Using Russian tins of caramelised condensed milk found at a German supermarket.
Caramel Pie
The joys of shopping abroad
Joy - I found a stack of Russian condensed milk tins at a German supermarket, and while that is nothing special, this is:
they were already caramelised. That saves me a couple of hours of au-bain-marie cooking and a possible spoiled pan, not to mention
the risk of exploding tins.
Wondering how I knew what was in them? Well it says so in German at the opposite side :-) And with the hint, I could trace "moloko" to "milk"
and "sacharom" to "sugared". Still... I was a bit sceptic. Contents was a bit grainy of texture - not only was it caramelised, but cristallised as well. As with honey, heating will cure that.
So - with the parents over, I went all out and made a lovely caramel variation on the milk pies I did last year. It's a bit time-consuming, with a lot of waiting in between, but that's no problem at all with my mother who enjoys cooking and baking just as much as I do.
This is for a 23 cm round pie tin.
crust:
- 200 g self-raising flour
- 100 g caster sugar
- 100 g butter
- 1 egg yolk
- 1 tbsp water
filling:
- 1 tin/400g (caramelized) condensed milk
- 50 gr dark brown sugar
- 25 g butter
- 2 egg yolks
- 2 tbsp flour
- 1 tsp vanilla
merengue topping:
- 2 egg whites
- 75 g caster sugar
- 1 tbsp lime juice
A crust from scratch
Prepare the pie tin with a bit of margarine and line it with baking
parchment. Then go for the crust. All my foreign cookbooks speak of
convenient unbaked pie crusts from the supermarket. Well, no such stuff
here... so it's the hard way for us then.
Prepare a pastry dough with the ingredients listed for the crust; line
the pie tin with it and trim the edges. Prick the pastry with a fork
and line the inside again with baking parchment. Put dry beans on top
of that. Blind-bake this in a pre-heated oven at 175°C for 10 minutes.
Remove the beans (hot!) and peel off the parchment. Then bake for some
5 minutes more to dry it. Set aside, and go make the filling!
Filling
Just mix up the ingredients; it'sa good idea to melt the butter beforehand, but make sure it's cooled off before combining with the eggs. There's no need to whisk the egg yolks.
Baking, adding the topping
Bake in a pre-heated oven, 175°C, for about 40 minutes. It will
rise, but it won't remain that way. You could cover it with tin foil
for the last 10 minutes, to prevent the crust from getting too brown
later on. Leave to cool completely - about an hour in the fridge will
do - then whip up the merengue topping, spoon on top of the pie, and
make peaks in the merengue with the back of the spoon. Put this in the
oven again for about 12 to 15 minutes - and keep an eye on the level
of browning. The peaks should be nicely browned but the rest still lovely
soft & gooey inside.
Oh deary me, I do love pie for dessert and coffee... :-)

