Karelian Pies

Karelian Pie

Years ago I met a young Finnish woman named Sirkku, and she made what she called Karelian Pies.  I’ve never forgotten them, but never really knew how to make them.  What I do recall is that the filling was a buttery, creamy rice – unlike anything I had ever tasted before – in a rye dough square that had finger prints on the edges, and was turned over, corner to corner, to contain the rice.  I thought they were absolutely delicious.

Mixing Flours and Water

Move ahead to the days of the internet and instant gratification.  I decided to look them up, and came across this recipe for the pies at Tofu for Tea:

Karelian pies (makes 12-14 small pies)
120 g rye flour
30 g plain flour
1/8 tsp salt
120 ml water
190 g white rice (she used sushi rice, I used Arborio)
500 ml milk
1/2 tsp freshly grated nutmeg (optional)

If you don’t have a scale, try to keep the portions similar for wet / dry ingredients.  Luckily, I do have a scale, and it worked out nicely.  Use Google to get equivalent non-metric measurements.
Choose a good dark rye flour.  Bob’s Red Mill is one I use for all sorts of baking, and it is always really tasty.  Other brands exist – see what is out there.

Rye Flour
Sift together the rye flour, plain flour and salt in a bowl, or use a whisk to blend the flours and salt.  Add the water to the flour by making a small well in the middle, and stir with a spoon as you pour the water into the well.  Dough will be soft and moist (and I think would be great for crackers!).
Mixing Flours and Water
When all is combined, mush the dough together into a ball and transfer to a board dusted with flour.  Roll the dough into a tube, cut in half, and roll out until long and thin.  My final dough looked like two long tubes, each about 14 inches in length, and about an inch in diameter.  Divide into 12-14 pieces.
Tubular!
Sliced and Ready to Roll Out
Making sure you have plenty of flour on your hands and the board, roll the sliced tubes into balls.  As with pie dough, it is really important to work with a lot of flour, and dry hands.  Flatten each ball slightly, and with a floured rolling pin, very gently flatten the balls into oval shapes.  Flip the dough over after 3 or 4 rolls with the pin, and never put more pressure on the edge of the dough with the pin – you want a light touch.  Spread the dough out from the center to the edges until it is about 1/8 inch thick.  Transfer to cookie sheet lined with parchment paper.  If the dough gets smooshed into the board, or sticks to the rolling pin, scrape it off, and roll it into a ball.  Before reworking it into a flattened shape, remove the sticky dough left on the board or the pin, and redust everything with flour.
Rye Dough Balls
Rolled Out Dough
The rice totals about 2 c. dry.  Put into a pan, rinse until clear, and then drain.  Add 1 qt. water (or 1 liter), bring to boil, then drop to low, cover, and cook about 15 minutes.  You will now have a rather watery mix of rice and liquid.  Drain rice and water in a sieve for about 20 minutes.  Return to pan, add milk (about 2 c.) and bring to light boil, drop temperature, cover, and maintain a simmer.
Cooked Rice - First Cooking
Draining Rice
Creamy Rice - Second Cooking with Milk
Check your pot and stove top as milk boils over very easily!  As an aside, this is also an excellent base for stove-top rice pudding, but the crock pot works better because it doesn’t boil over.
Boiled Over!
Boiled-Over Milk
The flattened rye dough doesn’t need to be covered with a damp cloth while the rice cooks.  You might consider cooking the rice and making the rye dough while the rice cooks
Pies Ready to Bake
Once the rice is cooked, stir it up with the grated nutmeg.  You might consider a little butter as well, if you like that richness.  The nutmeg adds a really nice touch to the pies – no idea if it is traditional – and I imagine that, instead of nutmeg, some good, fresh herbs would be nice, such as fresh chervil or savory.  Fill the pies with a nice mound of rice.  You can fill each flattened rye ball, and then do curl the edges of the dough up and around the rice, or do it individually.  Keep your hands dry, so I suggest just dusting them with white flour.  Pinch the dough together around the rice.  When you have made all the pies, left over rice can be added carefully to the pies.

Melt a couple of tablespoons of butter in a dish and stir in a bit of milk.  Brush this over the rice and on the rye dough.

