• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Charlotte Pike

Food & Drink Expert

  • About
  • Writing
  • Consulting
  • Speaking
  • Contact

Recipes

Apple pie

3 January 2016 By Charlotte Pike

Freshly baked apple pie

Freshly baked apple pie

An apple pie is one of the most comforting, homely puddings you can ever make, and this is my all-time favourite recipe, adapted from my Hungry Student Baking book.

If you’re not confident making pastry from scratch, this is a great recipe to start with. It’s pretty much foolproof and produces a delicious, rich, buttery pastry. It’s slightly sweet and enriched with egg yolks, which is exactly how I like sweet shortcrust pastry. I hope this recipe will also convert you to making pastry at home, rather than using shop-bought. The difference is astonishing.

This pie is easy and quick to make, as homemade pies go, and it also uses readily-available ingredients – all of which I will generally keep in the kitchen – so this is a lovely last-minute dessert to make to follow a Sunday roast. It’ll really impress your family or guests.

Feel free to add more spice or dried fruit to the mix. Cloves and sultanas all work very well here. You could also use half Bramley apples and half eating apples, such as Cox, Braeburn or Jazz, which would produce a softer texture and taste a little sharper.

Apple pie

Copyright Charlotte Pike

Tip: I use eating apples in my pies, but feel free to use baking apples, such as Bramley apples. Just add an extra 25g/ ¼ cup sugar

Ingredients

For the pastry

  • 300g/2 ½ cups plain flour
  • 150g/2/3 cup butter, cubed and chilled
  • 4 tsp caster sugar
  • 2 egg yolks
  • 8 tsp ice cold water

For the apple filing

  • 650g eating apples, peeled, cored and cut into slices
  • 70g/generous 1/3 cup caster sugar
  • 1 tsp cinnamon
  • 4 tsp water
  • 1 egg, beaten
  • 3 tbsp caster sugar for sprinkling

Method

  • Place the apple slices into a saucepan with the sugar, cinnamon and water and cook for 10 minutes. The apples should have softened a little during this time.Set aside to cool.
  • If you are making pastry, start with this first. If not, skip to stage 9
  • Place the flour and butter into a bowl. Rub together lightly using your fingers until the mixture resembles breadcrumbs
  • Add the sugar and egg yolk and stir into the butter and flour
  • Finally, add the cold water, a little at a time. Take a table knife and use this to stir the mixture to mix the water in.
  • Once the water has been added, bring the pastry together to form a ball. Wrap in cling film and chilli in the fridge for 20 minutes
  • Whilst the pastry is chilling, preheat the oven to 200C/400F/Gas Mark 6. Grease a 24cm pie dish, or a 20cm/ 8” round spring form tin well and set aside
  • When the pastry is chilled, take two large sheets of clingfilm, place half the ball of pastry between the two sheets and roll out to be thin enough to fit the tin – ¼-½ cm thickness is generally about right.
  • Fit the pastry to the tin and press into the edges and round the sides. If you are using the springform tin, build the pastry up to 5 cm up the sides of the tin and cut around the edges neatly. If you have any thin patches, just press any excess pastry over them to cover them up. If you are using the pie dish, leave 1-2cm excess pastry around the rim.
  • Fill the pastry case with the apple mixture.
  • Roll out the second half of the pastry as you did the first half. Place the pastry on top of the pie and cut around the edge of the dish using a knife.
  • Dampen down the edges of both pieces of pastry with water. To do this, take a little cold water in a glass. Dip your finger in the water and then dab it onto the edges of the pastry to moisten. Then, take a fork, and press down around the rim of the pie to seal the pastry.
  • Brush the pie with the beaten egg to glaze, and sprinkle with the caster sugar. Make a couple of cuts in the centre of the pie using a sharp knife
  • Bake the pie for 25-30 minutes until golden brown.
  • Serve with cream, custard or ice cream

Filed Under: Baking, Dinner, Recipes, Uncategorized Tagged With: Apple pie, Apple pie filling, Apple pie from scratch, Apple pie recipe, Apples, Best ever apple pie, Dessert, Easy apple pie recipe, food, Fruit pudding, homemade, Homemade pie, How to cook, How to make apple pie, How to make pastry, How to use up apples, Pastry recipe, pudding, Sweet pastry, Sweet shortcrust, Traditional apple pie, Ultimate apple pie

Mulled Wine

31 December 2015 By Charlotte Pike

DSC_0011

Mulled wine is one of my favourite drinks at this time of the year. As always, homemade is infinitely superior to shop bought. This is my recipe for homemade mulled wine and it is sensational.

