Apple Pumpkin Pie

My mother always made two pies at Thanksgiving–one apple, one pumpkin. They were both so tasty, it was always difficult to choose between them! With this recipe, you don’t have to choose–it combines the best of both pies.

My mother always made two pies at Thanksgiving–one apple, one pumpkin. They were both so tasty, it was always difficult to choose between them! With this recipe, you don’t have to choose–it combines the best of both pies.

My late grandmother, bless her, was a terrible cook. Maybe it’s because she first began keeping house during the Great Depression, but her meals tended to be bland, under-seasoned and overdone.
She did have three notable exceptions: potato salad, which my family has been vainly trying to replicate for decades (she never wrote it down); gravies of any kind, which made sense, seeing that she used every last drop of moisture from her roasts in order to make them (you needed that mouthwatering-gravy to choke the dried meat down); and piecrusts.
The irony is that piecrusts can be tricky even for very good cooks, like my mother. But Grandma had it nailed. I remember one grocery shopping excursion in my childhood where Mom, surreptitiously selecting a refrigerated dough, jumped guiltily when she heard Grandma’s scornful voice just behind her: “Make your own!”
Pie is a popular dessert at this time of year (or any time of year!), and there as many different types of piecrusts as there are pie recipes. Here are some of my grandmother’s tips for turning out a basic crust, ideal for pumpkin, apple, pecan, mince and other favorite, holiday pies.
A great twist on pumpkin pie.
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