Pie-a-Day #11: Apricot Pie with Almond Paste Streusel
When Good Food producer Harriet Ells walked into the studio with a bag of Blenheim apricots I was excited. When she threw down the gauntlet with the words “You better turn these into a really good pie”, I gulped. Apricots are more a tarty kind of fruit. The color of the inner tender orange flesh lends itself to be on display in an arrangement of concentric circles, lightly brushed with glaze. But no, I had to make a pie. So I started thinking about the affinity apricots have for almonds. I will often make a filling of Italian amaretti cookies to fill a peach or apricot cavity then bake them. I knew we had a small container of very high-end almond paste made with a mixture of sweet and bitter almonds. The oil of the bitter almond is what gives that sensational scent that we associate with the nut. Almond paste is coarser and less sweet than marzipan, perfect I thought for mixing into a streusel topping.
- Almond Paste
- Almond Paste
- Apricot Pie with Almond Paste Streusel
When picking apricots from the farmers markets choose an assortment of yielding ripe fruit and firmer fruit that may not be super sweet, but will have more complex flavors. That way you have the best of both worlds for the filling.
So I cut my favorite crust recipe in half to make enough for a single crust pie. See below.
Apricot Filling:
1 1/2 lbs ripe apricots or enough halved, ptted fruit to yield 2 -3 cups fruit
1/4 cup brown sugar
1/4 tsp salt
3 to 6 Tablespoons flour
Mix the apricots in a bowl with the sugar and salt. Add the flour by sprinkling it over the fruit one tablespoon at a time, mixing it after each addition. You have the perfect amount of flour when the flour just absorbs the fruit juices without seizing up.
Almond Paste Streusel Topping
1 cup flour
1/4 cup packed brown sugar
2 Tablespoons sugar
1/4 tsp salt
1/4 cup good quality almond paste
1 stick butter, cut into 8 pieces
Place flour, sugars and salt in small bowl. Mix with a whisk or spoon. Add the almond paste and butter to the bowl. Use a pastry blender to cut the butter and almond paste into the flour and sugars. Or you can do what I do and use your fingertips to work the butter into the dry ingredients until it looks like very lumpy pie dough.
To assemble the pie:
Roll out the dough and arrange it in a deep dish pie plate. Sprinkle graham cracker crumbs over the bottom of the rolled crust to absorb excess fruit juices. Add the sweetened and floured apricots to the pie pan. Top with a generous layer of Almond Paste Streusel Topping.
Place pie in lower third of preheated 375° oven. Bake for 20 minutes, or until streusel begins to color. Then cover the pie with aluminum foil to protect the streusel from browning too quickly. Continue baking the pie for an additional 20 minutes or until you can see thickened fruit juices bubbling up from the streusel. Remove foil and allow streusel to crisp up and turn a rich golden brown in spots.
Only serve to people who appreciate the taste of almonds.














That looks incredible, Evan. What is the situation with bitter almonds now in the US? I know that they're used in the manufacture of almond extract, and I'm glad this paste is available, but is the actual nut still illegal to buy in the US? Where did you find the paste? So happy pie month is back!
This looks fantastic…and I happen to have a whole basket of apricots from a friend's tree! Pie!
I cannot believe that I read this before I had breakfast. I am going to be thinking about this pie EVERY MINUTE today!!! mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm And Brian McGovney — it's a whole SUMMER's worth of PIE a DAY!!
This pie is delicious!! So yummy!!!! The aroma is just fantastic. The apricots melt in your mouth. HMMMMM!!!!! Whole Foods had almond past. Thanks, Evan! A true winner.
That looks incredible, Evan. What is the situation with bitter almonds now in the US? I know that they're used in the manufacture of almond extract, and I'm glad this paste is available, but is the actual nut still illegal to buy in the US? Where did you find the paste? So happy pie month is back!
According to http://homecooking.about.com
"The bitter almond is a cousin to the sweet almond and contains traces of lethal prussic acid in its raw state. Although the toxicity is destroyed by heat, the sale of unrefined bitter almonds is prohibited in the United States. Fifty unprocessed bitter almonds can be lethal to a human. Yet, bitter almonds are successfully processed to make almond extract and almond-flavored liqueurs."
Surfas has a nice selection of really good almond pastes. You can find the Mandelin Almond Paste I used online at http://www.mandelininc.com/home/
This is so, so good! I have made it twice and am about to make it a third time. YUM!!!!
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Evan Kleiman has been the host of Good Food on KCRW since 1998. A longtime restaurateur and owner of Angeli Caffe on Melrose. She was the founder of Slow Food, Los Angeles and is an avid gardener.
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