a dough, don’t overwork it, just let it come together.

Once you have your dough, roll it out pretty thin, about a quarter inch, drape it over your pie pan, cut off the excess, reroll said excess.

Now you can ladle your pork mixture into the pie.

Then take two granny smith (or other) apples, peel, core, and slice then. I sliced very thin using my v-slicer (another tool every kitchen should have).

Put a layer of apple slices on the pork, sprinkle with brown sugar, put another layer, sprinkle with brown sugar, rinse repeat until you’re out of apples.

Now take your remnant pie crust that you rerolled out, drape it over the pie pan, remove the excess and crimp the edges of the top and bottom crust pieces with your fingers or a fork, and cut 4 vent holes in the top. Your pie is assembled.

Bake it for between 45 minutes and 1 hour at 375 degrees.

Your pie will be delicious.

How to cook with Nutmeg, and have it taste good.

Put down that jar of pre-ground nutmeg, PUT IT DOWN! Now walk away, WALK AWAY, do not touch it, never touch it again.

Pre-ground nutmeg is disgusting, and here is why. Unless you’re a high volume kitchen you’ll never use pre-ground nutmeg fast enough, even assuming it was fresh when you bought it, so by the time you use it the volatile oils in the nutmeg, what give it the flavor, will have gone rancid, it will be bitter and taste horrible.

The only nutmeg worth eating is whole nutmeg, if your store does not carry it you can buy it online such as at Amazon, they have 3.5oz which will last a good many months, even a year if you’re a rare user, they also have 28 oz which will last darn near forever…. and it will last. When nutmeg is left whole it does not go rancid because the volatile oils are protected inside the nut. I’m sure, eventually, it might lose flavor, but mine have lasted years without any such loss.

So, you have whole nutmeg, what do you do with it? If you just need a tiny bit you can use a mircoplane grater and just grate what quantity you need directly into your dish. If you like more, or would like something more hand friendly, use a mortar and pestle. If you do not have a mortar and pestle, buy one. It is something no home should be without, you can use it to crush up herbs (garlic, rosemary, etc) to make rubs, or spices, or whatever. It is really easy to use too, and it will grind even hard things like nutmeg into powder.

You just put your little nutmeg nut in the mortar and smash it with the pestle, this will break it into chunks, if you don’t need the whole nut, remove the chunks you do not need and put them back in storage, then pound pound pound, and grind grind grind, and you’ll get finely ground nutmeg powder in about 10 seconds. One morning my 3 year old woke before me, climbed on the counter, and started grinding nutmeg, it was so easy even he could do it. I guess he wanted pancakes.

If you have trouble getting the nutmeg out of the mortar (when you grind it it can want to stick to the stone), use a metal spoon to scrape it out, no big deal. Then smell it and revel in the wonderful smell of truly fresh nutmeg, and add it to your dish.