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Natchitoches Meat Pie Receipes
Posted on 6/20/09 at 2:15 pm
Posted on 6/20/09 at 2:15 pm
Anyone have any good ones on here?
Please don't let the OT I am asking about food that isn't bacon related TIA
Please don't let the OT I am asking about food that isn't bacon related TIA

Posted on 6/20/09 at 2:20 pm to BACONisMEATcandy
I use the J Folse recipe. I lived in Natchitoches for a few years, and this is the closest I've ever come to recreating the taste.
½ pound ground meat
½ pound ground pork
½ cup cooking oil
½ cup chopped onions
½ cup chopped celery
¼ cup chopped green bell pepper
¼ cup chopped red bell pepper
1 tbsp diced garlic
2 cups beef stock (see recipe)
2 9-inch pie shells
1 egg
½ cup water
salt and cracked black pepper to taste
METHOD:
Preheat oven to 400 degrees F. In a heavy-bottomed sauté pan, heat oil over medium high heat. Sauté beef and pork until golden brown, stirring constantly, until all liquid has evaporated. Add onions, celery, bell peppers and garlic. Sauté three to five minutes or until vegetables are wilted. This should cook slowly for about one hour, adding beef stock to mixture to prevent sticking. Season to taste using salt and pepper. Remove from heat and allow to cool. Roll pie dough into circles and cut into halves. Spoon a generous portion of the cooked meat mixture into the pie shells. Brush a little egg-wash around the edge of the shell, fold over and press the edges with a fork similar to apple turnover. Place on a greased cookie sheet or pan. Make small slits in dough to vent steam, egg-wash entire pie and bake thirty minutes at 400 degrees. Pie may also be deep-fried.
½ pound ground meat
½ pound ground pork
½ cup cooking oil
½ cup chopped onions
½ cup chopped celery
¼ cup chopped green bell pepper
¼ cup chopped red bell pepper
1 tbsp diced garlic
2 cups beef stock (see recipe)
2 9-inch pie shells
1 egg
½ cup water
salt and cracked black pepper to taste
METHOD:
Preheat oven to 400 degrees F. In a heavy-bottomed sauté pan, heat oil over medium high heat. Sauté beef and pork until golden brown, stirring constantly, until all liquid has evaporated. Add onions, celery, bell peppers and garlic. Sauté three to five minutes or until vegetables are wilted. This should cook slowly for about one hour, adding beef stock to mixture to prevent sticking. Season to taste using salt and pepper. Remove from heat and allow to cool. Roll pie dough into circles and cut into halves. Spoon a generous portion of the cooked meat mixture into the pie shells. Brush a little egg-wash around the edge of the shell, fold over and press the edges with a fork similar to apple turnover. Place on a greased cookie sheet or pan. Make small slits in dough to vent steam, egg-wash entire pie and bake thirty minutes at 400 degrees. Pie may also be deep-fried.
Posted on 6/20/09 at 2:25 pm to lsutiger_08
thanks but I think I'm gonna leave the celery out 

