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  • Welcome to HowToCookThat I'm Ann Reardon and today we're going to make another recipe out

  • of the 200-year-old cookbook.

  • We made the cheesecake a little while ago and you asked us to make some more recipes

  • out of this book.

  • So I have been looking through and one that caught my attention was fruit pies.

  • So I thought we'd start with a fruit mince pie.

  • The 200-year-old cookbook says: "There are several things necessary to be particularly

  • observed by the cook, in order that her labours and ingenuity under this head may be brought

  • to their proper degree of perfection.

  • One very material consideration must be, that the heat of the oven is duly proportioned

  • to the nature of the article to be baked.

  • Light paste requires a moderate over; if it is too quick, the crust cannot rise, and will

  • therefore be burned; and if too slow it will be soddened, and want that delicate light

  • brown that it ought to have."

  • In other words ... pre-heat your oven to 180 degrees (C).

  • Next the recipe says: "Put 6 ounces of butter to 8 ounces of flour and work together well."

  • I'll type out all these recipes for you on the HowToCookThat.net website and there's

  • a link to that below.

  • Once you've rubbed the butter into the flour so it looks like this you're ready for the

  • next step.

  • "Then mix it up with as little water as possible so as to have a stiffish paste."

  • I didn't know that pastry used to be called paste, did you?

  • Well now that we've made our paste, let's move on to the filling.

  • Shred 3 pounds of meat very fine, and chop it as small as possible.

  • Wait a minute!

  • I thought this recipe was under 'Fruit Pies' - it is under fruit pies, why are we adding

  • MEAT to it?

  • This is very strange but let's go with it.

  • "Take 2 pounds of raisins, stoned and chopped very fine and the same quantity of currants

  • nicely picked, washed, rubbed and dried by the fire."

  • I'm going to swap the fresh currants for dried ones and the dried raisins for fresh grapes.

  • Fortunately I don't have to seed the grapes because we have seedless varieties now.

  • Imagine having to cut the seeds out of every one of these before you used them.

  • Okay what's next?

  • "Pare half a 100 pippins, core them and chop them small".

  • Well, pippins are apples and I'm going to make a quarter of the recipe, so I'm not going

  • to be using 50 ... paring them just means to peel them and core and chop are self-explanatory.

  • What does it say next?

  • "Take half a pound of fine sugar and a quarter of an ounce of cloves and two large nutmegs

  • and heat them all fine.

  • Then put them all together in a large pan and mix them well together with half a pint

  • of brandy and half a pint of sack.

  • Put down close in a stone pot and it will keep good for 3 or 4 months."

  • WHAT!?

  • You're kidding me!

  • 3 or 4 months!

  • Imagine knowing that the meat may have been stored for up to 4 months before you ate it.

  • Then I just wouldn't be eating it for health reasons.

  • Oh my goodness that's just scary!

  • For the sake of science, I'm going to put some in a jar for 4 months.

  • There were no fridges when this book was written so surely this is just going to go off at

  • room temperature.

  • Anyway let's read what it says next...

  • "When you make your pies, take a little dish, somewhat larger than a soup plate and lay

  • a very thin crust all over it.

  • Lay a thin layer of meat then a thin layer of citron, cut very thin.Then a layer of mincemeat

  • and a layer of orange peel cut thin.

  • And then over that, a little more meat".

  • What is with all this MEAT?!

  • This is supposed to be a fruit pie not a meat pie.

  • Then it says: "Squeeze half the juice of a fine seville

  • orange or a lemon."

  • I have so much of this fruit mince mixture left over that I'm going to make another pie

  • without those layers of meat and the citron.

  • Just the fruit mince that we made.

  • And keep in mind that this is just one quarter of the recipe!

  • Finally it says: "Lay on your crust and bake it very nicely.

  • These pies eat very fine cold."

  • Well it certainly looks yummy from the outside.

  • Time for the taste test, we're going to start with the one that has the most meat in it.

