Gluten-Free Buttermilk Apple Hand Pies // So...Let's Hang Out

I’m not what you’d call a baker.

Meticulous measurements are not my thing. I’ve been known to “wing it” when it comes to cookies and the like. This is where you pick out a recipe and use it as a very loose guideline. It usually involves extra cinnamon and way too many chocolate chips. Perhaps this stems from my distaste for word problems or anything math. Or, perhaps it goes back to my inherent distaste for being told what to do.  As a child, I once willfully poked a fork into my eye, simply because my mother told me not to. I wore this misdeed in the form of an eye patch for a few weeks while the puncture wounds from the tines healed. Not kidding.

Gluten-Free Buttermilk Apple Hand Pies // So...Let's Hang Out

Baking is like a series of escalating dares. I like to test its limits. Often, it pays off. I get lucky. I get away with it. We end up with something like these cookies, or these tartlets. Life is good. Then other times, I get stabbed in the eye with a fork. Metaphorically speaking, of course.

This past week I put on some Jewel and got fast and loose with some pie crust. Wrong. I was playing some foolish games, my friends (yes, Jewel puns).  There was a situation. It was bad. Also, the only thing sadder than seeing a two year old wearing an eye patch is pulling a truly mediocre and slightly burnt pie from the oven. Okay, no, a two year old in an eye patch is worse. But, you get the picture. It’s not good.  However, it’s totally humbling. Is that where that whole humble pie saying comes from?  I get it. *Note: it’s not at all where that saying comes from. At all.*

Gluten-Free Buttermilk Apple Hand Pies // So...Let's Hang Out

So, yesterday I got real with myself. I put down my metaphorical eye-puncturing fork.  I measured everything. I didn’t try to get fancy. I broke out the big guns and used this fail-proof flour mix. There were two whole sticks of butter. There was buttermilk. I chilled it. I rolled it. I said a prayer. I did a pie dance. I cut out my pie dough into little heart shapes and filled it with cinnamon spiced apples.

Gluten-Free Buttermilk Apple Hand Pies // So...Let's Hang Out

My husband and I consulted on whether I should make a full-sized pie or individual hand pies. We mulled it over and decided we liked the idea of being able to quickly and easily get this pie into our mouth with efficiency. My husband might have likened it to a “pie sandwich”. I like his brain.  Also, tiny pie is super cute.

Gluten-Free Buttermilk Apple Hand Pies // So...Let's Hang Out

I will caution you that pie baking gets messy. This is a shot of my kitchen table in the throes of it. It gets worse before it gets better. You kind of just have to go for it. Maybe you get some flour in your hair. Maybe you catch your dog trying to sneak up onto the table and lick the bowl that contained your buttermilk. She’s the worst baking assistant ever. She’s totally fired.

Gluten-Free Buttermilk Apple Hand Pies // So...Let's Hang Out

Don’t worry. It’s going to be worth all the muss and fuss. Trust me. Once you seal them up with a fork, brush them with buttermilk and sprinkle them with sugar, you are ready to stick them into the oven and let the magic happen.

Gluten-Free Buttermilk Apple Hand Pies // So...Let's Hang Out

Fast forward twenty minutes later and you’ve got some hot little pies just begging to be put into your hot little hands. Caution: they really are hot. Bits of molten apple goo will actually burn your flesh. Just guess how I figured that one out…

Gluten-Free Buttermilk Apple Hand Pies // So...Let's Hang Out

Once they have cooled slightly, all bets are off. Hot little hands, meet hot little pies. I used my cooling time to whip up a little coconut whipped cream. Lemme tell ya, that stuff is kind of magic when it’s slathered on top of one of these little pies. Regular whip would also be divine. Heck, why don’t you just throw one of these in a bowl of vanilla ice cream? All good things.

Gluten-Free Buttermilk Apple Hand Pies // So...Let's Hang Out

As I bit into my first pie (yes, maybe I had more than one) I felt a sense of accomplishment. It’s like I aced my math test. I followed that word problem. Sure, I’m more of an art student, but I just nailed that chemistry exam.  I measured all the things.  Heck, I felt like a baker. Well, at least like I was passing. And, you know what? I managed not to puncture anything with a fork. Life is totally good. I’m not wearing an eye patch.

