I consider myself lucky to live in the place I do. I'm surrounded by beauty - mountains, rivers, trees and good, generous people. There's an apple orchard not too far down the road, and when I received an invitation to visit, to explore, I knew it was something I couldn't pass up.
Luke at Mountain View Orchards is one of those good people. We stomped around, stepping over the high grass and fallen apples, taking in the last of the days sunlight, shining and glittering around the trees, apples heavy on their branches, their scent perfuming the air. He told me all about the orchard in a way only a man passionate about a place can. Not all fact, but feeling.
He lamented that the old variety of apples, the tasty, imperfect sort, were being passed over for the shiny, flawless-on-the-outside, less flavorful varieties. He told me about his passion for Appalachian culture, and we agreed that this, growing real things in a place they are meant to be grown, is far more interesting and cultural than the new Starbucks in town. All while we snacked on apples, freshly picked. It's a truth universally acknowledged that fruit plucked straight from the tree just tastes better.
Luke sent me off with a basket full of apples we'd picked, and I came home with a plan. A pie plan. As much as I love this place I call home, I also love this community, this microcosm we call the food blogging world. It's full of the same sort of good people. People like Stephanie, Beth and Sarah, who, when I sent out a tweet about needing pie, all understood and excitedly passed emails back and forth about a virtual pie party. Ladies, I cannot wait to sit down and share a slice with you one day.
This pie is bare bones, as simple and stripped down as possible. It’s just apples, sugar, salt, and a bit of brown butter. Not even a dash of cinnamon. These are the sort of apples my autumn daydreams are made of and I wanted them to shine. It's best served up with a side of The Avett Brothers (particularly this track and this one) - their new album has been my constant companion since it's release, and was playing as I baked this up. Be sure to check out Sarah, Beth, and Stephanie's posts for their lovely pies & music picks.
Brown Butter Apple Pie
pie crust (crust recipe from Martha Stewart):
2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon sugar
1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, chilled and cut into small pieces
1/4 to 1/2 cup ice water
In the bowl of a food processor, combine flour, salt, and sugar. Add butter, and process until the mixture resembles coarse meal, 8 to 10 seconds.
With machine running, add ice water in a slow, steady stream through feed tube. Pulse until dough holds together without being wet or sticky; be careful not to process more than 30 seconds. To test, squeeze a small amount together: If it is crumbly, add more ice water, 1 tablespoon at a time.
Divide dough into two equal balls. Flatten each ball into a disc and wrap in plastic. Transfer to the refrigerator and chill at least 1 hour.
Filling:
6 medium-large apples, I used granny smith, peeled, cored and sliced thinly
3/4 cup brown sugar
1/2 teaspoon salt
3 tablespoons flour
5 tablespoons butter
Preheat oven to 400 degrees. On a lightly floured surface, roll one disc of dough into a 12-inch round, 1/8-inch thick. Fit into a 9-inch pie plate. Set aside in the refrigerator.
In a pan, melt butter over medium-high heat and cook until it begins to brown, it will smell nutty and fragrant.
In a large bowl, combine the apples, brown sugar, salt, flour and brown butter. Pour into pie plate, mounding in the center. Roll second disc of dough into a 12-inch round, 1/8 inch thick. Wet edges of the crust in the plate, then lay dough on top, pressing at edges to seal. Cut vents into top crust.
Place on a parchment paper lined baking sheet. Bake at 400 for 15 minutes, until crust is browned at edges. Turn oven down to 350, bake for another 40-50 minutes.







That looked like the most magical day. We haven't had a chance to head out to pick apples this year, but I've eaten LOTS of them from our CSA. I do a brown butter and sage apple pie, but I'm going to definitely try this out.
ReplyDeleteall in this post so amazing and Magic!!
ReplyDeleteYes, Great work!
DeleteThis pie looks exquisite and the pictures (gorgeous as always) are so therapeutic... and maybe we'll share a slice one day too :-)
ReplyDeleteLove your blog and photos!:)
ReplyDeleteBeautiful, beautiful images. There's something so special about meeting folks that are passionate about what they do. It always leaves me feeling inspired.
ReplyDeleteJust made my first apple pie of the season from some beauties off my own tree. I don't have an orchard yet, but one tree sure is better than no trees to call my own. Just found you and can't get enough of this blog! How are you not advertising and making money yet?! You are SO good at this endeavor.
ReplyDeleteA beautiful pie and a beautiful day!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful apples! I love visiting the local apple orchard. The apples there are delicious. That pie looks so tasty too.
ReplyDeletebeautiful Hannah x
ReplyDeleteSuch a beautiful post, Hannah! Your pie looks lovely, and those apples in the basket are lovely. I hope that one day we can really sit down and have a slice together. xo
ReplyDeleteSo beautiful! And yes, the pie looks and sounds delicious. I have never actually made a apple pie, so maybe one of these days...
