Southern Wild Blueberry Pie…Yummmm

SOUTHERN WILD BLUEBERRY PIE…YUMMMM

This pie is packed with flavor because of the flaky crust and the wild blueberries. You can replace the wild blueberries with the cultivated ones.
This pie is packed with flavor because of the flaky crust and the wild blueberries. You can replace the wild blueberries with the cultivated ones.

Today my family and I went blueberry picking. Every spring, usually the end of May, we make our way to the blueberry bushes and forage blueberries until our fingers turn blue.

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M baby is getting so big. I hope she thinks well on these days of foraging blueberries every spring! I know I will!!
My baby is getting so big. I hope she thinks well on these days of foraging blueberries every spring! I know I will!!

This year has been an unusually wet season here in Alabama and it seems to have been exceptional for the wild blueberries. Every bush was as about as full of blueberries as I have ever seen.

With Memorial Day coming up, I think my Southern Blueberry Pie is in order. I love the flavors of the wild blueberries a little better than the cultivated ones. They seem to be sweeter. They are quite a bit smaller so you have to use more blueberries to have the correct volume in the pie, but it is well worth it. You can find more details about different wild and cultivated varieties on this post.

In the pie crust I use with this pie, I use both cold butter and lard. The butter gives you the rich flavor while the lard gives you the fantastic flakiness that we all deserve. I like to use the lattice crust, but when I am in a hurry, I will just top the pie with the crust and place a pie bird in the middle of the pie to keep the juices from spilling over and to keep my crust nice and flaky.

I just hope I can make this pie fast enough…before the blueberries are mysteriously eaten by 7 little blueberry thieves!

* You can substitute domestic cultivated berries in the pie if wild berries are not in season.

* Brushing the top lattice with heavy cream or an egg and sprinkling raw sugar on the tops of the lattice crust gives it a prettier appearance as well as a nice crunch.

SOUTHERN WILD BLUEBERRY PIE

Blueberry Pie

With Memorial Day coming up, I think my Southern Blueberry Pie is in order. I love the flavors of the wild blueberries a little better than the cultivated ones. They seem to be sweeter.
5 from 1 vote
Course Dessert
Cuisine American

Ingredients
  

  • 2 homemade pie crusts
  • 5 ½ cups blueberries
  • 1/3 cup brown sugar
  • 1/3 cup granulated sugar plus 2 tablespoons for sprinkling
  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon
  • ¼ cup flour plus 2 tablespoons for sprinkling
  • 1 large egg beaten
  • 1 tablespoon heavy cream

Instructions
 

  • Preheat oven to 375 degrees.
  • In a large bowl combine berries, brown sugar, granulated sugar, cinnamon and flour. Stir gently.
  • Sprinkle 2 tablespoons of flour and 2 tablespoons of granulated sugar on the bottom of chilled crust. Pour filling into the crust, follow lattice crust instructions and bake in oven for one hour or until blueberries are bubbly and crust is golden. Serve with ice cream or homemade whipped cream.

Notes

Note: You can substitute domestic cultivated berries in the pie if wild berries are not in season. Note: Brushing the top lattice with heavy cream or an egg and sprinkling raw sugar on the tops of the lattice crust gives it a prettier appearance as well as a nice crunch.
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Tried this recipe?Let me know how it was!

Homemade Pie Crust

Course Dessert
Cuisine American
Servings 2 pie crusts

Ingredients
  

  • 3 cups all- purpose flour
  • 1 teaspoon kosher salt
  • ¾ cups unsalted butter 1 ½ sticks, very cold
  • 1/3 cup vegetable shortening Crisco, very cold
  • 6 tablespoons ice water plus more if dough is too thick.

Instructions
 

  • Place flour and salt into food processor fitted with a steel blade and pulse to mix.
  • Dice butter. Add diced butter and cold shortening to processor.
  • Add ice water to the mixture down the feed tube with machine running. Pulse machine until dough forms a ball. Wrap in plastic wrap. Refrigerate 30 minutes.
  • Cut dough in half. Roll one of the pieces on a well-floured board rolling from the center to the edge, turning and flouring the dough to make sure it does not stick.
  • Continue rolling until 14 inches in diameter. Fold the dough in half over the rolling pin, place in pie pan. Unfold and mold to pie plate.
  • If making a double crusted pie, roll remaining half of dough out on a well floured surface. Roll from the center to the edge, turning, flouring, and rolling until you get a disc with the diameter of approximately 12 inches or to desired size. Using a sharp knife, trim the edges of the top crust leaving a ¾ inch overhang under the original pie crust and crimp the edges using your index finger and thumb. Make steam vents by using a sharp knife to cut 4 slits in center of top crust.
  • If making a lattice crust, roll remaining half of dough into a rectangle about 1/8 inch thick and 8x10 inches. Cut the rectangle lengthwise into 1-inch strips. Make sure to do this on a floured surface so lattice strips do not stick. Place strips about one inch apart oven top of pie. Fold back every other strip half way over itself and place one of the remaining strips perpendicular to the original. Return the strips that had been folded back to their original position. Fold back the alternate strips and place another strip across the unfolded strips. Return strips that are folded back to the original position and repeat by continuing to weave the lattice on top of the pie filling. Roll the overhang under bottom pie crust. Use a sharp knife to trim off the excess. Use your index finger and thumb to pinch dough to make a fluted design.
If you like this recipe, please give it a star rating to help other cooks find it!
Follow me on Instagram and tag #stacylynharris so I can see all the SLH recipes you make. ♥
Tried this recipe?Let me know how it was!

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7 Comments

  1. I see the pie crust ingredients but not the recipe.

  2. Anita Nay says:

    Butter reads this way
    ¾ cups unsalted butter 1 ½ sticks, very cold
    is it 3/4 cups of butter or 1 1/2 sticks is more than 3/4 cups of butter so exactly what is the amount? Thanks

  3. Anita Nay says:

    Sorry, meant to say, 1 1/3 sticks is more than 3/4 cups of butter so is it 3/4 cup or 1 1/2 sticks of butter? for the exact amount. would like to make this crust but don’t want a failure, thanks

    1. Thanks, Anita. It is 3/4 cups, which is 1 1/2 sticks. I’m so excited you are going to make it!
      Take a picture of the pie and send it to me! I can’t wait to see it!!

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