Saturday, November 5, 2011

Chicken Pie

We ate a lot of what we called chicken pie when I was growing up, and I loved it, but it was not like the chicken pie I’ve eaten at other people's houses or in restaurants. Those usually have onions, peas, carrots or other vegetables in a sauce that is rather thick. At our house there were two ways of making chicken pie, baked or on the eye of the stove in a stew pot. I later learned that the stove top version would more often be called chicken and dumplings – in this case strip or rolled dumplings. This was my very favorite. Del isn't that crazy about any of it, but will eat either kind, and David would probably still just as soon have one of the cheap frozen kind he always preferred as a child.

Baked Chicken pie

Mother kept a bag of bony pieces of chicken such as backs in the freezer and added to it until she had enough to do something with. Then she would cut up a chicken and stew them together. Stewing meant simmering the chicken in water with salt and pepper until done. Mother would put resulting broth in a Pyrex dish and add the backs wings and short legs (thighs, or short jumpers as Mr. Williams called them). Then she would cover the dish with her homemade pie crust and bake until the crust was golden brown and the broth was bubbly. She would reserve the rest of the broth and chicken for chicken salad or some other dish.

Chicken Pie – stove top version

Recipe:

Stew a chicken in sufficient water to make a goodly amount of broth. Remove skin and bones and return to broth. Taste broth. If it tastes bland, add a bouillon cube or some chicken stock base and pepper.

Pastry

2 cups all purpose flour
½ t. salt
2 T Crisco
½ cup hot water

Mix flour and salt. Cut in the shortening with two knives until it resembles coarse meal. Stir in the hot water with a fork. Form into a ball and roll until 1/16” thick. Cut into strips approximately 1” by 3” and drop into simmering broth. Cook for 20 minutes, but do not allow to boil or they will break up.

Note: I prefer to keep the chicken out of the broth until after I cook and remove dumplings and most of broth into a heated serving dish. Then I quickly reheat the chicken in remaining broth and add to the dish.

Note: In a pinch, you can substitute strips from thinly rolled canned biscuits.

3 comments:

  1. Hello my name is Kenny Wilson and I found your blog looking for recipes from home . Like you I am from the Emporia and Jarratt va and I was raised on a lot of the same foods you have written about. My family was from the Purdy and Jarratt area , and I was raised on a farm as well. Have a lot of wonderful child hood memories

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  2. Hello my name is Kenny Wilson and I found your blog looking for recipes from home . Like you I am from the Emporia and Jarratt va and I was raised on a lot of the same foods you have written about. My family was from the Purdy and Jarratt area , and I was raised on a farm as well. Have a lot of wonderful child hood memories

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  3. Hi, Kenny. I graduated from GCHS in 1965, but there are still Robinsons out on the farm. I'd love to know more about your memories. Sorry I am so late answering your comment. I've fallen out of the habit of blogging, but hope to get back to it.

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