Natchitoches (pronounced NACK-uh-tish) in northwestern
Louisiana is famous for two things: “Steel Magnolias,” which was filmed there
in 1988, and spicy meat pies that predate the Civil War. We were in
Natchitoches in July and stopped by to take some meat pies home. They are good!
The most famous pies are found at Lasyone’s which is located
on Second Street. These meat pies were originally out-the-backdoor or street
food sold by the few who knew how to make them. In the tradition of street food
in Louisiana, the pies were sold with their own street cry: “Lotta, hotta meat
pies!” They are not easy to make and local recipes seem to be vague and faulty:
too much flour in the filling, too much lard in the pastry. The best way to make
them is to bake them, not only less caloric but they will not fall apart in the
oil when you try to fry them.
I found that there is a meat pie festival every year in
Natchitoches the third weekend of September. This historic town is along the
banks of the Red River and was founded in the early 1700s in French Louisiana.
The settlement was established in part to develop trade with the colony of New
Spain at Tejas (east Texas). Though nominally French, Natchitoches was not
easily connected to the rest of Louisiana, and the foodways of the Spanish had
great influence in the region. The now-famous Natchitoches meat pie is one of
the results of that cultural exchange. Early pies would have been stuffed with
bison, deer, and other available game. Now that crawfish is available you will
find many pies stuffed with them especially in the spring.
Give them a try or you can buy them frozen at some grocery
stores. Serve them hot with spicy mustard and you will have a real taste of
Louisiana.
From A Love Affair
with Southern Cooking by Jean Anderson
Natchitoches Meat Pies
Makes 23 appetizers
Pastry
2 cups sifted all-purpose flour
½ teaspoon baking powder
½ teaspoon salt
½ cup firmly packed lard or vegetable shortening
3 tablespoons cold milk beaten with 1 large egg
Filling
¼ pound ground beef chuck
¼ pound ground pork
2 medium scallions, trimmed and coarsely chopped (include
some green tops)
¼ teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon black pepper
1/8 to ¼ teaspoon ground hot red pepper (cayenne)
1/8 teaspoon ground allspice
1 teaspoon all-purpose flour
¼ cup water
For the pastry: Whisk the flour, baking powder, and salt
together in a large mixing bowl. Add the lard and using a pastry blender, cut in
until the texture of coarse meal. Quickly fork in the milk-egg mixture and as
soon as the pastry holds together, shape into a ball. Place on a large sheet of
plastic food wrap, flatten, then wrap and refrigerate until ready to proceed.
For the filling: Cook the beef, pork, scallions, salt, black
and red pepper, and allspice in a medium-size heavy skillet over moderate heat,
breaking up the clumps of meat, for about 5 minutes or until no traces of pink
remain. Sprinkle in the flour, then, stirring all the while, add the water.
Cook, stirring now and then, for about 5 minutes or until lightly thickened and
no raw floury taste remains. Cool to room temperature.
Preheat the oven to 375°F. Remove the pastry from the
refrigerator and roll as thin as pie crust on a lightly floured pastry cloth.
Cut into rounds with a 2 ¾ -to 3-inch biscuit cutter, then drop 1 ½ to 2
teaspoons of the filling onto the lower half of each round, leaving a margin of
at least ¼ inch. Reroll the scraps and cut additional circles. Moisten the
edges of the pastry circles all around, fold in half to enclose the filling,
and crimp the edges firmly with the tines of a fork to seal. Also prick the top
of each round with the form to allow steam to escape.
Arrange the rounds about 2 inches apart on an ungreased
large baking sheet, slide onto the middle oven shelf, and bake for 12 to 15
minutes or until the edges are brown.
Serve hot with cocktails.
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