Thanksgiving recipe: Sorghum buttermilk pie
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In case you haven鈥檛 noticed, I love cooking with buttermilk. It tenderizes, flavorizes, tangifies and creamifies anything it works with. I go out of my way to seek out good, thick country buttermilk. It is the most important ingredient in fried chicken, biscuits and cornbread. I use it in dressings, gravies, marinades, cookies cakes and pies. It is always on my refrigerator.
And one of the best resources I鈥檝e found for buttermilk recipes is "," first published in 1928. Tucked into the tightly packed pages are more recipes that use buttermilk than I could count, and I have a little post-it flag on almost all of them. I marked 鈥淢olasses Custard鈥 on one page and recently returned to it.聽
I hadn鈥檛 at first marking realized it was a pie filling, but figured that was even better. These old-fashioned recipes are short and not particularly detailed, and the pie crust part is just a short line at the end. But I couldn鈥檛 resist. I switched out the molasses for sorghum, because I love the earthy, Southern sweetness of the syrup.
Sorghum buttermilk pie
Serves 8
Pastry for one 9-inch pie
1 cup sorghum
1/2 cup buttermilk
1 cup granulated sugar
2 tablespoons flour
1/2聽teaspoon baking soda
3 eggs
1. Preheat the oven to 300 degrees F. Fit the pastry into a pie plate and set aside.
2. Stir the sorghum, buttermilk, sugar, flour, and baking soda together in a large, high sided saucepan. Crack the eggs into the measuring jug you used for the sorghum and milk and beat together. Pour into the pan and stir to thoroughly combine all the ingredients. You might want to use a whisk to break up any flour lumps, but use a heatproof spatula while cooking.
3. Place the pan over medium high heat and cook, stirring constantly, until the mixture comes to a boil. Scrape the bottom and sides of the pan frequently to prevent scorching. The filling will bubble up so needs to be stirred and watched carefully. When it reaches a boil, remove from the heat and stir it down for a few minutes until some of the foaming subsides. Carefully pour it into the prepared crust 聽Fill it right to the top, if you have more in the pan than will fit in the crust, let it settle a few minutes, then gently stir the remaining filling into the crust.
4. Bake the pie for 40鈥45 minutes, until it is firm with just a little wobble to it. I鈥檝e never had the filling spill over, but just to be safe I like to put a foil lined baking sheet on the rack below to catch any potential drips.
5. Place the pie plate on a rack to cool completely, then chill until firm.