In search of the perfect pumpkin pie. . .

Since today is a FEAST day, I thought it would be appropriate to share a recipe for pie here at Pie and Coffee. For some time I have been searching for the perfect pumpkin pie. I may have found it today. I have experimented with a lot of different pumpkin pie recipes but this one is the best to date.

This pie was made from basic ingredients, I started with a whole pumpkin and went from there. To make the mashed pumpkin — a couple of weeks ago I sliced a pumpkin into chunks and baked it at 350 degrees until they were soft, and then put them in the freezer. Yesterday I took some of it out of the freezer and let it thaw, and then mashed the pulp this morning with an electric mixer. I did not use a pie pumpkin, just an ordinary “jack-o-lantern” pumpkin that I got from a local farmer through the Oklahoma Food Coop.

The RECIPE (with notes about which farms I got the various ingredients from):

3 cups mashed pumpkin (from McLemore Farms in Colony)
1 cup honey (Honey Hill Farm north of Edmond)
3 eggs (from Lehman’s Eggs in Newcastle)
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon ground ginger
1/2 teaspoon ground cloves
16 ounces cream (Wagon Creek Creamery in Helena)

Combine all ingredients and mix well. Pour into two unbaked pie crusts. Bake at 425 degrees for 15 minutes, then at 350 degrees for 45 minutes, until a knife inserted in the center comes out clean.

To make the pie crust, I use “Dorothy’s Never Fail Pie Crust” recipe:

3 cups flour (Shawnee Mills, Shawnee)
1-1/4 cup butter (Wagon Creek, Helena)
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon vinegar
1 egg (Charles Horn, Cordell)
5 tablespoons water

I don’t know who “Dorothy” was — it presumably isn’t Dorothy Day — but her pie crust recipe works nicely. Mix the flour and salt, then add the butter and work the flour into the butter very thoroughly. Mix the vinegar and water, add the egg (slightly beaten), add to flour and mix thoroughly. Roll out between two pieces of wax paper.

As an experiment, I baked these pies covered with foil — this was suggested by Jo Logan, the bee keeper I got the honey from, since honey-sweetened baked goods tend to brown faster. The pies cooked just fine, but they did take an extra 15 minutes, so if you bake them covered, add 15 minutes to the 350 degree baking time. The crust came out lightly browned and not burnt.

Longest Night, Worcester

There will be a memorial event for those who have died homeless the evening of December 21. The event will begin at Union Station and end at St. John’s Church.

(announcement follows:)

The Longest Night: Worcester Homelessness Memorial Day rally and memorial service will take place on Thursday, December 21, 2006, the first day of winter and the longest night of the year.

This memorial observance is part of the National Homeless Persons’ Memorial Day that since 1990 has called attention to the tragedy of homelessness and those who have paid the ultimate price for our nation’s failure to end homelessness.

On December 21st, Worcester Homelessness Memorial Day, a coalition of concerned Worcester residents and organizations will gather at 6:30 p.m. at City Hall Plaza (behind City Hall), where we will hold a rally and vigil to remember our homeless neighbors who died in 2006. We will then walk to St. John’s Rectory (44 Temple Street) for a 7:15 p.m. memorial service.

The rally behind City Hall will include a call to action as well as a reading and remembrance of the names of homeless individuals in Worcester who died in 2006.

At the memorial service at St. John’s Rectory, religious leaders from a variety of faiths will each say a few words about the loss of homeless members of our community.

Together these memorial events will honor those who have died and call our community to recommit to the task of ending homelessness.

Please join us on December 21st – The Longest Night. Together we can make our communities safer and healthier for all.

Items

Funeral: The Telegram & Gazette reported yesterday on the funeral of Michael A. Cerrone in Worcester. Cerrone was killed by a car bomb in Iraq.

Godzilla: The Worcester Public Library will be screening “Godzilla, King of Monsters” Saturday at 2pm.

Oaxaca: Infamous Worcesterite ChaCha Connor is in Oaxaca. Indymedia has an interview with her about the situation there. MP3 (original post)


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KNIMBY: The West Side’s anonymous author writes:

Now I know that most of the politically correct crowd is going to say that it is naive to believe that drug and/or alcohol abuse does not occur in our neighborhood. That may be so. However it would also be ridiculous to say that our area is riddled with substance abuse on par with other parts of the community.

(According to Technorati, we’re the first blog to link to The West Side. And we’re darn proud of it.)

