Tag Archives: fresh peaches

Dell Ward’s Peach Custard Pie

 

On a mission to use the last of the Eckert’s peaches this week, this pie, as remembered from “small kid time” in Marble Hill, came immediately to mind.  The recipe, for Peach Custard Pie, was passed to me from friend, Tim Ward.  Tim’s grandmother, Mrs. Dell Ward, was a terrific cook whose skills in the kitchen were well-known in our area.  The small cafe beside the 4-way stop in “old” Lutesville, MO, was a home away from home for generations of families who enjoyed Mrs. Ward’s dinners, her homemade doughnuts, and a huge array of delectable desserts.

A trip to Mrs. Ward’s cafe was always welcome in our family as a meal also guaranteed visiting with friends and savoring any number of her special desserts.  Known for her home-style cooking, Mrs. Ward offered this tasty pie in the summer when peaches were bursting with flavor. An ample slice of Peach Custard Pie was the perfect end to a fried chicken dinner on hot July nights.

Do not use a store-bought crust for this pie! It deserves the most tender flaky crust you can provide so make your own and layer in slices of fresh peaches. You will need to adjust the custard ingredients depending on how many peaches you use; 3 large peaches are just right if using a 9-inch pie plate. This recipe reminds me of the Sugar Pie my Grandma James made with the peaches being a spectacular juicy addition. The simple custard enhances the flavor of the fruit making this an ideal and refreshing summer treat. Sweet memories indeed!

Dell Ward’s Peach Custard Pie

Ingredients

1 cup sugar
1/4 cup flour
Fresh sliced peaches
1/4 cup milk, scant
1 9” unbaked pastry shell

Directions Preheat oven to 350. Mix together the sugar and flour and sprinkle over sliced peaches in unbaked pastry crust. Drizzle with the 1/4 cup milk (or less, depending upon how it looks; you want the custard thick). Bake until filling mixture sets, about 45 minutes. Allow to cool well so custard thickens; the pie can also be chilled in the fridge then served cold.  Recipe note: place a sheet of foil on bottom of oven in case pie bubbles over.

Peach Cobbler

After finding the sweetest, largest, and juiciest of peaches from Eckert’s Nursery last week at Schnuck’s Market, it was a no-brainer that a peach cobbler soon appear in my kitchen as quickly as possible. Mine and mama’s favorite cobbler (with blackberry cobbler being an equal favorite if that’s possible), peaches are never better than when baked up cobbler style and topped with the sweet crunchy crust in this recipe.

There’s nothing hard at all about making cobbler. Peel the fruit, slice it, and toss with a minimum of sugar (ripe fruit doesn’t need a huge amount of sugar) and flour to thicken the juices then stir up your topping, add it over your fruit, and IN the oven it goes! I sometimes use cinnamon for spice, sometimes nutmeg, but use either sparingly; you want just the barest whiff to enhance the fruit.

Vanilla ice cream is, of course, the perfect accompaniment to a fruit cobbler. You absolutely cannot go wrong combining the two. It is only right. And right on! Use the recipe below from my “Missouri to Maui” cookbook to create the very best of summer deliciousness!

Peach Cobbler

Ingredients

For the fruit
1 cup sugar
2 T. flour, heaping
1/4 tsp. nutmeg or cinnamon
4 cups fresh peaches, peeled and sliced

For the topping
1 cup sugar
1 cup flour
1. tsp. baking powder
1 tsp. salt
1/3 cup cold butter or margarine, diced
1 egg, beaten

Directions

Preheat oven to 375. Place fruit in large mixing bowl and combine sugar and flour and pour over fruit; stir to coat. Sprinkle with nutmeg or cinnamon and pour into a lightly-greased 11x7x2 (2 qt.) baking dish. Prepare topping by stirring the dry ingredients together in mixing bowl then cutting in the cold butter until the dough is crumbly. Add the beaten egg, stir to combine, and drop by spoonfuls on top of the fruit or just sprinkle it evenly over fruit. Bake at 375 for 35-40 minutes until brown and bubbly. Cool before serving; top with vanilla ice cream.