Baking – at what temperature should apple-choco pie be prepared

bakingchocolatepietemperature

I have done this in the past but didn't really get the pie to turn out like I expect. I am wondering if I am not cooking it at the correct temperature since all the other aspects of the apple-choco pie recipe have been followed.

Here is the recipe:
ingredients

For the chocolate pastry:
3/4 cup plain wheat flour (maida)
3 tbsp cocoa powder
5 tbsp powdered sugar
4 tbsp butter/ghee

For the filling:
2 apples chopped in small pieces
2 tbsp brown sugar
2 tbsp chopped nuts (walnut, cashew)

Make the pastry:
mix all the ingredients in a bowl and add the butter into the flour, till it resembles bread crumbs. Add 1 tablespoon of cold water to gently knead it into a firm dough. Refrigerate for 15 minutes. Roll out 2/3 of the dough into a circle. Prick with fork at regular intervals and refrigerate for 10 minutes. Bake it in a pre-heated oven at 300°F for 15 minutes.

Make the filling:
mix the apple(chopped), sugar, walnuts & keep aside.

Place the filling on the half baked chocolate pastry and sprinkle the sugar mixture on top. Cover with the remaining rolled out chocolate pastry and seal the edges. Prick the top of the pie with a fork at regular intervals. Bake in a pre-heated oven at 300°F until
golden brown.

But it still didn't have the taste I wanted. In fact, it wasn't baked properly. What mistakes were there that resulted in the base of the pie being sticky?

What other fruit can I use instead of apples, other than dry fruits? Which tastes better than apples?

Best Answer

We can only guess at the cause of your quality problems with the bottom crust.

If it is due to excess moisture from the filling seeping into the crust, there are two main approaches you might take.

  1. Par-heat the apples (as recommended by Kenji Alt) after they are cut up, but prior to baking. This will help set the pectin and cause them to loose less moisture into the pie as it is baked. You can do this in the microwave, or by pouring hot water over them. See the link for details.

  2. Create a barrier layer between the bottom crust and the filling with a complimentary ingredient moisture will not (quickly) penetrate.


Protecting bottom crust with a barrier

I would suggest using a thin layer of semi-sweet or bitter-sweet chocolate. Complimentary thick preserves, such as apple or peach may also work:

  1. Blind-bake the crust as directed (bake it without a filling). Edit: It is strange that your recipe does not say to dock the crust before blind baking, nor to use pie weights, or rice, or something to keep it from bubbling up and buckling.
  2. Spread melted chocolate (or preserves) in the shell.
  3. Pour the filling on top, being careful not to disturb the barrier layer too much.
  4. Bake as normal.

Quality of Recipe

The recipe has a number of strange aspects, as Jefromi and I have both noted in our answers such as a low temperature, time/temperature ratio for the apples, not specifying type of apples, in addition to poor blind baking instructions.

You might be better off searching for a better quality recipe that tickles your fancy.