Pie is my favorite way to consume... anything. So when I found this, I was interested in how to make my own pies-in-a-jar:
http://www.permies.com/t/4565/cooking/jar-pie-years
But, is it safe? I don't know. Here's my thoughts:
You can preserve pie filling but only with certain thickeners. Thick stuff takes forever to transfer the heat throughout the jar and I guess the duration and temp break down some kinds of starch to the point that they may not hold the filling together. But there's some temperature sensitive thickeners that are runny when hot and survive canning to set into a nice jelly.
Pie crust is not sterile and needs preservation. I typically have a batch or two of crust in the refrigerator and it goes bad after a few weeks. (Solution: leftovers pot pie whenever possible. All those layers would make heat transfer a difficulty. A crust on the top of the pie would probably be OK but it would take a long time to brown in the jar, if it ever did.
There was some cake-in-a-jar talk a while back, usually with banana "bread". Found an article where some scientists inoculated the jars with C. botulinum and tested for the toxins after a certain time period. Turns out canning bread/cake doesn't kill the bad stuff. Maybe this is in the same vein.
HOWEVER, I understand that pies were used back-in-the-day to preserve meat and fruit. I've looked all over on the interwebs and can only find modern overly paranoid advice about throwing out a pie after 2 days. But I thought I heard some guy on the food network mention that his family made 100 blackberry pies every fall---this absurd number of pies implies that they were doing it to preserve the fruit. But how long did the pies last? In what condition should they be kept? Were the pies vented? Covered/sealed with lard? So many questions! Anyone know about preservation of food via pie?
http://www.permies.com/t/4565/cooking/jar-pie-years
But, is it safe? I don't know. Here's my thoughts:
You can preserve pie filling but only with certain thickeners. Thick stuff takes forever to transfer the heat throughout the jar and I guess the duration and temp break down some kinds of starch to the point that they may not hold the filling together. But there's some temperature sensitive thickeners that are runny when hot and survive canning to set into a nice jelly.
Pie crust is not sterile and needs preservation. I typically have a batch or two of crust in the refrigerator and it goes bad after a few weeks. (Solution: leftovers pot pie whenever possible. All those layers would make heat transfer a difficulty. A crust on the top of the pie would probably be OK but it would take a long time to brown in the jar, if it ever did.
There was some cake-in-a-jar talk a while back, usually with banana "bread". Found an article where some scientists inoculated the jars with C. botulinum and tested for the toxins after a certain time period. Turns out canning bread/cake doesn't kill the bad stuff. Maybe this is in the same vein.
HOWEVER, I understand that pies were used back-in-the-day to preserve meat and fruit. I've looked all over on the interwebs and can only find modern overly paranoid advice about throwing out a pie after 2 days. But I thought I heard some guy on the food network mention that his family made 100 blackberry pies every fall---this absurd number of pies implies that they were doing it to preserve the fruit. But how long did the pies last? In what condition should they be kept? Were the pies vented? Covered/sealed with lard? So many questions! Anyone know about preservation of food via pie?