Deep-Dish Strawberry Rhubarb Pie with Oatmeal & Brown Sugar Crust
Ingredients
- FOR THE CRUST
- 3 cups oatmeal you can use either quick cooking oats or regular oatmeal. I used regular because I like the extra chewiness in the finished crust, and the oats get a little ground up I anyway if you mix them in a food processor, but up to you.
- 1 ½ sticks butter melted
- ½ cup firmly packed brown sugar
- ½ teaspoon salt
- FOR THE PIE
- 6 cups rhubarb preferably red, cut into one-inch pieces – here’s the thing about that: using rhubarb that is green skinned will still taste delicious, but the eye appeal will be umm, not that great.
- 4 cups fresh strawberries local if at all possible washed, hulled, and sliced in half
- 1 cup water
- 1 ½ cups granulated sugar
- ½ cup Minute Tapioca NOTE: you can also use ½ cup cornstarch. Both will do the trick, but tapioca is clearer, while pies thickened with cornstarch can be a little bit cloudy looking – both work so no problem with whatever you choose.
- ½ teaspoon salt
- NOTE: The original recipe calls for the addition of ¾ teaspoon cinnamon ½ teaspoon nutmeg, and ¼ teaspoon ground cloves. I left them out because all I wanted to taste was the rhubarb and strawberries, but feel free to experiment if you’d like.
Instructions
- FOR THE CRUST
- If you have a food processor, this is a good job for it: Pulse together the oats, brown sugar, salt, and melted butter just until mixed.
- If you are mixing by hand, just stir the whole works together.
- Pat about 2/3 of the crust mixture into a 9-inch pie plate, going up the sides as far as you can. I used a deep-dish pie dish, so if you use a regular sized one, no worries – you’ll just have a little more topping left over. It worked pretty well to use a big tablespoon and coax the oats up the sides of the dish, so if your oats are not cooperating, you might try that strategy. Set the remaining topping aside until ready to bake.
- FOR THE PIE
- Preheat your oven to 425 degrees.
- In a smallish bowl, stir together the Minute Tapioca (or cornstarch) and water. Let stand and do its thing for about three minutes. The reason for this exercise is to allow the tapioca or cornstarch to dissolve, and form for lack of a better word, a slurry.
- In a Dutch oven sized pan, stir together the rhubarb, sugar, and salt. Stir in the tapioca (or cornstarch) and water slurry. Bring to a boil over medium heat, until thickened and bubbling, and let it boil for about one minute. NOTE: The rhubarb will not be tender or cooked through – this is a good thing. The first time I tried this recipe I decided to cook the rhubarb until it was soft…and then it disintegrated. The pie still tasted great but didn’t look all that hot).
- Once the mixture is thickened, remove from heat and gently stir in the strawberries, just until mixed.
- Spoon the mixture into the crust and sprinkle the remaining topping over the top of the pie. You might have too much filling if you aren’t making a deep-dish pie, which is another good thing. Just spoon it into a bowl and grab the ice cream!
- Bake for 20-35 minutes, depending on whether you are using a deep-dish pie pan or not. The filling should start to bubble, and the pie should look like it is thickened and set. Check on the pie’s progress after about 15 minutes. If it looks like it’s getting too brown on top, spray a piece of aluminum foil with cooking spray and lay it gently over the top of the pie to prevent burning. That should do the trick.
- Cool to room temperature before diving in. I refrigerated it overnight before slicing and it was good as gold the next day.