Plum Chutney Crumb Pie
Updated May 27, 2024
- Total Time
- About 2 hours, plus 1 to 1½ hours’ chilling and baking
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
FOR THE CRUST
170 grams all-purpose flour (about 1 ¼ cups), more as needed for rolling out dough
1 gram fine sea salt (about ¼ teaspoon)
10 tablespoons unsalted butter, preferably a high-fat, European-style butter, chilled and cut into ½-inch pieces
FOR THE FILLING
2 tablespoons cider vinegar
70 grams light brown sugar (about ⅓ cup)
1 star anise pod
1 cinnamon stick (2 inches long)
1 small sprig fresh rosemary
1 teaspoon grated fresh ginger root
1 gram black pepper (about ½ teaspoon)
2 grams ground cardamom (about ½ teaspoon)
1 gram fine sea salt (about ¼ teaspoon)
3 pounds ripe plums, pitted and sliced (about 6 cups)
100 grams granulated sugar (about ½ cup), more to taste
1 teaspoon freshly grated orange zest
25 grams instant tapioca (about 2 tablespoons)
FOR THE CRUMB TOPPING
90 grams all-purpose flour (about ¾ cup)
100 grams dark brown sugar (about ½ cup)
5 grams cinnamon (about 1 teaspoon)
Pinch ground cloves
1 gram fine sea salt (about ¼ teaspoon)
5 tablespoons unsalted butter, cut into pieces
Vanilla ice cream, for serving (optional)
Preparation
- Step 1
Make the crust: In a food processor, briefly pulse together flour and salt. Add butter and pulse until mixture forms chickpea-size pieces (3 to 5 one-second pulses). Add ice water 1 tablespoon at a time, up to 6 tablespoons, pulsing occasionally until mixture is just moist enough to hold together. Form dough into a ball, wrap with plastic and flatten into a disk. Refrigerate at least 1 hour.
- Step 2
Make the chutney: In a medium saucepan over medium heat, bring vinegar, 2 tablespoons water, brown sugar, star anise, cinnamon stick, rosemary sprig, ginger root, pepper, cardamom and salt to a simmer, stirring to help dissolve sugar. Add a third of the plums and let mixture simmer until thickened, stirring frequently, 20 to 30 minutes. Let cool, then discard star anise, cinnamon stick and rosemary.
- Step 3
Meanwhile, toss remaining plums, granulated sugar, orange zest and tapioca in a bowl and let sit for 20 minutes. (If your plums are tart, add more sugar to taste.)
- Step 4
Lightly flour a work surface and rolling pin. Gently roll out dough to fit a 9-inch pie pan, dusting with flour if dough is sticking. Fold dough in half and transfer to pie pan. Carefully press crust into pan and crimp edges. Return pie to refrigerator for 20 minutes. While crust chills, heat oven to 400 degrees.
- Step 5
Gently press foil into pie crust and fill with pie weights or dried beans. Transfer to oven and bake for 18 minutes. Remove the foil and pie weights and bake for another 5 to 10 minutes, or until crust is a light golden brown. Transfer to a rack to cool slightly.
- Step 6
Meanwhile, prepare the crumb topping: In a small bowl, combine flour, brown sugar, cinnamon, cloves and salt. Using your hands, work in butter until the dry ingredients are completely incorporated into butter and large, marble-size clumps form when pinched. Let sit in refrigerator while assembling pie.
- Step 7
Mix chutney into uncooked plums. Pour filling into crust and cover with crumb topping. Turn oven down to 350 degrees and place pie on a baking sheet on middle rack in oven. Bake pie for 1 to 1 ½ hours or until fruit is bubbling and top is golden brown. Serve warm or at room temperature, with vanilla ice cream if you like.
Private Notes
Comments
Replaced plums with Red Haven peaches, cardamom with coriander and a pinch of cumin, and omitted star anise. might have been the best peach pie I have ever made - complex, not too sweet, and the peaches were clearly the star of the show, rather than sugar, which is too often the peach pie result. A definite keeper.
I just skipped the pie crust part and have made a crumble; it's in the oven now and I know it is going to be delicious!
This is a good (not great) pie reminiscent of rhubarb. The recommended quantities resulted in a 10 inch pie when I made it. It requires a considerable time investment.
Made with Italian plums from my tree and brought the pie to a pie event in the neighborhood - it got the most votes for favorite of the day!
Followed this recipe closely. But, I used small, very ripe red and yellow plums and it came out like soup. The chutney was delicious and everything else worked. But maybe the recipe is written for prune plums? Or I should have left the liquid behind when I filled the pie? Will try this again and see if I can make it work. Delicious but a mess.
I made this as a crisp in a small cast iron skillet, instead of a pie. The taste and presentation surprised and delighted my DOL and wife.