Preheat the oven to 210 C / 400 F.  Bake for about 20 minutes.  I had two racks, so I switched the racks half way between, at the 10 minute mark.  Cool on the pans, or move to wire racks.  When completely cooled, store in a container in the refrigerator.
Cooling Pies on Rack
Notes
It took about 1.5 to 2 hours to make these.  They are rather tasty, and certainly not something most of us eat every day.  I imagine they would be very nice as a side dish, say with fish or a good green salad.  By themselves, they can be a bit bland, but with a good pairing with other foods, would work out very nicely.  Personally, I really like them, and when I want something to do, they could be just the perfect thing to keep my hands out of the devil’s work.

Quesadillas!

I don’t like the standard quesadilla I’ve experienced – cheese and meat mushed together in a flour tortilla. Definitely unappetizing. However, not too long ago, we had dinner at the in-laws, and as always, we were well fed. We met up prior to seeing Itzhak Perlman at the Oxnard Performing Arts Center, so dinner was light. And that is when I fell in love with quesadillas a la Drew. And this afternoon, we had some.

These quesadillas are not slap-dash, but require a bit of time. For your pleasure, here is how they are made.

Ingredients

Large flour tortillas
Large peppers – red bell, pasilla, and / or other tasty peppers
Grilled chicken breasts
Sauteed onions mixed with chipotle and ancho powder
Grated jack cheese

Roast peppers over open flame until skin is charred. Steam in bag or closed container to cool. Peel and seed. Grate cheese, slice chicken. Sautee onions until slightly caramelized; add seasoning if desired.

On tortilla, layer cheese evenly over the entire surface. One one half of tortilla, spread out pieces of chicken, peppers, onions, and then place in hot cast iron skillet which has been sprayed with oil. Turn up heat, and cook open-faced until the cheese has melted. Once melted, fold tortilla in half, squish a bit, and let cook a bit more. Remove from skillet, slice and serve with sour cream and salsa.

Serve with Margaritas!

Roasted Bell Peppers

Peel and Seed the Peppers

Grate the Cheese, Slice the Chicken

Cheese All Over Tortilla. Chicken, Peppers and Onions on One Half

Heat in Iron Skillet Until Cheese Melts

Fold Tortilla in Half

Serve with Margaritas . . . Devour!

Moussaka

I’m currently reading The Bellini Card, by Jason Goodwin.  If you are not familiar with the series, I suggest you pick one up, especially if you enjoy cooking, foreign culture, and history. Our hero, Yashim, is in Venice in 1840. And, at one point, he makes Turkish Moussaka for a Venetian family – “lasagna without noodles.”

Having the house all to myself for the next three days, I thought I’d do a bit of baking. And since the moussaka sounded good, exotic, and filling, I did a bit of research and created my own:

Moussaka a la Turque

4 small Italian eggplants
1 1/2 large white onions
4-6 large cloves of garlic
1 lb. ground lamb
1/2 c. chopped Italian parsley
3 chopped medium-sized tomatoes
1 1/2 tsp. Chinese cinnamon
1 tsp. ground allspice
1-2 tsp. fresh ground pepper
2 eggs
2 c. goat milk yogurt
Aleppo pepper

Heat broiler.

Peel eggplants, slice about 1/2 inch thick. In large bowl of salted water, place peeled, sliced eggplants, and let soak for about 30 minutes (while you do some other things).

Chop onion and garlic together, very fine. Place in 10-12 inch frying pan, saute until golden in 3 T. olive oil. Add ground lamb, and continue to cook, stirring the lamb-onion-garlic mixture to brown the meat. When meat is browned, add parsley, tomatoes, cinnamon, allspice, pepper, and about 1/4 – 1/2 c. water. Continue to cook over medium heat to make a thick sauce.

While meat is cooking, mix together eggs, yogurt, and aleppo pepper. Let sit. Add pinch of salt if desired.

Drain eggplant slices, squeeze, and set out on paper towels, pat dry. Lightly grease cookie sheet, and in one layer, place sliced eggplant. Spray with oil, or lighly brush slices with oil. Broil until slices are lightly browned, about 5 mins. Turn over, coat with oil, and repeat. Remove from oven.

Drop oven to 375 degrees F.

In 9 x 9 glass pan, place ground meat mixture. Cover with eggplant slices. Pour yogurt-egg mixture on top. Clean up the kitchen, letting the yogurt-egg mixture settle over meat and eggplant.

Bake for 40 minutes, until top is nicely browned. Cool about 15 minutes. Serve with salad.