Pie with prunes dried apricots and nuts three-layer

Richness and richness of taste of filling with crumbly dough! This is a famous pie of Tatar cuisine. A fairly rare shortbread yeast dough is used, which rises well, but remains crumbly and tender. The natural sweetness of the fruit can be adjusted to taste.
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Composition / ingredients

servings:
Translation table of volumetric measures
Nutrients and energy value of the composition of the recipe
By weight of the composition:
Proteins 9 % 5 g
Fats 21 % 12 g
Carbohydrates 71 % 41 g
280 kcal
GI: 34 / 0 / 66

Step-by-step cooking

Cooking time: 2 h 40 min
  1. Step 1:

    Step 1.

    Prepare the products. The dough will be shortbread, but it is yeast. Therefore, remove the oil from the refrigerator in advance, it should be soft. Wash the lemons well and wipe dry. Soak the dried fruits in warm water for 10 minutes, then rinse under running water. Spread them out between napkins so that excess moisture goes away. Also wash and dry the peeled nuts.

  2. Step 2:

    Step 2.

    Prepare the sourdough. Heat the milk so that the finger is warm, but not hot, it is 38-40C. Pour warm milk into a spacious cup, add sugar and dry yeast. Stir and leave in a warm place without drafts to activate for 15-20 minutes. If the foam cap does not appear, the yeast is not active and should be replaced. Pour the finished sourdough into a bowl for kneading dough. Add the flour sifted with salt in parts, mix the dough with a strong spatula.

  3. Step 3:

    Step 3.

    At the end of the kneading, add soft butter and quickly mix with flour. I do it with cold, dry hands, first in a cup, then on the table.

  4. Step 4:

    Step 4.

    It turns out an elastic, almost homogeneous dough that does not stick to your hands. Roll it into a ball, transfer it to a clean cup, cover with a towel and leave for proofing for 45 minutes-1 hour (as appropriate). Put it in a warm place! I leave it in the oven turned off, preheated to 40C, on the lower level.

  5. Step 5:

    Step 5.

    While the dough is coming, prepare the lemon filling. Remove the zest from the lemons without capturing the white layer. Then remove the entire white layer, it is he who gives bitterness! Remove the seeds from the lemons. Punch the sliced lemon in a blender, adding sugar. The mass turns out to be quite liquid, put it in a saucepan with a thick bottom. Pour a few spoonfuls of juice into the starch, stir it in a separate cup so that there are no lumps and return to the saucepan.

  6. Step 6:

    Step 6.

    Heat the lemon mass on the lowest heat, without letting it boil. Stirring constantly, cook until thickened, it's fast enough. The lemon filling is ready when a groove is held in it from holding the spatula. Remove from the heat and, stirring, cool. Be sure to taste it, adjust the amount of sugar if necessary. The cream should not be bitter. Cover it with a film.

  7. Step 7:

    Step 7.

    Prepare the filling from dried fruits. In separate cups, turn the prunes and dried apricots into a meat grinder. Then add 1 tablespoon of lemon juice or a little less concentrate to each cup. Pour in a little water, so much that it turns out not a liquid puree. Add and adjust the sugar to taste, mix until smooth. The taste of the filling should initially please you, it will not change in baking.

  8. Step 8:

    Step 8.

    Prepare the products for streusel. Butter should also be soft. Prepare a streusel (it's sprinkled on top, looks like crumbs from flour). To do this, chop the walnut very finely in a blender.

  9. Step 9:

    Step 9.

    Sift flour into a bowl, add sugar and chopped walnuts. Add soft butter and rub everything with your hands.

  10. Step 10:

    Step 10.

    You should get such a flour crumb. It should not be homogeneous, it's good when there are lumps of different sizes, it will look beautiful on the cake.

  11. Step 11:

    Step 11.

    By this time, the dough will have time to come up, it will increase in size by almost 2 times. That's how my dough rose after 1 hour.

  12. Step 12:

    Step 12.

    Put the dough on the table, it does not stick, do not add flour. Crumpling, form a loaf. Divide the dough into 4 parts, one larger and 3 approximately equal.

  13. Step 13:

    Step 13.

    Grease the mold (I have d 20 cm) with soft butter, dust with flour, shake off the excess. From most of the dough , form a bottom with a side of about 5 cm. The dough can be rolled out or stretched with your hands without effort, forming a circle. Try to make the thickness uniform, about 0.7 cm. Put the prune filling on the bottom, spread evenly with a spoon.

