You’re the apple of my pie.
No, seriously, you’re sweet enough to eat.
This pie was truly a labor of love… and a product of this amazing community.
Yes, I made it, but it wouldn’t have happened at all without my inspiring friends, readers, and the food blog community at large. The filling recipe is loosely adapted from Bravetart’s amazing cookbook and the crust is Laura’s miraculous stand-mixer pie crust (seriously). Not to mention that the inspiration to make an apple pie with marzipan came from one of you!
I’ll admit, I’ve never really loved apple pie (I’ll choose a chocolate dessert over a fruit one any day) and probably never would have chosen to make one for Thanksgiving. But when reader Michelle commented in my facebook group that she likes to add cubes of marzipan to the apple pie filling… well you don’t need to say marzipan twice to get me on board.
Of course it took me a few tries to get it right (easy as pie my a$$) but the end result is well worth it.
The first pie I made for Thanksgiving (which was just Taylor and me this year and thus a perfect opportunity to test out something new). To begin with, I was concentrating so hard on my lovely lattice crust that I completely forgot to put the marzipan in the filling (doh). The pie itself also decided to go all Vesuvius on me and erupt boiling hot apple caramel out the sides.
Good news: I had a baking sheet under the pie.
Bad news: I didn’t line that baking sheet with foil.
RIP baking sheet.
Still, we ate the pie and admitted, even without the marzipan, that the recipe had potential and deserved another try.
For the second pie I scrapped the lattice (figuring a solid top might hold in the hot filling better), I also adjusted the filling a bit, reduced the juice to lessen the total liquid in the filling, and (gasp!) didn’t forget the marzipan this time.
So what went wrong?
Well, I maybe got a bit too overzealous with the decoration, cutting the letters out of the solid top, leaving some very thin and fragile areas between the letters that ultimately collapsed when the pie was cooling.
I attempted to salvage it for a photo by propping it up with paper towels (shameless, I know), and then promptly forgot about the paper towels as I went to slice into it. Yum!
So we were getting closer, but still not quite there.
3rd time’s a charm?
Despite a ghostly apparition appearing in my pie crust (you know, like Jesus in the grilled cheese? Except this looked like a buttery ghost as I rolled out my crust). I was convinced this was a bad omen… the last thing you want to see when you’re down on your pie luck already is a freaking ghost in your pie crust, and yet, this pie baked up beautifully… no eruptions, no collapsed top, and the filling perfectly set and balanced in sweetness and flavor. Finally a pie worth sharing!
So, maybe it was a good ghost then?
This final iteration differs from the last one only in the style of the crust (cut out letters on top of the solid crust and a few carefully placed vent holes makes for a sturdier top), also a slight reduction in the quantity of sugar (this really depends on how sweet you like your pie and how sweet your apples are to begin with, but the marzipan does add a good deal of sugar on its own which is why there is so much less sugar here than is traditionally used).
The apples macerate with sugar and spices for about an hour (I did this in a zip top bag) then all the liquid is drained off (just snip the corner of the bag) and reduced on the stove until it’s thickened and syrupy and almost caramelized. This extra step ensures the pie filling is not overly juicy or runny. (Bravetart’s original recipe doesn’t do this, but after my first pie disaster I felt it was a smart step to take).
The marzipan is cut into cubes and then layered into the pie, where it almost melts into the apples as it bakes, infusing the filling with a subtle almond flavor and sweetness. Seriously though – plain old apple pie’s got nothing on this.
I’m putting this out there: 2018 will be the year of pie. It’s something I’ve struggled with so much so that it’s become a running joke every Thanksgiving: what kind of pie disaster will Lindsay have this year?
Well, no more. I’m committed to practicing my pie skills by making a pie a month in 2018, focusing on pies that require traditional (ie: not cookie) crusts. Practice makes perfect, right? So maybe by this time next year I’ll be a pro at this whole pie thing, and the Thanksgiving pie curse will be vanquished once and for all!
Who’s with me?
(I mean, you get to eat pie every month so why NOT?)
This perfect apple pie recipe features two kinds of apples for balanced flavor and sweetness, layered with cubes of marzipan for an unexpected touch of almond.
Filling heavily adapted from Bravetart, crust from A Beautiful Plate.
All images and text ©Lindsay Landis / Love & Olive OilLet us know what you think!
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