![]() And the milk needs to be chilled before using. A can is 12 ounces, so you will need two to make this recipe. I find screw top boxes of evaporated milk that are 17 ounces. It turned out beautifully too, so I think you could even do this without the crust if you are in a bind. I had some filling the first time round that I just couldn’t imagine would fit in the crust, so I put it in a ramekin and baked it along with the pie. The secret here is to whip the milk and sugar more than you think you should until it is stiff, then to slip it into the oven for less than you think you should. Many recipes called for a sweetened pate sucree style crust, but I couldn’t see it needing any more sugar, so I went with a simple, basic crust – I even tested it with a pre-rolled, bought pie crust which works a treat. It is a light and airy mousse with a deep, treacly, molasses-y flavor that is a complete surprise in something so delicate. Somehow, in my mind I imagined something similar to a chess pie, but it is not that at all. And it is very different than what I expected, in a lovely way. The point is, it is a very simple and utterly delicious pie made with very few ingredients. ![]() There are lots of resources for Gypsy tart, and many stories to go with it – some of which admit to being pure speculation – but it appears to be a specialty of Kent in England, and many of the articles I read said that people from Kent love it, but outside the area are not familiar with it, so how it came into my consciousness I cannot imagine. It was a circuitous route, searching for “evaporated milk and sugar pie,” but eventually, through some trick if internet luck, I came across Gypsy Tart and knew that’s exactly what I had in mind. ![]() Then it hit me that maybe it was a wartime rationing recipe from England, so I searched through a few books I have on that era, but to no end. I was thinking Southern, but when I didn’t turn anything up, I went through those resources from other regions. I thought maybe it was a Depression era recipe, so I started looking through community cookbooks from the 40s. I couldn’t remember where I’d seen it or why it was in my brain, but it just kept tapping at my memory. Somewhere in the back of my mind was this niggling idea of a pie made with evaporated milk and sugar. And I stand in my own pantry and think about ways to use things. I’ve flipped though old cookbooks and seen what other people are creating. I have been exploring some recipes and ideas for cooking with fewer, more available ingredients, and I share them on my Facebook page and Instagram feed. I’m just not sure about the right way to precede here. Feasts for a family Easter, fiesta meals for Cinco de Mayo or decadent ideas for special occasions. As far as posting on this site, it’s been a little tricky, I generally have a store of recipes created months, sometimes years in advance, but they haven’t felt like the right thing to do. And my meals have tended toward the peanut butter sandwich variety more than I care to admit. I’ve conquered a couple of long delayed kitchen projects, but I haven’t written a whole new book. I still cook – it’s my job – but that burst of energy and creativity hasn’t come. I planned to become an expert on cooking from the pantry and the freezer. And I’d make myself fantastic meals twice a day. Testing three and four recipes a day, absolutely alight with creativity. ![]() I thought, when all these safer-at-home orders started, that I would be an absolute cooking machine. ![]()
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