Winslow Street Park:
DSCN8143
schematic

Bad buildings: WoMag profiles the ten worst propeties in the city.
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A chat with KNIT

For the past year I’ve been trying to attend a KNIT meeting or get on their mailing list, but they don’t return my calls and e-mails.

So I was happy to see there was a KNIT table at last night’s Doherty siting hearing, and happier that KNIT’s Chris Comeaux was willing to talk to me about the group.

My first question: What is the deal with Protect Our Children?
Continue reading “A chat with KNIT”

Saint Kermit podcast #47: Hot stuff

[download the mp3 of “Saint Kermit #47”]

DSCN8273

Another episode of the green-tinged podcast.

Talk:

  • Jim thinks third-party candidates didn’t do very well in Massachusetts.
  • Jim thinks Grace Ross should run for Worcester’s City Council.
  • Mike thinks WCCA is awesome.
  • Mike talks a bunch about community media and for-profit media. (If you read this blog, you’ve seen it before.)
  • Jim watched some of the new English-language al-Jazeera.

Interview:

Sports crew:

  • They talk about sports.

Coffee in Worcester: Acoustic Java

Jacob Berendes has convinced us to post a Worcester coffee review once a week. Let’s see how long this lasts.

This discussion is about Acoustic Java, 932a Main Street near Clark University, Worcester, Massachusetts. 508.756.9446.

Bruce at Acoustic Java
Bruce at Acoustic Java

Here’s an audio clip (mp3) of us discussing youth soccer and Motörhead, to give you a feel of how the transcription differs from what was said. (Other audio formats.)


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Pie and Coffee: How’s it going, Bruce?

Bruce: Pretty good.

What’s your impression of Acoustic Java?

Very nice. Very relaxing. I’ve always heard about that place, in advertisements, but never really actually got there till today.
Continue reading “Coffee in Worcester: Acoustic Java”

Another Central Massachusetts Darfur vigil

Central Massachusetts residents went to the Sudanese Embassy in Washington, DC, this Thursday, for a 24-hour fast and day-long vigil to call attention to the ongoing genocide in the Sudanese region of Darfur.

The participants were Al Guilmette, Ken Hannaford-Ricardi, David Maher, and Scott Schaeffer-Duffy. All four men have participated in previous Darfur-related vigils, and have been arrested for civil disobedience at the Embassy. Scott visited Darfur with a Catholic Worker Peace Team in December 2004.

How to get your library to change its lending policy

[Download the mp3 of “How to get your library to change its lending policy”]

Here’s a podcast of Mike Benedetti & Kevin Ksen talking about how Worcester residents convinced the library to change its policy on lending to the homeless.

Other formats, podcast feed. This podcast is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 License. Share and enjoy.

Kevin Ksen
Pictured: Kevin Ksen, and a pumpkin-based microphone placement.

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Items

WoMag blog? http://worcestermag.blogspot.com/ is listed in the blog log this week, but it doesn’t exist. In fact, the name worcestermag.blogspot.com is still available! What hoodlum will grab it first?

Update: Two seconds of sleuthing reveals it shoulda been http://worcesterma.blogspot.com/. Typos in URLs are serious things.

Next SMOC meeting: Monday, there’s another public meeting with SMOC about the June Street program. A judge will be the moderator.

You’ll recall that this June Street dispute prompted the classic line: “I will be the neighbor from hell.

You gotta ask yourself: is being the neighbor from hell going to accomplish your goals, or just make your neighborhood more hellish?

Downtown Worcester: The Worcester Regional Research Bureau is sponsoring an online survey about Downtown Worcester.

Winslow Street Park: Note that the future Winslow Street Park is right next door to Ed Hyder’s market, one of the finest groceries food stores in the city.

Ed Hyder's & the Winslow Park Site
It’ll be so sweet to grab some olives and baked goods and sit in the park with a young lady snacking and watching the passersby on Pleasant Street.

When Clive McFarlane sees this, he thinks:

. . . it is difficult to see how a park of leisure and peace can long endure in a neighborhood where many people live lives patched together by welfare, drugs and alcohol, and to which those who are lucky to escape with a college education seldom come back.

I think: “Picnic heaven.”

China slaughtering dogs over 35cm tall: Part of their one dog policy. Washington Post:

Keeping pets has been controversial in China for decades. Banned as a middle-class habit during the radical Cultural Revolution of the 1960s and ’70s, dog-raising surged anew with the introduction of free-market reforms.

The government line is that this is about stopping rabies. Are bigger dogs bigger rabies risks?