First you need in season peaches. There is no comparison to grocery store peaches or frozen grocery store peaches. In my world those are not really peaches. Pretend such things do not exist and the world will be a better place.
I can fresh Missouri peaches in July and August at the peak of their peachy juicy yumminess. These peaches, canned in sparkling jars will do. Sigh, in a pinch glass jar peaches from the grocery store will work but only the glass jar ones. Think I am being snobby? These are
peaches we are talking about.
Once upon a time I did not understand the glory of peaches. I just thought they were....
meh. One sunny morning Chad and I set off in newly wedded bliss to the farmer's market. It was a hot July morning in Iowa, crowds send me in a panic, but Chad was on a mission.
I said peaches were no big deal. He had to prove me wrong.
Oh. He handed me the most perfect round globe of deliciousness, bite already out of one side because he had to taste test it to make sure it was perfectly ripe. The sweet-sour juices ran down my cheeks as I gobbled it. It was like eating sunshine. I wanted more. We ordered peach trees for our city garden. Not the 36 peach trees I wanted as I calculated exactly how many trees would fit in our urban lot. I no longer wanted spinach or tomatoes.....just peaches. Forever peaches.
I do now have my 36 peach trees and room for more. Mmmmmm...peaches.
Peach pie, however, eluded my grasp. It never turned out just right! How unfair!
Then I realised that most peach pie recipes work with inferior peaches. Just like with everything in my kitchen, scaling back was going to be the key, working with the best ingredients and highlighting the pure flavours instead of hiding them in spices.
So you need peaches. About 4 for a typical pie. More if they are small. This equals 1 quart of canned peaches at my house.
RECIPE FOR FILLING:
4 large ripe and sliced peaches
1/4 cup of raw sugar.
Lemon juice (one lemon's worth or 1.5 T)
a pinch of sea salt
a teaspoon of almond extract
4 T of cornstarch
Pie dough recipe at the end of this post.
Put filling in pie tin lined with crust dough. Top with dough in whatever design you choose, just not a solid sheet. The peach filling needs lots of venting. That's a pro tip. Brush with milk or melted butter and sprinkle with sugar.
350 degrees, middle rack. Bake until browned (about 45 minutes).
Sometimes I get fancy and add vanilla bean salt to the top with the sugar, but just because.
That is the filling. You could add some cinnamon, ginger, or allspice, but it isn't needed. The bright flavour of the peaches stand on their own.
This is the pie crust recipe here.
2 cups of flour
1 stick of butter, frozen
4 T of fresh farm rendered lard, frozen
1 T of raw sugar
1 T of salt
Cut by hand or food processor and then add 1/4 of ice water or buttermilk until doughy. Then roll out and work fast.
That's it. Really.