mrs. nye’s pies

A few weeks ago, I spent an afternoon with one of Andrew’s best friend’s mom, Mrs. Nye.  Her son, Alex, and Andrew went to school here in East Aurora together and played on the basketball team.  They’re a bit of an unlikely pair (Alex is a bit more fly-by-the-seat-of-his-pants and works in the broadcast news business; he’s creative and perhaps a little rough around the edges) but they totally work and both have a strong entrepreneurial spirit.

Anyway, his mom, Ann, is famous around here for her pies–she even had a small home business going for awhile–and pie is one thing that makes me nervous (I’m always afraid I’m going to mess up the crust), so I enlisted her help.

She was prepped and ready to go before I even arrived; she even has a handy pie-rolling station/cutting board built right into her countertop.

My mistake #1: I never use enough flour for the board.  Don’t be stingy, Holly!

We started with flour, salt and shortening in the mixer until it resembled a pea-like consistency, then started adding water.  Mrs. Nye doesn’t bother with the ‘it must be ice-cold’ business!

Then, just when it was starting to hold together, we formed it into balls/discs by hand.  Again, lots of flour!

Rolling them out…

Now, here’s the tricky part: getting the crust INTO the pan…  It’s always the part that makes me sweat.  I’ve always relied on the ‘drape it over the rolling pin and hope for the best’ method.  Mrs. Nye doesn’t sweat it at all; she just rolls it out and before you know it, it’s on the pie plate and she doesn’t care how it looks–it’s on the bottom, anyway.  (I knew there would be some nuggets of wisdom in here…)

Crimp the edges however you like–this one was for a one-shell pie–and then grab a fork.

For pre-baking a pie shell, make little punctures ALL OVER THE PIE with a fork.  Another thing Mrs. Nye doesn’t mess with is pie weights (she’s a bit of a minimalist).

There’s my pie!  This one was a maple syrup pie–Andrew and I are huge fans of the one we had at Aux Anciens Canadiens in Quebec City a couple years ago–and I found a recipe in the pie “bible” at Susy’s house.  More on the recipe later.

Mrs. Nye was preparing apples for the rest of our pies, which we would assemble and freeze.  Who knew you could do that?

More dough rolling…

…pie-filling…

(My tried-and-true apple pie recipe is from a friend of mine’s mom, which is really just a basic recipe, and then I add LOTS of cinnamon–a tablespoon–and orange juice and orange zest.  I saw the citrus addition on a Barefoot Contessa episode and took it to be God’s truth, and it is.  The cinnamon is all me.)

…and now, the second crust!  Here is where I start to get REALLY nervous.  I mean, this is the one that people actually SEE, and it has to fit over the top.

Use water to ‘glue’ the edges before draping with the second crust.  (Again, who knew??  No one ever told me this.)

Finish by tearing any extra crust off the long parts and use them to patch other areas, if necessary.  For Mrs. Nye, who can actually roll her crust into a relative circle, this is probably an UNnecessary step.  For me, it’s the only way my crust actually stretches from side to side…

Life goal #1: master yeast bread

Life goal #2: master pie

Life goal #3: master homemade ice cream

Life goal #4: not get fat in the process

(Hey, a girl can dream…)

Anyway, about the recipe.  So Andrew and I just DIED over this maple syrup pie we had on a trip to Quebec City awhile back (the fact that it cost an arm and a leg and we WENT BACK A SECOND TIME should tell you something), and I’ve tried a couple times to make one at home.  Imagine, if you will, a pecan pie without the pecans, but still a crunchy ‘crust-like’ top layer.  That, my friends, is a maple syrup pie.

Sadly, the recipe we used from the pie “bible” (below) wasn’t quite it.

This recipe is a little closer–I made it for our Bible study shortly after returning home from our trip–but wasn’t exactly right, either.  Guess we’ll just have to go back and try it again!!  Actually, we’ve been trying to arrange a trip with Emily and Dan up there during the winter, so maybe next year??

Below is me with the baked maple syrup pie.  Man, did it smell good! I had to scoot out after it finished, we I took it home to surprise Andrew, and then we showed up at the Nye’s with the rest of the pie to share with them.

The reason this post has taken me SO LONG is that I wanted to wait until I actually baked the apple pie from my freezer (that, and life just has a way of side-tracking me lately…)  Well, with only two of us, it’s not all that practical to just throw a pie in the over with no one to help us eat it!

Last night was the perfect excuse–Andrew’s grandma came for a visit for Easter–so I packed it up and brought it over to the Layer’s to have after pizza and wings.

