Sunday, December 20, 2020

French Canadian Tourtiere Recipe

 


Tourtiere
 French Canadian tradition
for
 Christmas

This recipe makes 3 double crust savoury meat pies.
I use the pastry recipe off of the box of Tenderflake Lard.
Make the pastry ahead of the filling as the dough needs to be in the fridge for an hour before rolling out.

Filling 

2 tsp olive oil
2 cups finely diced onions
3 cloves of garlic
1 cup of finely minced celery
2 pounds ground pork
1 pounds lean ground beef 
1 tsp ground sage spice
1/4 tsp each ground cloves and ground cinnamon spices
1 tsp salt 
1/2 tsp ground pepper
1 cup water
3 cups mashed potatoes
1/2 cup fresh chopped parsley

In a large pot heat the oil and saute onions, celery and garlic until soft.
Add the ground meat and cook until no longer pink.
Drain any fat from the pot.
Add the sage, cloves, cinnamon, salt, pepper and water
Add a lid to the pot and simmer for 30 minutes.
Remove from the heat and add the mashed potatoes and parsley stir well to mix.
Cool on counter.

Roll out the pastry dough thinly and line 3 pie plates 
make sure to save enough dough to top each pie.

Fill each pie with the filling.
Roll out the pastry tops and seal edges.
Cut in some vents in the tops for steam to escape.
(You can use a very small star cookie cutter to make these vents attractive)

Brush pies with egg yolk and milk
bake for 35 - 40 minutes in a 375 degree oven.

If you make these ahead you can freeze the uncooked pies.
remove from freezer, thaw then in a fridge then bake them.

Allow pies to sit on the counter after baking for about 20 minutes before slicing them.



Serve with the condiment of your choice...

HP sauce 
piccallilli
Branston pickle
sweet mustard pickles


Hope you have fun making these tourtiere pies.

They are usually served on Christmas Eve or Christmas Day.

Merry Christmas!

~ Be Well and Be Kind ~

12 comments:

Linda Shukri said...

Your pies sound delicious! Thanks for sharing. :-)

Polly said...

mmmm they look so good. Merry Christmas.

La Vie Quotidienne said...

I have always wanted a good recipe for this...and now thanks to you I have one.

Merry Christmas.

Jane said...

These are beautiful and look delicious! I wan5 to try to make them. P.s. your blog is a balm is this crazy world.

hostess of the humble bungalow said...

Hope you enjoy the recipe Linda

hostess of the humble bungalow said...

I haven't made tourtiere for a few years...I have more time at home to bake and cook so I thought it would be fun to make some for our family.

hostess of the humble bungalow said...

Hope you enjoy this recipe Adrienne. Merry Christmas!

hostess of the humble bungalow said...

Thank you for those kind words Jane.
Merry Christmas!

Michelle said...

Your pies look tasty! I notice you do not do a blind bake for the bottom crust. Do the bottoms cook well? I have not made tourtier before.

Merry Christmas, and looking forward to 2021. I really enjoy your blog.

hostess of the humble bungalow said...

I roll the pastry very thin and bake it with the filling. They could be baked blind and work too.
Happy New Year as we welcome it in and hope for better health for us all!

Margie from Toronto said...

Thank you so much for this - I've been wanting a tourtiere recipe for ages - I knew the basics but wasn't sure of the spice measurements.
I hope that you and your family has a good Christmas and let's all hope for a very Happy New Year!

hostess of the humble bungalow said...

Margie I hope you enjoy this recipe...there are so many out there for a tasty tourtiere. Some are based only on the meat and others like this one include some veggies. Happy New Year!