Thursday, March 14, 2013

Mini Shepherd’s Pie

Here's a post that I'd started a couple of weeks ago, read on.
I came across this dish a few days back, and ever since I’d been thinking of trying something like that myself. Today, I was already doing a lot of the usual cooking and I thought, “Why not dabble in some pie?” I’ve also had making Shepherd’s Pie in my mental to-do list for a while now. I had some spare shredded chicken to make the filling, so a few online recipes and lots of tips later, I got 8 medium potatoes boiling for mashed potatoes.  
Mini Shepherd's Pie with Chicken Filling
The basic ingredients for mashed potatoes: boiled potatoes, salt, pepper, a generous amount of butter and a few splashes of cream. Yes, I am trying real hard to inch past that border-line cholesterol of mine. The secret to good mashed potatoes, one that is not pasty, is to eliminate water. That includes steam from the boiled potatoes. After mashing the potatoes with a potato ricer or a fork, season the potatoes and add a few tablespoons of butter. Finally, add the cream. You need to make sure not to overmix the mash, otherwise you end up with a gooey mess instead of fluffy mash. My mashed potatoes turned out pretty good, so good that my kid who’s a fussy eater kept on tasting forkfuls from the bowl.
  
With the mash out of the way, I was about to make an Indianized chicken filling. That’s when it hit me that if I were to make mini Shepherd’s pie, I’d need something edible to line my trusted, versatile muffin tray. I couldn't that the easy way out as there was no bread in stock. So my dabbling changed to downright experimenting as I started making a shortcrust pastry for the pie. Yikes! This takes me back a few years when I tried a hand at making quiche from scratch! Not only was I uninformed about the art of pastry-making, but I also did the blunder of not following a recipe – I was doing it Jamie Oliver-style, without the skill. Talk about experiments blowing up in your face.
   
Anyway, a few years and a couple of grey hair past, I learned my lesson. Today, I really wanted to succeed and that meant more online research. I followed this recipe to the T. I think I did pretty good, well almost (read on and you’ll know why). 

Mini Shepherd’s Pie

For the mashed potatoes:

  • Potatoes  – 8 medium
  • Butter  – ½ cup (feel free to indulge yourself with more)
  • Cream – ¼ cup
  • Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste 
  1. Boil the potatoes till cooked. Make sure not to overcook them. 
  2. Peel the potatoes and mash them with the back of a fork. Use a wide bowl to help the steam escape. 
  3. Add salt and pepper, and mix with the fork. Next, incorporate the butter and cream while taking care not to overmix.
There's more mashed potatoes than necessary for the pie. It helps to make the mash first - that way you and your family can have forkfuls every now and then till the mini pies are ready.

For the filling:
  • Shredded Chicken – 2 cups (cooked with salt, pepper and green chilies for spicing up the filling)
  • Onion – ½ medium, finely minced  
  • Garlic – 4 cloves, finely minced
  • Garam masala – ½ tsp
  • Coriander powder – ¼ tsp
  • Coriander leaf – 4 tbsp, finely chopped
  • Oil – 1 tbsp
  1. Sauté onion and garlic in oil till the onions become soft and translucent.
  2. Add coriander powder and coriander leaf and sauté for about 20 seconds.
  3. Add the shredded chicken and garam masala, and sauté for 2-3 minutes till the coriander leaf is soft.
For the pastry case:
  1. Make a batch of pastry dough according to this recipe. Wrap the dough in cling film and refrigerate it for 30 minutes.
  2. Preheat the oven to 190°C/375°F/Gas 5.
  3. Roll out the chilled shortcrust pastry to about the thickness of a five rupee coin. Cut out circles big enough to cover the base and sides of your muffin mold. Keep in mind that the pastry shrinks when baked. So, you may have to cut out slightly bigger circles.
  4. Grease the muffin tray with butter. Gently place the pastry in the muffin molds and press down lightly so that the pastry takes the shape of the mold. Prick the pastry lightly with a fork. Cover the muffin tray with cling film and rest it in the fridge for 15 minutes.
  5. Next, cover the molds with foil or butter paper, and fill them with dried beans. Bake the pastry for 10 minutes. When the top edges of the pastry start turning brown, remove the beans and the foil. Bake the pastry for another 3-5 minutes so that the base dries out. While the beans and the pricking stop the pastry from rising while cooking, blind baking gives you a crisp pastry case.
  6. Allow the pie crust to cool down completely before adding the filling. Otherwise, the crust becomes soggy.
Important: Never take the shortcut of not blind baking the pastry – a mistake that I made. The pastry takes ages to cook, drying out the filling in the process. Moreover, you end up with a soggy crust. My other mistake was that I rolled out the pastry quite thick.
   
   Assembling the pies:
  1. Fill each pastry mold with the chicken filling.
  2. Cover the pie with a generous layer of mashed potatoes. You can also pipe the mash over the filling for enhanced visual appeal.
  3. Sprinkle some chopped coriander on top.
  4. Bake for about 15-20 minutes at 190°C/375°F/Gas 5 until the potato turns golden brown.
One of the very nicest things about life is the way we must regularly stop whatever it is we are doing and devote our attention to eating. ~ Luciano Pavarotti

5 comments:

  1. I always get a belly-full just reading your mouth-watering experiments. And that too without sampling any of them. I guess I should start dabbling in the theoretical culinary arts. Its theoretical cause I don't get a chance to eat any!

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    Replies
    1. Thank you for the kind words (now, I'm just being plain formal here :P). You are always welcome to the lab though :)

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  2. Replies
    1. come over here, girl... Let's experiment together, you clothes, me food :)

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  3. The Torture continues.... ha ha.. Nice to go thru this... getz the feelin dat i almost had it!!!!...

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