Muenster Apple Pie

"This idea struck me as I was coring and slicing some Gala apples for an apple pie and eating some mini Baby Bel cheeses. Apples with soft mild cheeses are my favorite snack of all time, so it wasn't long before inspiration really hit. I normally use Fuji apples instead of Gala, but I imagine you can use just about any crisp apple. I half my apples, core them with a melon baller, half those pieces, and then slice very thin - maybe 1/4 inch thick at the most."
 
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Ready In:
1hr 10mins
Ingredients:
10
Yields:
1 9-inch pie
Serves:
6-8
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ingredients

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directions

  • Pre-heat oven to 375°F
  • Mix flour, corn starch, salt, and spices together, and then toss the apple slices in the mixture until each piece is well-covered.
  • Toss in the Meunster cheese.
  • Stuff your pie shell with apple mixture, then put slices of Baby Bel on top of mix instead of the traditional butter.
  • Close the shell, make small vents, and brush liberally with egg wash.
  • Bake for 30 minutes with an edge guard (foil works fine), and then another 15 minutes without the guard.
  • High Altitude adjustments, over 3000 feet: Depending on your oven, set temperature 25 degrees higher, increase primary cooking time by five to ten minutes, and keep final time without edge guard the same.

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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

I'm one of those lucky people who gets to work from home (for now), so I have a bit of time here and there to try out new ideas in the kitchen to keep my foody-brained kids and hubby entertained. I'm also a compulsive do-it-yourself-er. I knit, sew, cook, sculpt, paint, and do whatever home improvements I can shoe-horn into my budget. I tend to buy base ingredients in bulk and then make as much as I can from scratch. I also (most years) try to keep a well-stocked garden for fresh veggies and herbs, and that's a heck of a challenge up where in rural Wyoming. As far as cookbooks are concerned, I am painfully spoiled since I inherited all of my grandmother's gourmet cookbooks, including her translations of my grandfather's royal Austrian recipes. And yes, that includes squab, quail, boar, venison, and moose. Beyond that, I also tend to collect as many recipes as I can get my hands on, modifying them to fit the kids' tastes and my locally-available ingredients (a serious consideration, especially in the winter time).
 
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