Lance is one of those
rare individuals who does not like meat pies. I blame the horrible,
gristle-filled soggy-pastried reheated things that often passed for pies when
we were younger. But it’s something he’s carried with him in life and now he
doesn’t like pies. He’ll quite happily eat fresh homemade pies with their
delicious chunks of meat and flaky buttery pastry if we have dinner at someone
elses’ house and that’s what is served, but he still ‘doesn’t like pies’. So I
don’t cook pie. Except the other day, I cooked this pie.
So, how do you cook a
pie for someone who doesn’t like pie? Step one. Don’t tell them you’re making
pie. Step two. Make this pie.
This isn’t a pie in a
traditional sense, as the ‘pastry’ contains no flour and isn’t really ‘pastry’
as we know it. So before you start imagining said buttery flaky goodness…stop.
Instead, the ‘pastry’ part of this pie is made out of corn puree. When I read
this recipe, I knew it was something I wanted to try. I love corn and was so
intrigued by how this would turn out, that I made it a few days later. This is
from one of my swag of Christmas cookbooks A Taste of Old Cuba, a book chosen to satisfy my
obsession with Cuban food which is somewhat hard to indulge out in Perth. The filling is
a chicken and tomato base, with flavours rounded out by the briny deliciousness
of olives and capers, and the sweetness of prunes. I changed a few things in the making of it, but just barely.
The end result was
remarkable. The ‘pastry’ puffs nicely in an almost cake-y way, with the
delicious sweetness of corn and a sort of crisp top layer. The flavours of the
filling are all perfectly balanced and so entirely comforting.
Cuban Chicken Pie
8 tbsps butter (plus extra for greasing pie dish)
1 tbsp sugar
3 tsps salt
½ cup hot water
12 pitted prunes, cut into quarters
3 tbsp vegetable oil
1brown onion, diced
3 cups crushed tomatoes
1 tsp pepper
3 cups shredded cooked chicken
½ cup pimento stuffed olives, sliced
1 tbsp capers
4 egg yolks
2 hard boiled eggs, sliced
¼ cup slivered almonds
Puree corn kernels
until smooth in a blender or food processor. Melt the butter in a large frypan
over medium heat. Add the corn puree, sugar and 1 tsp of the salt. Turn the
heat down to low and simmer for 15 minutes or so, until the corn thickens, and
pulls away easily from the pan, similar to the way it does when you cook
polenta. Set it aside to cool.
Soak the prunes in the
hot water for 15 minutes.
In a large pot, heat
the oil over medium and cook the onion in the remaining 2 tsps salt until soft
and translucent, 5 minutes. Add the tomatoes, pepper, chicken, olives and
capers and the prunes and their soaking liquid. Simmer for 5 minutes, stirring
to combine everything fully. Turn off the heat.
Preheat your oven to
170C. Grease a casserole dish with butter.
Spread just over half
of the corn mixture on the bottom of the casserole dish, spreading evenly
across the bottom and up the sides. Very gently pour the chicken mixture on
top, then lay the boiled egg slices on top. Spread the remaining corn mixture
over the top and smooth.