Gluten-Free Buttermilk Apple Hand Pies // So...Let's Hang Out

Enjoy, Friends! I hope that these sweet little treats find a spot on your Thanksgiving table. xox

Gluten-Free Buttermilk Apple Hand Pies

Serves 12 hand pies     adjust servings

Pie crust recipe from Joy The Baker

Ingredients

    Pie Crust

    • 3 cups Cup4Cup Gluten-Free Flour , plus extra for rolling out the dough
    • 2 tablespoons granulated sugar
    • 1 teaspoon salt
    • 1 cup ( 2 sticks) of cold, unsalted butter, cut into cubes
    • 1 large egg
    • 1/2 cup cold buttermilk, plus more for brushing on tops of pies
    • 1 tbs course sugar

    Pie Filling

    • 4-5 apples, I used a combo of Granny Smith & Pink Ladies
    • 2 tsp cinnamon
    • 1/2 tsp cloves
    • 1/2 tsp nutmeg
    • 1/2 cup brown sugar, firmly packed
    • juice of 1/2 a lemon
    • 2 tsp arrowroot powder
    • 2 tbs unsalted butter

    Instructions

    1. In a large mixing bowl, combine your flour, sugar, and salt. Whisk together until it is well combined.
    2. Add in your cubed cold butter. Work the butter into the flour mixture with clean hands. You will start to get a shaggy mixture. The butter will break down into different sized chunks. Some will be the size of oat flakes, others will be the size of peas.
    3. In a smaller bowl whisk together your buttermilk and your egg.
    4. Create a well in your dough mixture, and pour your buttermilk mixture into the center of that well.
    5. Using a fork, work the wet ingredients into the flour and butter mixture. Do your best to moisten all of your flour mixture. Your dough should come together and be both moist and a bit shaggy.
    6. Turn your dough out onto a floured surface and split it into two even pieces. Shape these even pieces into discs, flour them, and wrap them in plastic wrap.
    7. Set your wrapped dough to chill the fridge for about an hour.
    8. While you wait for your dough to chill, peel all of your apples and chop them into small and manageable bite sized pieces.
    9. Add them to a bowl with your spices, brown sugar, arrowroot powder and lemon juice. Stir until they are well combined.
    10. In a large skillet, heat up your 2 tbs of butter. Add your apples to the pan and cook for 5-8 minutes or until the fruit starts to soften.
    11. Once the fruit starts to become soft, remove your apples from the heat, put them in a separate bowl and allow them to cool completely.
    12. When your dough has finished chilling, remove it from the refrigerator and allow it to sit out for a couple of minutes.
    13. Preheat your oven to 350 degrees and line two baking sheets with parchment paper.
    14. Using a well floured surface and a well floured rolling pin, roll your dough out to about an 1/8 of an inch thickness. Using a large cookie cutter (I used a heart shaped cookie cutter, but you can use whatever you have on hand. A circle would work great.) cut out your dough. Place your cut out dough onto a parchment lined baking sheet. Keep reshaping your scraps and cutting out shapes until you've used up all your pie dough.
    15. Place a small amount of filling inside of your dough. Try to omit as much of the liquid as possible so that your crust does not get soggy. Take another one of your pie dough cut outs and place it directly on top of the dough that contains the filling.
    16. Using a fork, gently seal the edges of your pies by pressing the tines into the dough all around the edges. If you fill your pastry up too much, the dough will begin to break.
    17. Once you have repeated this step on all twelve pies, use a knife to cut a couple of slits in the tops of your hand pies.
    18. Using a pastry brush, brush the tops of your pies with buttermilk and sprinkle with course sugar.
    19. Bake pies for 20-25 minutes or until they turn a beautiful golden brown.
    20. Allow them to cool for 10-15 minutes and then serve them warm with whipped cream or ice cream.
    21. Enjoy!

    by

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