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zakruti.com » Dish recipes » Adam Ragusea
Leftovers Pie Recipe

Leftovers Pie Recipe

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Rating: 4.5; Vote: 2
Thanksgiving leftovers or anything else to get rid of? Cover them in liquid, thicken, top with mash, bake, eat REPICE, FEEDS 10-12 PEOPLE (I think you should make leftovers pie with whatever leftovers you actually have, but if you want to replicate my pie in this video precisely, here's what you'll do) 8-10 cups cooked turkey meat 1lb Brussels sprouts 1 lb carrots 1 bunch scallions / spring onions 8 oz sharp cheddar cheese, grated 1 12 oz bottle hard apple cider 1-2 cups frozen peas 5 lb Yukon Gold potatoes (or similar yellow-skinned variety) 8 ounces (two sticks) butter, ideally European-style 4 egg yokes milk (up to a half gallon) salt pepper dried thyme dried sage Wondra flour Peel the potatoes, cut them into even chunks, boil them until they are easily crushed, then drain them. In the big pot you just use, get the butter melting, then pour the drain potatoes on top. Whip the potatoes with a hand mixer until smooth. Then whip in milk, salt and pepper to taste. Let it cool for a bit before mixing in the egg yokes and a handful of the grated cheddar. Cut the woody stems from the Brussels spouts, remove any gross-looking outer leaves and cut the sprouts in half. Peel the carrots and cut off their stem and tip ends. On a baking sheet, toss all the vegetables in melted butter and salt and pepper, keeping the carrots and sprouts in separate piles. Roast the vegetable at about 400 F until tender the sprouts while probably need to come out before the carrots do. Cut the root ends off the spring onions peel off any slimy outer layers, then slice them all up thin. Cut the cooked meat and the carrots into bite-size pieces. Get the oven pre-heating to 400 F, if it's not already there. Put the meat, carrots, sprouts and spring onions into a wide 6-8 quart oven-safe casserole, lasagna pan, roasting pan, etc. Pour the cider on top, followed by enough milk to submerge all the ingredients. Bring to a low boil on the stovetop and stir in enough Wondra to achieve slightly less than the thickness you want. Turn the heat off and wait for it to stop bubbling before stirring in the still-frozen peas and the rest of your cheese. Stir in salt, pepper, thyme and sage to taste. Drop big blobs of mash around the surface of the pie to get it mostly covered. Bake at 400 F until the sauce is starting to bubble, then turn on the broiler and brown the top to your liking. Allow to cool thoroughly before scooping out portions
Date: 2019-11-14

Comments and reviews: 8


Adam, since you were (still are) a college professor, I think a cool video idea would be easy meals that college students can make Im in college right now and I struggle to cook meals that arent already boxed or pre-cooked. Keep up the great work, and thanks for giving us great videos to watch
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I doubt this would work with the leftovers from my family's thanksgiving dinner. Something tells me a mac and cheese, baked beans, cornbread dressing, and broth-y dumpling pie would not be very appetizing, no matter how much European-style butter I use.
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Adam, I think the grainyness may be caused by the acid in the fruit juice (cider) curdling the milk you add. To solve this, either do not add the fruit juice, or wait until just before when things are already homogenized.
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Can I still use a corn starch slurry to thicken the sauce rather than Wondra or a roux? Will a corn starch slurry leave my sauce gritty? Love your vids btw, very informative.
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Awww, this is what my mum makes after Christmas when we inevitably have too much turkey. All these turkey videos is making me excited for going home at Christmas. :D
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Just curious Adam, do you end up having to eat all the food you make for these videos? Just seems like you're going to be eating Thanksgiving food all month long.
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I came back from college today and my mum already made this for dinner using the leftover chicken tandoori scraps, it's an absolutely wonderful recipe
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Adam I heard that if you cut up potatoes you'll boil out the nutrients as compared to boiling them whole, applies to everything. Is that a true?
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