Posted on 6/20/09 at 2:41 pm to BACONisMEATcandy
This is pretty much a standard recipe.
LINK /
The exception is that I use a little cornstarch mixed in water rather than flour. If you'd rather not fry them, roll out some refrigerated pie dough a bit thinner than it is in the package and use that. You can bake them. I've done that and they also freeze very well pre-cooked.
The recipe doesn't have to be exact as far as the filling. I put some red pepper flakes in mine.
LINK /
The exception is that I use a little cornstarch mixed in water rather than flour. If you'd rather not fry them, roll out some refrigerated pie dough a bit thinner than it is in the package and use that. You can bake them. I've done that and they also freeze very well pre-cooked.
The recipe doesn't have to be exact as far as the filling. I put some red pepper flakes in mine.
Posted on 6/20/09 at 6:34 pm to Gris Gris
Lasyone's is the best....original, beginner of all the best meat pies....from Natch.....
Natchitoches Meat Pies
Lasyone's Meat Pie Kitchen - Natchitoches, LA
Gourmet January 1996
Gourmet - One Year Subscription
6 ounces ground beef
6 ounces ground pork
1/4 cup chopped scallions
2 3/4 teaspoons salt
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1/4 teaspoon dried hot red pepper flakes
1/8 teaspoon cayenne
4 cups plus 2 1/2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 cup cold vegetable shortening
1 large egg, beaten lightly
1 cup milk
Vegetable oil for deep-frying
In a large heavy skillet combine beef, pork, scallions, 3/4 teaspoon salt,
and spices and cook over moderate heat, stirring and breaking up lumps,
until meat is just cooked through (do not overcook).
Sift 2 1/2 tablespoons flour over meat mixture and stir well. Remove
skillet from heat and cool filling to room temperature. Drain off any fat.
Into a bowl sift together remaining 4 cups flour, remaining 2 teaspoons
salt, and baking powder. With a pastry blender or your fingertips blend
in shortening until mixture resembles coarse meal. Add egg and milk
and toss until incorporated. Form dough into a ball.
On a floured surface with a floured rolling pin roll one third of dough
into a 14-inch round, about 1/8 inch thick. With a 5 1/2-inch round
cutter cut out 4 rounds and stack between sheets of wax paper. (My
friend Mrs. Cloutier says she uses the top of an old coffee pot as
a cutter.) Roll and cut out 8 more rounds in same manner with
remaining dough, stacking rounds between sheets of wax paper.
Put a heaping tablespoon of filling slightly off-center on each pastry
round. With fingertips dipped in water dampen edge of pastries and
fold over to form a half circle, enclosing filling.
With a fork dipped in water crimp edges of pastries and prick tops
of pies once or twice.
In a deep heavy kettle (10 inches in diameter) heat 1 1/2 inches oil to
350 degrees F. on a deep-fat thermometer and fry pies, 3 at a time,
turning occasionally, until golden brown, about 2 minutes.
Transfer pies as fried with a slotted spoon to paper towels to drain.
Makes 12 pies (cocktail-size meat pies can be made by cutting
smaller rounds and using less filling per pie).
Natchitoches Meat Pies
Lasyone's Meat Pie Kitchen - Natchitoches, LA
Gourmet January 1996
Gourmet - One Year Subscription
6 ounces ground beef
6 ounces ground pork
1/4 cup chopped scallions
2 3/4 teaspoons salt
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1/4 teaspoon dried hot red pepper flakes
1/8 teaspoon cayenne
4 cups plus 2 1/2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 cup cold vegetable shortening
1 large egg, beaten lightly
1 cup milk
Vegetable oil for deep-frying
In a large heavy skillet combine beef, pork, scallions, 3/4 teaspoon salt,
and spices and cook over moderate heat, stirring and breaking up lumps,
until meat is just cooked through (do not overcook).
Sift 2 1/2 tablespoons flour over meat mixture and stir well. Remove
skillet from heat and cool filling to room temperature. Drain off any fat.
Into a bowl sift together remaining 4 cups flour, remaining 2 teaspoons
salt, and baking powder. With a pastry blender or your fingertips blend
in shortening until mixture resembles coarse meal. Add egg and milk
and toss until incorporated. Form dough into a ball.
On a floured surface with a floured rolling pin roll one third of dough
into a 14-inch round, about 1/8 inch thick. With a 5 1/2-inch round
cutter cut out 4 rounds and stack between sheets of wax paper. (My
friend Mrs. Cloutier says she uses the top of an old coffee pot as
a cutter.) Roll and cut out 8 more rounds in same manner with
remaining dough, stacking rounds between sheets of wax paper.
Put a heaping tablespoon of filling slightly off-center on each pastry
round. With fingertips dipped in water dampen edge of pastries and
fold over to form a half circle, enclosing filling.
With a fork dipped in water crimp edges of pastries and prick tops
of pies once or twice.
In a deep heavy kettle (10 inches in diameter) heat 1 1/2 inches oil to
350 degrees F. on a deep-fat thermometer and fry pies, 3 at a time,
turning occasionally, until golden brown, about 2 minutes.
Transfer pies as fried with a slotted spoon to paper towels to drain.
Makes 12 pies (cocktail-size meat pies can be made by cutting
smaller rounds and using less filling per pie).
Posted on 6/20/09 at 7:10 pm to bossflossjr
quote:
Lasyone's is the best....original, beginner of all the best meat pies....from Natch.....
I've had those meat pies before. If that's the right recipe, it'll be better than any recipe another person comes up with

Posted on 6/20/09 at 7:15 pm to BACONisMEATcandy
Meat, dough, fry.
Oh and add Bacon
Oh and add Bacon
Posted on 6/20/09 at 8:03 pm to lsutiger_08
i go thru Natchitoches almost every week from BR......working......stop at Lasyones often. they have a rockin chicken fried steak, too.
That recipie should be pretty accurate....was submitted by Lasyone's for Gourmet Magazine several years ago
That recipie should be pretty accurate....was submitted by Lasyone's for Gourmet Magazine several years ago
Posted on 6/21/09 at 12:22 am to bossflossjr
I keep Lasyone's meat pies in the freezer at all times,now, so I don't have to make them. Agree they are hard to beat. Something about that recipe doesn't look right, though. Lasyone's are a wee bit saucy. They are not dry and there is a thickness that cause the meat to flow out a bit when cut down the middle.
Posted on 6/21/09 at 12:43 am to BACONisMEATcandy
I spend a lot of work time in the N. Not sure I like meat pies. I have been to all the important places, and I find the dough heavy and the meat, well, sub par. Anybody agree?
Posted on 6/21/09 at 1:40 pm to BigAlBR
The only meat pie in Natchitoches that I like is from Lasyone's. The dough is not heavy and there's a good deal of flavorful meat. I find others to be dry. Lasyone's filling has an almost creamy texture. It's a matter of taste, though.
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