ReplyDeleteLove the bushel of apples in the crate. Lovely indeed...
ReplyDeletePie party?! HECK YES! Love this idea!
ReplyDeleteWow, those are some seriously gorgeous photos! Definitely makes me miss living somewhere with a distinct 'fall' season!
ReplyDeleteSo nice to have a new post from you! Your photographs are breathtaking, and that pie looks so scrumptious. Thank you for sharing it!
ReplyDeletexo
I love a bare bones apple pie. It really points to the beauty of the ingredients.
ReplyDeleteLooks like you had a lovely time in the orchard!
lovely pictures
ReplyDeleteSO gorgeous!!
ReplyDeleteI love the photos here, wow.
ReplyDeleteSheesh. Every single photo. Beautiful work, Hannah.
ReplyDeleteamazing beautiful photos. everyone of them. enjoy the pie party!
ReplyDeleteApple orchards have a special place in my heart. Every year in early October the family would gather at my grandmother's house, each family unit supplying a bushel of apples. Everyone had a job - I was usually an apple peeler - and together, as a family, we'd make homemade apple pies. (We're a LARGE extended family) Grandma had a freezer in her basement just for these pies. We'd freeze them, and then take two out every time we'd have a big family dinner. To this day I can't eat store bought apple pie.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful photos and pie! Yum.
ReplyDeleteYum! I hadn't thought of doing brown butter in an apple pie, but I bet they're perfect together! I love your pie pan as well...
ReplyDeleteGorgeous photos, as usual Hannah! Will be trying this recipe out as soon as apple prices go down here in Florida.. Browned butter makes everything taste better ;)
ReplyDeleteI made an apple pie on Sunday too!! I've been enjoying a piece every night after everyone is asleep, it's my favorite time of the night :) I LOVE your pie dish.
ReplyDeleteHannah, your pictures.. they're so amazing! there's an indescribable atmosphere, so magic and perfect. Love it! And love your beatiful apple pie=)
ReplyDeletexoxo
Gorgeous doesn't even begin to describe how amazing these photographs are.
ReplyDeleteYou are so talented.
This pie sounds so interesting, and your pictures are beautiful! I work at a cider mill bakery, here in Western NY, and make apple pies by the dozens (from scratch, I may add). I have never seen an apple pie without spice, but the addition of brown butter, I can only imagine adds a depth of warm flavor, without masking the apple taste.
ReplyDeleteIs that Luke in the photos? I dig his outfit -- so perfect for a day in the orchard! Lovely post, Hannah.
ReplyDeleteThese photos are so dreamy and ethereal. We don't really have apple orchards in my area, so I'll settle for living vicariously through your photos and words :) I'm really digging the simplicity of this apple pie. I'll have to try to make one soon.
ReplyDeleteI was having a pie day yesterday too. But then, for lack of time, I turned to apple crisp. Just as tasty, but I'm so making an apple pie for real soon!
ReplyDeleteGorgeous. I love the photos...and the pie looks amazing. I live in New Hampshire, where we are also fortunate to have natural beauty around us, similar to yours. Thank you for capturing the glory of your area, and those amazing apples!
ReplyDeleteYour photographs are absolutely stunning. I could stare at them all day. And brown butter apple pie sounds so lovely.
ReplyDeleteYou're really making me miss the apple-picking and cider mills of my Midwestern youth. :) That pie looks wonderful!
ReplyDeletesuch a beautiful post.
ReplyDeleteStunning, stunning photographs that capture the bittersweet quality of autumn.
ReplyDeleteI am waiting to go for apple picking and yet to bake my first pie of the season. Such gorgeous photos and I am loving the rustic look of the set up!
ReplyDeleteso beautiful hannah!
ReplyDeleteYour photos from the orchard are really striking. This year at my local farmers market it seems there are more of the heirloom varieties than I've seen in years past. It's a comforting thing and I enjoy tasting them all. I love that you kept your pie so simple to let the apples shine.
ReplyDeleteA simple apple pie sounds just perfect right now. The weather is cool, but not cold, the nights are getting darker quicker...
ReplyDeleteI'm so making apple pie this weekend!
Wow, Hannah. You captured the true beauty of this orchard...
ReplyDeleteI wish to know more about this because it actually catches my attention. Keep on posting valuable information about this dude! Thank you so much for sharing.
ReplyDeleteGreat apple orchards and pie parties. Love it!
ReplyDeleteThis is such a lovely post Hannah, and you do indeed live in a beautiful place. I would not pass up on an offer to pick apples in a neighbour's orchard either! His lament is well-founded, alas, for there really are too many pieces of cloned produce in supermarkets now. Even in our markets, the varieties are only just beginning to become more interesting.
