Vinegar pie contains a sweet and tart custard-like filling. It's baked in a flaky pie crust and topped with whipped cream, honey, and cinnamon. It is something that you should definitely give a try.
If you tell someone that vinegar pie is on your list of desserts this holiday season, they are most likely to make a face and ask why. It is hard to blame them as well, because vinegar traditionally isn't a dessert item and is often used for savoury dishes as a souring agent or a preservative in pickles. But this vinegar pie is here to change the minds of all the people who say vinegar cannot be used to make delicious desserts.
This vinegar has a delicate balance of tart and sweet flavour, a custardy interior, and a creamy crust. It tastes so good that you wouldn't be able to identify that vinegar is used as a flavouring agent in this pie if you didn't know it.
Vinegar pies are called desperation pies, along with chess pie, buttermilk pie, and green tomato pie, because they were created by using a few inexpensive pantry items. Its simplicity and great flavour, despite being made with inexpensive ingredients, are the primary reasons why this pie was so well-liked during the Great Depression.
Lately, these desperation pies are making a comeback to the culinary scene, and many restaurants have started to include them in their menus due to the recent rise in popularity of desperation pies. Many chefs and cooks are going back to their grandma's cookbooks to get traditional food recipes, thanks to the renewed interest in homegrown cooking heritage. So get your vinegar ready and enjoy this simple yet delicious pie.
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