If you haven’t made your own before, then I urge you to. You’ll be amazed by how good it is. The flavours of the spices and fruit really sing, and it’s so much more interesting and complex in flavour than the sugary shop-bought stuff. Even the good quality brands.

Mulled wine is incredibly quick to make and doesn’t require a huge list of ingredients. I always keep the requisite ingredients in stock at home, so I can prepare a batch from cupboard to glass in under 15 minutes. I hope you enjoy it as much as my friends and family have this Christmas.

Mulled Wine

Charlotte Pike

Serves 6-8

Ingredients

750ml bottle quality red wine

Juice and zest of a large orange

Zest of an unwaxed lemon

1 tsp vanilla extract

100g caster sugar

3 star anise

3 cloves

A good grating of fresh nutmeg (around a teaspoon)

1 cinnamon stick

Method

Place all the ingredients into a saucepan. Stir well and warm gently over a moderate heat. Do not allow to boil. Heat until small bubbles form around the edge of the pan. Strain through a sieve and serve hot.

Filed Under: Dinner, Recipes Tagged With: Mulled wine, Mulled wine recipe

Gingerbread biscuits

24 December 2015 By Charlotte Pike

DSC_0001

Gingerbread biscuits are one of my favourite Christmas treats. They keep extremely well and are loved by friends and family of all ages. I’ve been tinkering with my gingerbread recipe this year, and this one is, I think, my best ever. My original recipe is still very popular, and requires fewer ingredients, but these are my all-time favourite now. I haven’t bothered with icing biscuits this year, as I just haven’t had the time, but I think these are rather charming cut into Christmas tree shapes and sprinkled with a little icing sugar.

Gingerbread biscuits

Makes 18 large biscuits

Ingredients

250g plain flour, plus a little extra for the work surface

85g light brown soft sugar

4 tsp ground ginger

1 tsp ground nutmeg

1 tsp bicarbonate of soda

Pinch salt

75ml golden syrup

120g butter, softened

1 egg yolk

 

Method

Start by sifting the flour, sugar, ginger, nutmeg, bicarb. and salt into a large mixing bowl and stir to combine.

Add the syrup, butter and egg yolk and mix well to combine. This is easiest done in a stand mixer. The mixture will form a fairly firm dough when it’s mixed together. Bring the dough into a ball and flatten to form a disc, around 3 cm thick. Cover in cling film and refrigerate for 20-30 minutes.

Meanwhile, preheat the oven to 180C and line two large baking sheets with non-stick baking parchment.

Once the dough is chilled, remove from the fridge and unwrap. Sprinkle the work surface with extra flour and roll out the dough to around 7-9mm thick. Cut out shapes and lay them out on the baking sheet, remembering to leave at least 15mm between each biscuit, as they do expand in the oven.

Once all the shapes have been cut, bake for 7 or 8 minutes for a soft gingerbread texture and 8-10 for a crispier biscuit.

 

When the biscuits have been cooked, transfer the gingerbread to a wire rack to cool fully. They are rather nice enjoyed warm though. They keep for 7-10 days stored in an airtight container.

Filed Under: Baking, Recipes Tagged With: Baking, Biscuit, Biscuit recipe, Christmas baking, gingerbread recipe

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 3
  • Go to page 4
  • Go to page 5
  • Go to page 6
  • Go to page 7
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 9
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Subscribe to my Newsletter

Buy my books

Get in touch

  • E-mail
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn

Search

Footer

About

  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookies

Copyright © 2025 Charlotte Pike.
Website by Callia Web

×

Log In

Forgot Password?

Not registered yet? Create an Account