Sadly, I forgot to take a photo of the baked pie…by the time I remembered, it was almost gone!  The crust looked pretty nice–one of my best, perhaps–I can tell you that.

And since I can’t have pie without ice cream or whipped cream (the maple syrup pie is best with freshly whipped, slightly sweetened whipped cream to cut the sweetness), I asked Andrew’s mom to make sure some was in the freezer.  I also brought the salted caramel sauce (Did you know it’s most definitely pronounced “car-A-mel,” not “car-mel?”  I heard that on the radio the other day.) Susy sent home with me and it was fantastic.

It’s kind of a mess in my bowl, but, as my mom would say (and I bet Mrs. Nye, too), ‘it’s all going the same place.’

i think i CAN, i think i CAN

After THREE 2-hour-to-the-dot half-marathons (which is a completely respectable time, I might add) I PR’d this morning with an AMAZING (if I do say so myself) 1:44!!!

I’ve been running faster and faster over the last year or so (thanks to Susy!), but bonked in my last two half-marathons, so I was anxious to redeem myself and earn the time I deserve.  This morning was that morning!

We picked Katy up in Buffalo on our way across the border.  In true Holly and Andrew fashion, we had the “Andrew-didn’t-get-out-of-bed-on-time-and-Holly-freaked-out-because-she-thought-we-were-going-to-be-late” fight, but made up by the time we hit Canada.

The full marathoners start at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in downtown Buffalo, then run over the Peace Bridge into Canada.  The half-marathon starts 13.1 miles in, on a stretch of road in Fort Erie, 13.1 miles from the falls.

(We arrived in PLENTY of time; we sat in our warm car for more than an hour before heading to the start.)  As usual, Andrew was right….

Emily gave me some GUs she wasn’t going to use; I chose to bring along the pineapple flavor, for obvious reasons.  (It was almost sickeningly sweet–aren’t they all?–but it tasted pineapple-y!)  Thanks Emily!

Pre-race static stretching…and a little warming up!  It was in the low- to mid-forties this morning.  A bit chilly, but we ended up with THE BEST day EVER.  Seriously–bright blue, clear skies, full sun and mid-50s.

We’re excited!

The race field wasn’t that big–5,000 total I think–but it was almost perfect.  Not too big, but not small, either.  And well-run.  (Haha, I’m so punny.)  They arranged busses to and from the half-marathon start, and I believe spectators could ride along, too.

This was our view for the whole way.  There were houses and a walking/running trail along our left side…

…and the Niagara River along our right.  Just gorgeous.  And it was either flat or a gentle downhill the entire way.  Does it get better than that?

Here we are!  Andrew high-tailed it a couple miles down the course to catch us in the beginning.  I love having my own personal photographer…

Here I am again, at mile 10.  Katy and I stayed together until about half-way, then I pulled ahead–I had energy!  We kept it at about an 8:20/mile pace until the 10k mark (there were both km and mile markers along the way…confusing!  I knew knew quite where we were…).  I sped up to closer to an 8:00/mile from there on out.

Andrew moved the car and hiked down to the finish at the falls.

The finish line was refreshingly NOT chaotic, since it wasn’t a giant race.  I missed having a food tent–they handed out bags filled with water, apples, bananas and granola bars–but it cut down on space and craziness.  After my sprint, I was a bit light-headed and needed some hand-holding.  Good thing I didn’t have to wait too long for Andrew and Katy (he managed to find her first) to rescue me.  He even brought his wallet along so I could get a Sprite on our way out–that is LOVE.

Katy finished in 1:50–fantastic!  We paused to take a couple shots in front of the falls–why miss an opportunity?

Great shots!

Best race ever!  I will definitely consider doing this one again.  The only thing I would have changed would be the start time; 10 a.m. just seems SO LATE.  But, since it’s a bit of a hike to get there, it was nice being able to wake up at my regular time and still get to the race.  Here’s to next year’s fall half-marathons–there are so many good ones in this area!  If they weren’t so darn expensive, I might do one every month…

an international morning

Hello Canada!

Emily, Katy and I (and Emily’s med-student husband, Adam) made the trip across the border this morning to get our race packets.  A series of unfortunate events has precluded Emily from running, but she joined us (heck, they drove!) for moral support and to facilitate introductions.  For those who don’t know, Emily is the blogger I found via Kath’s blog and is a dietetic student at Buff State.  Katy is her friend and running the race, too.

Katy (left) and Emily (right) and I did the picture-taking thing after grabbing our goodie bags.  (It’s what you do when you have a blog…)  SO excited about the iPhone!  It took these awesome photos and I didn’t have to drag Andrew’s giant camera with me 🙂

Wish me luck tomorrow!