Apple Pie, Circus-Style

Published March 8, 2020

Apple Pie, Circus-Style
Jenny Huang for The New York Times. Food stylist: Maggie Ruggiero. Prop stylist: Beatrice Chastka.
Total Time
1¼ hours, plus chilling and cooling
Rating
4(706)
Comments
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This winter in Paris, my husband went out every morning, walked to Circus bakery and returned home with an apple pie, a really good one. The rustic pie — a cross between an American open-face pie and a French galette — is made with a sturdy, rather wet dough. Chill the dough overnight and it will be a dream to work with. The filling is a generous mound of unpeeled, thinly sliced, lightly sweetened apples, flavored with an abundance of lemon juice and zest and, so surprisingly, not a speck of spice. At Circus, the palm-size pies are pentagonal. The dough is lifted up around the apples, pinched and pressed into shape. To learn to make the pastry at home, I watched Circus’s bakers at work. I loved how each had a particular way of forming the pies. But, most of all, I loved that no matter how they shaped them, in the end, they all looked beautiful. My pie looks beautiful and yours will, too.

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Ingredients

Yield:3 pies (6 servings)

    For the Dough

    • cups/340 grams bread flour
    • cup/40 grams whole-wheat flour
    • teaspoons granulated sugar
    • 1teaspoon fine sea salt
    • 1cup/225 grams cold unsalted butter (2 sticks), cut into small chunks
    • ½cup/120 milliliters ice water
    • 1tablespoon apple cider vinegar

    For the Filling

    • 3tablespoons granulated sugar
    • 5teaspoons bread flour
    • 1lemon, zested, then juiced
    • 2tablespoons unsalted butter, melted
    • 4medium sweet apples (1 to 1½ pounds; 450 to 680 grams), such as Golden Delicious, Fuji or Gala

    For Assembly

    • 1egg, for finishing
    • Demerara or sanding sugar, for finishing
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (6 servings)

671 calories; 36 grams fat; 22 grams saturated fat; 1 gram trans fat; 9 grams monounsaturated fat; 2 grams polyunsaturated fat; 78 grams carbohydrates; 5 grams dietary fiber; 26 grams sugars; 10 grams protein; 407 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Make the dough: Put the bread flour, whole-wheat flour, sugar and salt in the bowl of a food processor, and whir to combine. Drop in the chunks of butter, then process in 8 to 10 long pulses, scraping the bowl often, until the ingredients look like coarse crumbs and hold together when pressed.

  2. Step 2

    Stir together the ice water and vinegar in a measuring cup, then pour the liquid over the dough as you pulse the machine, forming a moist dough. Scrape the dough onto a work surface, shape into a log and divide into thirds. Press each piece into a disk, wrap tightly and refrigerate overnight.

  3. Step 3

    The next day, working between sheets of parchment, roll each piece of dough into an 8-inch circle that’s a scant ¼-inch thick. Cut each piece into a 7-inch circle, cover with the parchment and refrigerate for at least 1 hour or up to 2 days. (Leftover dough can be used to make a smaller pie or to make cookies.)

  4. Step 4

    Make the filling: Stir the sugar, flour and zest together in a large bowl, then stir in the butter and lemon juice. Quarter and core the apples, leaving the peel on, and slice them very thinly; a food processor or mandoline works best here. (You want about 5 loosely packed cups.) Add apples to the large bowl, and use your hands to toss until they’re coated with the sugar mixture.

  5. Step 5

    Assemble the pies: Working with 1 circle of dough at a time, peel away the top sheet of paper, and lightly score a 4-inch circle in the center of the dough. Pile apples inside the circle, pressing to make a compact mound about 1½ inches high and leaving a bare border of about 1½ inches.

  6. Step 6

    The final pie should have five sides, and all the corners should point in the same direction. For this effect, lift a piece of the dough up, and hold it against the apples. Lift a piece of dough next to it, press it against the apples and grab the triangle of dough that forms where the two layers meet. Holding the point of the triangle, pull it down so that the tip of the triangle is at the base of the pie. With your index finger, firmly press the point of the triangle into the base to seal it in place. Continue until you’ve got a pentagonal pie.

  7. Step 7

    Repeat with the remaining circles of dough and apples. (You may have some apples leftover.) Refrigerate the pies while you heat the oven. (You can cover and refrigerate the pies for up to 1 day.)

  8. Step 8

    Center a rack in the oven, and heat it to 375 degrees. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper, and transfer the pies to the sheet.

  9. Step 9

    Stir a splash of water into the egg, and brush a little on the sides of the pies, avoiding the top rim of the pie dough. Sprinkle the sides with Demerara sugar.

  10. Step 10

    Bake the pies until the crust is beautifully golden and a knife inserted into the apples meets little resistance, about 45 minutes. Transfer the sheet to a rack, and allow the pies to cool for at least 30 minutes before serving.

Ratings

4 out of 5
706 user ratings
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Comments

It would be great to have a video of someone making the pie or a video of the bakers at Circus making it. :)

Rather than forming the dough into logs, I simply dumped it from the food processor into a bowl on my kitchen scale, divided the weight by three, and portioned out the dough that way.

Agreed Stan. However, you argue for convention over a superior method. Mass (weight) measurement is consistently reliable while volume is not, regardless of the type of product you are creating. A universal switch both to mass and metric measures would improve all of our culinary adventures.

A little late to the game, but I used store bought (gasp!) dough which saved time and came out beautifully.

I really dislike recipes that give instructions that say "food processor". Many people who have minuscule NYC kitchens don't have room for a food processor. Can't the various authors of NYT recipes also include how to do this the old fashioned way, by hand? I know the food processor is easier, but not if you don't own one. Inclusiveness is nice.

My second attempt with this was fantastic: I was determined not to have an apple pizza! Really formed an edge by pressing and tucked the points of the pentagram under per the recipe. Secured the corners with toothpicks just in case, but it would have held without. Amazing and delicious to all who saw and ate. I love the apple peel left on, the lemon, and the texture — not a mushy traditional apple pie.

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