![]() 6 tablespoons cold unsalted butter, in 1/4” pieces.Food Processor Pie Dough or Good Basic Pie Dough, refrigerated.But if you don’t already have a favorite, I suggest the FOOD PROCESSOR PIE DOUGH OR GOOD BASIC PIE DOUGH. PASTRY NOTE: Use any dough you like for the bottom crust here. Now, while we’re blessed with good local peaches. I hope you’ll go buy some peaches and make this pie. I don’t think she thought I was a lost cause because of it – or at least, if she did, she didn’t say so – and I thought that was nice of her. I confessed to her that, while I like double crust pies, I’m addicted to crumb toppings. ![]() I had a call yesterday from a reporter at The New York Times who is working on a pie story for their July 4th food section. I’m hopelessly hooked on crumb topped pies, unapologetically so. Having made my point, a little about this luscious Fresh Peach Crumb Pie. Given the cost of fresh fruit, which peaches would you rather make your pie with? Now, compare that mountain of scraps to the tiny one generated by our FOUR peach BLANCHING session, below. The first photo shows the remnants of your typical 3-peach, paring knife peeling session. The best part, of course, is that for a little extra effort, you get to keep ALL of your expensive peach flesh, which you clearly would not if you peel peaches like the typical home peach peeler peels peaches. I just wait a minute, then pinch the skins and peel them right off. If your peaches are ripe, you shouldn’t have to drop them into a bowl of ice water, after their boiling water bath, as is often recommended. Then fish them out and set them aside on your work counter. Leave them in the water for about 30 to 40 seconds – no longer, because you don’t want the flesh to get soft it just makes the peaches harder to handle when you slice them. And no, you don’t even have to remove the labels since they’ll come off in the water. Some people drop 8 or 10 peaches in at once, but I like doing just a couple at a time. Normally, if you weren’t watching, I’d just drop the things in by hand but in order to prevent unwanted burns and lawsuits, I recommend lowering them slowly into the water with a slotted spoon or scoop. That’s step one above – lowering your peaches into a saucepan full of boiling water. It’s an initiative I call No Peach Left Behind, or what’s otherwise known as blanching. No matter where you buy peaches they probably cost too much – doesn’t everything? – so this week I’m going to show you, step by step, how you can get the most for your peach dollar by wasting less peach. He probably thought he could bore me out of there, and he was right. At last, he mumbled something about the intersection of shipping costs – clearly, these things only traveled first class – demand, and the disadvantageous scale of small organic growers. If he was being watched by one of the local peach cartels, I didn’t want some thug planting a bomb under his pickup. He seemed at a loss for words, so I leaned in a little closer. I shouldn’t have to take out a second mortgage just to bake a pie. I explained that I like to make pies, but I thought the price of produce was getting out of hand. So I was having an otherwise great week when I walked into my local Too Expensive Food Emporium to buy peaches for the pie you see here and about had a heart attack when I saw the price per pound.
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