British Pie Week: Homemade Melton Mowbray Pork Pie Recipe
By
9 months ago
Impress your friends and family with a good old homemade pork pie
The pork pie is a staple in British food, beloved by generations. This British Pie Week (4 – 10 March 2024), why not forego the supermarket option and have a crack at making your own with this Dickinson & Morris award-winning Melton Mowbray traditional pork pie recipe.
Pork Pie Recipe
Ingredients:
To make a 450g (1lb) Pork Pie
Pastry
- 200g plain flour
- 2.5ml salt
- 60g lard
- 35ml water
- Beaten egg to glaze
Filling
- 225g lean pork, chopped (shoulder would be ideal, but not bacon or ham)
- Salt and pepper
- 125ml pork stock & 15g gelatine
Method:
How to make the pastry
- Sift flour and salt into a warm bowl and rub in 15g of lard.
- Gently heat the remaining lard and water together until boiling, then add to the flour, mixing until mixture is cool enough to knead.
- Knead well to ensure no air is in the pastry.
- Keep aside a quarter of the pastry for the lid.
- Make the remaining piece of pastry into a ball and leave in the fridge overnight.
How to make the filling
Dice the fresh uncured pork into small pieces and season well with salt and pepper.
How to make the jelly
Make the jelly at a later stage, whilst baking, by dissolving the gelatine in pork stock.
Step-by-step how to hand raise a pork pie in a traditional way
- Remove the pastry from the fridge at least two-three hours before making the pie case. Begin by gently squeezing / tempering the pastry ball between your hands so that it becomes pliable and mouldable. Loosely form into a flattened ball.
- Tip: take great care not to overwork the pastry.
- Using a floured surface, circle the pastry between your hands to begin bringing the wall sides up.
- Take your dolly, or if you do not have one of these, a regular sized jam jar, and push firmly into the centre of the pastry. This should raise the wall sides up and outwards, ready for shaping.
- Whilst rotating the dolly in a circular motion, squeeze the pastry with your hands and at the same time work the pastry up and around the body of the dolly. The pastry should have a regular and even thickness all the way round.
- Tip: make sure you do not push the dolly through the bottom of the pastry case!
- Raise the pastry to the top of the dolly and prepare to remove the dolly from the pastry case.
- Gently remove the pastry case from the dolly by teasing the pastry away from the sides with your thumbs. Slowly remove the dolly from the case.
- Firmly place your ball of coarsely chopped, seasoned fresh pork into the pastry case, moulding the sides to the meat to ensure no air remains in the body of the pie.
- Damp the inside rim of the pastry case with egg.
- Roll out the reserved pastry to an even thickness and cut out a circular lid. Place on top of the meat and pastry case.
- Seal and finish the pie by hand, gently pinching the lid and wall sides together. Tip: very important to ensure the lid is very securely sealed to the pastry case otherwise the sides will collapse during baking.
- At opposite points around the circumference of the pie push the sides in to create a crimped finish to the top of the pie.
- Chill the pie for at least 1 hour in a fridge, or for best results, overnight.
- Your pie will now be ready to be placed in the oven.
- Just lightly brush the top of the pie (not the crimp) with egg and make a hole in lid centre. Place on a
- baking tray, and bake in the traditional way – without a supporting hoop – to give a distinctive bow-sided shape to the walls. Bake in the oven at Gas Mark 4 (220°C) for approximately 1.25 -1.5 hours. (NB times will vary according to oven type and make).
- Once baked until a rich, golden brown, cool the pie, make two holes in the lid and pour in the jelly.
- Leave to cool further, ideally overnight, in a fridge.
- Remember the pie is designed to be eaten cold, not reheated. To enjoy the pie at its best, remove from the fridge at least an hour before consuming.
Visit porkpie.co.uk for more information on this pork pie recipe.