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Shoofly pie

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Alternative names
  
Shoo-fly pie

Region or state
  
Pennsylvania

Place of origin
  
United States of America

Type
  
Pie

Main ingredients
  
Pie shell, molasses

Shoofly pie httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons44

Variations
  
Montgomery pie, chess pie

Similar
  
Chess pie, Eccles cake, Buttermilk pie, Rhubarb pie, Scrapple

Pennsylvania dutch shoofly pie holiday baked molasses pie recipe


Shoofly pie (or shoo-fly pie) is a molasses pie or cake that developed its traditional form among the Pennsylvania Dutch in the 1880s, who ate it with strong black coffee for breakfast. It is called Melassich Riwwelboi or Melassichriwwelkuche (molasses crumb cake) in the Pennsylvania Dutch language.

Contents

Shoofly pie Mrs Witmeyer39s Shoofly Pie The Washington Post

How to bake shoofly pie


Description

Shoofly pie Traditional Shoo Fly Pie Recipe Our Heritage of Health

Shoofly pie is a molasses (also called dark treacle) crumb cake that was baked in a pie crust. The addition of a pie crust made it easier for people to hold a piece in the hand while eating it.

Shoofly pie Shoofly Pie Pie Recipes Pie Crust Tips amp Tricks and latest Trends

It comes in two different versions: wet bottom and dry bottom. The dry-bottom version is baked until fully set and results in a more cake-like consistency throughout. The wet-bottom version is set like cake at the top where it has mixed in with the crumbs, but the very bottom is a stickier, gooier custard-like consistency.

Shoofly pie Shoofly Pie Recipe NYT Cooking

A Montgomery pie is similar to a shoofly pie, except lemon juice is usually added to the bottom layer and buttermilk to the topping. Treacle tart is a pie with a filling made from light treacle.

History and name

Shoofly pie Shoofly Pie Recipe Land O39Lakes

Shoofly pie began as a crust-less molasses cake called Centennial Cake in 1876, to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence in Philadelphia. In the 1880s, home bakers added a crust to make it easier to eat alongside a cup of coffee in the morning, without plates and forks. Precursors include Jenny Lind Cake, a gingerbread cake from the middle of the 19th century.

Shoofly pie AmishStyle ShooFly Pie A Ranch Mom

Because the cake contains molasses but no eggs, historians conclude that it was typically baked during the winter, when hens laid no eggs but when molasses would store well in the cold weather. The use of baking powder places its invention firmly after the Civil War and in the 1870s, when Pennsylvania Dutch bakers began using baking powder.

The name comes from a particular brand of molasses, called Shoofly Molasses. This brand was named after a popular circus animal that toured in Pennsylvania in the 19th century, Shoofly the Boxing Mule. The mule, in turn, may have been named after a song that became popular half a century before: Shoo Fly, Don't Bother Me.

The dish is mentioned in the song "Shoo-Fly Pie and Apple Pan Dowdy," popularized by Dinah Shore in the 1940s.

References

Shoofly pie Wikipedia