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Norma Harrington’s Pie Crust

By , from the Joan Menefee collection
Yield 1 crust with lattice top

Introduction

Perfect for a blackberry pie, this crust recipe came from Norma Harrington at Nendell’s Inn in Portland about 50 years ago. So it’s a state-of-the-art retro Oregon recipe. Its greatest strength as a crust is its idiot-proofness — you can work it and work it and it doesn’t get tough.

Ingredients

2 cups sifted flour
½ tsp. salt
cup vegetable shortening
cup cold whipping cream

Steps

  1. Cut the flour, salt, and shortening with forks or a pastry cutter. Moisten with the whipping cream until the dry ingredients adhere to one another but are not sticky.
  2. Gather the dough into a ball, wrap in plastic wrap, parchment, or waxed paper, and refrigerate for at least half an hour.
  3. Roll out the dough and transfer it to a pie pan. Use the remaining dough to make a lattice top crust.
  4. If making a blackberry pie, fill the bottom pie crust with several cups of fresh washed blackberries mixed with 1 cup sugar and the juice of 1 lemon. Cover with the lattice top and bake at 400 for about an hour, until the crust is browned and the filling is bubbling. Let cool on a rack before serving.

Notes

If you have any extra dough, roll it out, sprinkle it with cinnamon and sugar, and cut into 1-inch-thick strips. Bake at 400 degrees until golden.

Related post: Blackberry belts

This content is from the Joan Menefee collection.

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There are 2 comments on this item
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1. by DawnHeather Simmons on Aug 14, 2009 at 6:50 PM PDT

Well, Joan, I will definitely give this a try! Pie crust has long been my nemesis... so I’m all about trying an “idiot proof” recipe! Thanks! And another lovely article, by the way...

2. by joanmenefee on Aug 25, 2009 at 10:37 AM PDT

Thanks, DawnHeather. The shortening still gives me pause, but butter is just a lot fussier than shortening in this type of dough. I’ll be curious to see what you think. I haven’t found any blackberries in Wisconsin this month (at least not in any quantity), but I did spend a happy half hour eating blueberries and service berries on the Apostle Island Lakeshore this week. Sadly, we’d hiked too far to make trucking them out practical. And maybe the bears deserve their share.

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