  • You might not like them.

  • Okay.

  • They're actually from the 200-year-old cookbook.

  • Okay, alright well uh, that was good last time.

  • When you made the cheesecake, it was tasty so we'll see how the ... what is it?

  • This is a traditional 1800s fruit mince pie.

  • Hmm, okay fruit mince pie.

  • Like a Christmas pie?

  • Yeah, like my mum made at Christmas, which I know you don't love fruit mince pies but

  • this one is actually quite different to what my mum makes.

  • So you might like it.

  • Oh I like your mum's pie.

  • You do not like fruit mince pie, you like my mum's apple pie.

  • Oh this has got mince in it!

  • As in meat, yes he's already picked that up.

  • You have to taste it.

  • Is it sweet?

  • Tell people what it tastes like.

  • You like meat and you like fruit, do you like them together in a pie?

  • I don't like the thought of it together.

  • But do you actually like the taste of it?

  • It's not bad.

  • Really?

  • Oh I couldn't eat that one!

  • I nearly spat it out.

  • I'm shuddering at the thought of it.

  • It's okay.

  • Oh it's not, it's awful.

  • Seriously?

  • You think that's okay?

  • I mean I don't know if I would choose to eat it but it's not as bad as I thought it would

  • be.

  • What if I told you that I had stored the mince with the fruit for 4 months at room temperature

  • before baking it in the pie?

  • Is that what they used to do?

  • Yes.

  • It's no wonder that they're no longer alive!

  • It's not what I did of course, I didn't want to put us at any risk but that's what they

  • used to do.

  • It was a way of preserving the meat.

  • Really.

  • But I just could not bring myself to do that.

  • I thought I might actually leave some for 4 months and then go get it tested.

  • See what's growing in there.

  • That one had a layer of meat, a layer of fruit mince and another layer of meat.

  • The next one is just fruit mince, still the 200-year-old recipe it's just I haven't put

  • the layer of meat in between the layers of fruit mince.

  • Do I use the same spoon?

  • Yes, that's fine.

  • This one's got germs on it.

  • It's your spoon.

  • It can only have your germs on it.

  • Even so...

  • I thought you might actually like the pastry on this one because the pastry is kind of

  • melt-in-your-mouth.

  • It's actually really good pastry, you're a bit of a pastry fan.

  • What do you think of that one?

  • So this one's more of a dessert.

  • Well it's more fruity, it's got less meat.

  • They were both under 'fruit pies' in the recipe book.

  • So I don't quite understand if they ate the other one as a dessert or a main course or

  • what they do but this one's definitely more desserty.

  • This is my take on their one, I just took out extra layers of meat.

  • But it's still got, it hasn't got a lot of meat, but it's still got meat in it.

  • It has still got meat in it, you spotted that.

  • Wow.

  • Bit unusual?

  • Look, it's not bad.

  • Would it be better with no meat in it?

  • It'd be an apple pie wouldn't it.

  • Well no it's got grapes and currants and spices and so it wouldn't be an apple pie, it would

  • be more like a fruit mince.

  • Can you taste all those spices?

  • See the thing is that I don't like fruit mince pie.

  • That's right, but do you like this type of fruit mince pie where it's not so sweet.

  • I actually prefer this to normal fruit mince, just so sweet it's horrendous.

  • So you like home-made fruit mince but you'd like it without meat.

  • Apparently so.

  • So if I was going to make it again, just leave the meat out.

  • There just seems no reason to have meat in there.

  • Which indeed I think is what has happened over the years, it's separated out to become

  • a fruit pie and just a meat pie.

  • Let me know if you'd like me to check out more of the 200-year-old recipes, leave a

  • comment below.

  • Make it a great week and I'll see you on Friday.

  • Do you reckon anyone who is deaf watches this part of the video where there's no sound and

  • is lip reading it?

Welcome to HowToCookThat I'm Ann Reardon and today we're going to make another recipe out

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