ReplyDeleteI'm loving the fact, that while everyone is pumpkin mad, there is this beautiful post featuring gorgeous apples and apple pie. I'm partial to a crumble myself, but a good pie pastry never goes amiss. Beautiful! Thanks for sharing, happy apple eating!
This post is heavy with Pride & Prejudice quotes... I love it! And the photo of the apples in the bucket is just so pretty, all those different colors! Glad you are soaking up the beauty of this Fall season God has given us :)
ReplyDeleteI'm taking the deepest breath now...you can almost smell it...a beautiful capture.
ReplyDeleteHannah, Beautiful photos always.
ReplyDelete-E
this is beautiful and looks like fall. super excited to make your lovely pie! :)
ReplyDeleteNow, that's an amazing pie!!!!
ReplyDeleteI really enjoy the photographs in this post. Very nice!
ReplyDeleteSuch lovely pictures! I'm going apple picking at oak glen in yucaipa, ca this weekend and these pictures made me that more excited!
ReplyDeletexoxo
http://rubiesemeralds.blogspot.com/
Slight crispness in the air now. Days are getting shorter. Nothing like a simple apple pie to bring a smile to ones face.
ReplyDelete¡Qué bella propuesta me encanta ! abrazos y abrazos
ReplyDeleteHannah, this is exactly the kind of thing I talk about. Good people, great places right where they are meant to be. Not commercialized. And where the food just tastes better.
ReplyDeleteLove the story of the apple picking as much as your beautiful pie. And that basket full of gorgeous apples.
I realized I never did leave a comment and I'd been meaning too because I, like you, am fortunate enough to live with the beauty and cultural richness that is Appalachia in my backyard. And I'm so obsessed with it and passionate about it! This post was so beautiful and made me homesick even though I am home! You photography never fails to astound me. Seriously, it's so beautiful. The focus and light are just right every time! I'm headed back down to the N. GA mountains this weekend to apple country (around Ellijay)... and I hope to get some photos half as beautiful as these! God...I love the south! (which, I might add, is something teenage me would have *never* thought I'd say!)
ReplyDeleteDo you think this would cook fine without the top layer of pie crust? I have 1 homemade crust in the freezer, and would love to fill it with this apple filling without having to make another crust,
ReplyDeleteI think that would be just fine! Maybe a crumble topping instead?
Deletethanks for sharing this recipe...i now have an excuse to get into the kitchen and bake :D
ReplyDeleteBlessings,
Alisha
www.alishainprogress.blogspot.com
So, I just found my way here via Shanna at Food Loves Writing and I'm really not sure why I've never stumbled here before? But anywho, I am so glad that I finally landed here! These pictures are beautiful and inspire me to head back to our apple orchard and pick another 12 pounds. I have to admit something: I have never baked a pie. It is a very, very sad admittance. But, seriously, this post has inspired me to change that! I shall let you know how it goes :)
ReplyDeleteI need to to thank you for this good read!! I absolutely loved every bit of it. I have you book-marked to check out new things you post…
ReplyDeleteHello.
ReplyDeleteI have been a quiet admirer of yours for some time now.
Today, on my blog (you can find the post I speak of here: http://erinellenbergermarch.com/2012/11/01/figuring-it-out/)I declared I think you are an incredible photographer. I love the moodiness and story you tell with them. I wish you wild success and hope that I will that I would tell the folks who inspire me just that; to break the silent admiration and stop assuming they know how much they inspire me.
one day have a beautiful cook/book full of your images and recipes.
I hope this finds you well and gives you some happiness.
Warmly,
Erin
That would have been much better had my laptop hadn't scrambled my words...here is how it should have flowed:
ReplyDeleteHello.
I have been a quiet admirer of yours for some time now.
Today, on my blog (you can find the post I speak of here: http://erinellenbergermarch.com/2012/11/01/figuring-it-out/)I declared that I will that I would tell the folks who inspire me just that; to break the silent admiration and stop assuming they know how much they inspire me.
one day have a beautiful cook/book full of your images and recipes.
I hope this finds you well and gives you some happiness.
Warmly,
Erin
oy, feel free to delete the previous comment ;)
That apple pie looks amazing!
ReplyDeleteI'm 15 and just started my own food blog t0astfordinner.blogspot.co.uk
A very interesting read and a great post alltogether. thanks for sharing this information.
ReplyDeleteIts interesting you information.
ReplyDeleteMagical day for apple picking!! I wish we have apple orchards here in Florida. I could only wish ;)
ReplyDeleteSo lovely!!! <3 <3
ReplyDeleteWonderful paintings! That is the kind of information that should be shared across the net. Disgrace on the seek engines for no longer positioning this publish higher! Come on over and visit my web site . Thanks =)
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