Favorite Desserts and Holiday Drink Recipes
In one of our favorite desserts, Mock Apple Pie, crackers combine with sweet syrup to produce a treat that tastes and smells just like an old-fashioned favorite.
By Jean Teller
May/June 2012
 |
Is it a slice of apple pie or Mock Apple Pie?
Lori Dunn
|
Who knew a simple request for Mock Apple Pie would elicit such a strong response from our Recipe Box readers? Her grandchildren should be proud that June Brown of Chesapeake, Virginia, asked the question; they’ll soon be trying a slice of Mock Apple Pie baked by their inquisitive grandma.
RELATED CONTENT
Pie lovers worldwide head for the 2008 Great American Pie Festival....
Celebrate National Pie Day, January 23, with the goodness of America’s favorite dessert....
Make these chocolate recipes this winter for an instant pick-me-up....
Among our homemade pie recipes is an unusual dessert that has a reputation as a tasty treat with a ...
Mock Apple Pie originated in the late 1880s as settlers headed West where fresh apples were few and...
FAVORITE DESSERTS AND HOLIDAY DRINK RECIPES:
Mock Apple Pie Recipes
Graham Cracker Crust Recipes
Ozark Pudding and Chocolate Dessert Recipes
Holiday Drink Recipes
Biting off a chunk of research, it seems Mock Apple Pie originated during the late 1880s as settlers headed West where fresh apples — and even dried apples, for that matter — were few and far between. Apples were brought to North America by European colonists, so were less and less in supply the further one went West in early times. Thrifty cooks substituted the readily available and less expensive soda cracker for the apples in pies, keeping the syrup sweet and full of cinnamon, lemon and cream of tartar.
In 1935, a year after Nabisco introduced the Ritz Cracker, the company stole the idea, and a new and popular American tradition was born. The recipe has appeared frequently on the familiar red box, enjoying an occasional resurgence of popularity through the years.
By the way, the cream of tarter actually helps with the taste as tartaric acid (related to cream of tarter) and malic acid help give apples their distinctive flavor.
Of course, there’s also the psychological effect. We see a slice of pie that looks like apple pie, smells like apple pie, and tastes like apple pie, so it must be apple pie. Some people, though, smell and taste the lemon more than the cinnamon, and they think it’s lemon pie. Go figure.
One comment found during my research suggests keeping the crackers whole or at the very least breaking them in half. You also can substitute some brown sugar for the white, and a sprinkling of nutmeg is a nice addition to the cinnamon.