  14. Step 14:

    Step 14.

    Close the prunes with the second round of dough. Spread a layer of dried apricots on the dough.

  15. Step 15:

    Step 15.

    Cover dried apricots with the third part of the dough. Lay out the lemon cream, and sprinkle generously with chopped walnuts on top.

  16. Step 16:

    Step 16.

    Put the last, fourth circle of dough on top and, gently pressing down, expel the trapped air. Pinch the edges, make punctures with a fork to release steam so that it does not swell during baking. Let the pie rest while the oven heats up. First bake at t 80C for 30 minutes. Then increase to 190C, take out the pie, apply the streusel evenly over the entire surface.

  17. Step 17:

    Step 17.

    And bake until cooked for about 45 minutes, depending on your oven. The top begins to blush quickly, be sure to cover it with foil. Remove the foil about 10 minutes before the end. I baked for almost an hour, in an electric oven without convection, on the middle tier. I turned off the oven after 50 minutes, and the pie stood in it for another 10 minutes. Check the readiness for a dry skewer. Cool the pie in the mold, then remove. Cut the pie preferably cooled.

I cooked this pie for the first time, I was interested in an authentic recipe with a colorful photo.

Is prepared quite simply, but the taste is still for an amateur. It seemed to me that there was somehow a lot of fruit filling. I have kept the original recipe in the recipe, but if I cook more, I will reduce the amount of dried fruits to about 150 gr. each.

Depending on your preferences and the natural taste of dried fruits, you can not add sugar to the filling at all, or vice versa, put more. The same applies to the lemon layer, although it is problematic here without sugar.

The taste of the pie is quite complex and very rich. The fruity sweetness is shaded by lemon sourness, complemented by crunchy nuts and combined with a very tasty crumbly dough.

Choose high-quality dried fruits, avoid those where an oil layer has been applied. Give preference to natural, without preservatives for safety.

For beginners, it may be difficult to correctly determine the moment when the pie is ready. Due to the abundant and moist filling, the skewer comes out as if raw. To make sure, hold the pie in the oven with the door slightly open. Focus on the golden color of the top, it should not burn.

Be prepared for the fact that flour may need more or less than indicated in the recipe. Focus not on the amount of flour, but on the desired consistency of the dough. To avoid mistakes, read about flour and its properties!

Keep in mind that everyone's ovens are different. The temperature and cooking time may differ from those specified in the recipe. To make any baked dish successful, use useful information about the features of ovens !

Caloric content of the products possible in the composition of the dish

  • Whole cow's milk - 68   kcal/100g
  • Milk 3.5% fat content - 64   kcal/100g
  • Milk 3.2% fat content - 60   kcal/100g
  • Milk 1.5% fat content - 47   kcal/100g
  • Concentrated milk 7.5% fat content - 140   kcal/100g
  • Milk 2.5% fat content - 54   kcal/100g
  • Lemon - 16   kcal/100g
  • Lemon zest - 47   kcal/100g
  • Walnuts - 650   kcal/100g
  • Black Walnut English Walnut - 628   kcal/100g
  • Black Persian Walnut - 651   kcal/100g
  • Walnut oil - 925   kcal/100g
  • Whole durum wheat flour fortified - 333   kcal/100g
  • Whole durum wheat flour, universal - 364   kcal/100g
  • Flour krupchatka - 348   kcal/100g
  • Flour - 325   kcal/100g
  • Granulated sugar - 398   kcal/100g
  • Sugar - 398   kcal/100g
  • Butter 82% - 734   kcal/100g
  • Amateur unsalted butter - 709   kcal/100g
  • Unsalted peasant butter - 661   kcal/100g
  • Peasant salted butter - 652   kcal/100g
  • Melted butter - 869   kcal/100g
  • Dried apricots - 215   kcal/100g
  • Uryuk - 290   kcal/100g
  • Dried peaches - 254   kcal/100g
  • Prunes - 227   kcal/100g
  • Salt - 0   kcal/100g
  • Water - 0   kcal/100g
  • Lemon juice - 16   kcal/100g
  • Corn starch - 329   kcal/100g
  • Dry yeast - 410   kcal/100g

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