Easter has always meant baking in our family. Big, meat and cheese stuffed sausage pies and sweet and cheesy spring wheat pies - each required hours of shopping and prep work. We always gave away these pies as gifts to neighbors and friends.
Here, I just make enough for us to eat for about two or three days - these can't be good for you!
The meat pie stems from the Good Friday fast - since we couldn't eat meat on the Friday, we overcompensated with this behemoth on Saturday - and I will be biting into mine just as soon as I finish this post.
First, we dice up around a pound of assorted meats - proscuitto, dried Abruzzese sausage, soppresatta, salami
Then, we dice up about 1/2lb provolone, and 1/4lb mozzarella - the original recipe calls for dried basket cheese, or scamorza, but I can't get it here and I've grown to like this tweak
Combine well
Now, 1 1/2lbs ricotta, drained, mixed with 4 eggs, is seasoned with lots of black pepper, and grated romano cheese, about 1/2 cup, and mixed with the diced cheese and meat mixture
A square pan is lined with pizza dough. We use Stuart Yaniger's recipe, the one before he switched to using tipo 00 flour - it works very well
The pie is topped with another layer of dough - speaking of which - Cindy's foot is visible in the background - I couldn't do this without her, as she is the princess of dough - I get frustrated, but she has the touch, and makes it look so easy.
Bake the pies at 350 f for about an hour, until stuff starts bubbling up through the vent holes - it's a very rustic looking pie. and every cardiologist's nightmare.
"I say: find cheap wines you like, and never underestimate their considerable charms." - David Rosengarten, "Taste"