Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Double Cream Blueberry Pie

We have long been fans of Marie Callender's Double Cream Blueberry Pie.  Unfortunately the nearest restaurant is in Eugene, about 3 or so hours away.  So of course the next best thing is to do a little internet research and find the recipe or something close.  I think I found something really, really close.

I found a recipe on a Taste of Home/Community Forum site (http://community.tasteofhome.com/community_forums/f/30/t/210773.aspx).

Here is the recipe I copied from that site from a forum member named "Hollyga":

Marie Callenders Sour Cream and Blueberry Pie


Notes:
This was the last and final pie recipe from our visit at Marie Callenders. One thing we noticed right off was that the pie had apples in it. It wasn't just blueberries.

Ingredients:
1 9" Baked and Cooled Pie Shell

Blueberry Apple Filling

1 15oz Can Blueberries in Heavy Syrup Drained reserve juice in one bowl and 
berries in another bowl
1 1/2 C water
1 C Apple's (delicious) Pealed, Cored, and Diced, Large Pea Size
1/4 tsp. Salt
3 Tbsp. Cornstarch
1/4 C Water
3/4 C Sugar
1/2 tsp. Lemon Juice
1/4 tsp. Cinnamon


Preparation:
In a 2 quart saucepan combine diced apples with water, sugar, and salt at medium temperature until the apples are done but not mushy, about 10 minutes. While apples are cooking mix cornstarch with 1/4 cup water and dissolve cornstarch. When apples are done add lemon juice and berry juice, cook and stir until blended. While stirring on medium heat add dissolved cornstarch slowly and stir constantly until thickened. Add berries and cinnamon mix through. Remove from heat and cool before placing into cooled prepared pie shell. Refrigerate until thoroughly chilled.

Sour Cream Topping

1C. Sour Cream
1 tsp. Vanilla
1/2 C Sugar
1 Tbsp. Cream Cheese
1/2 tsp. Knox Gelatin
2 Tbsp. Cold Water

Dissolve gelatin in 2 Tbsp. water and set aside. Mix the sour cream, sugar, cream cheese, dash of salt in a pan warm on low heat until sugar in dissolved and everything is mixed thoroughly, stir and watch that mixture does not burn or dry out. When all is smooth and blended add vanilla and stir. Then gradually add gelatin until mixture has a firm consistency of soft pudding, remove from heat. Sour Cream topping may be smoothed over Blueberries while luke warm and chill. May be garnished with whipped cream.

If you are on a tight schedule you may use Blueberry Pie Filling but this will taste a much sweeter.


I made a few changes because I didn't have the can of blueberries called for in the recipe.  Just for your info I used 4 cups of frozen blueberries and one Golden Delicious apple. I added the blueberries at the same time as the apples. I didn't add any extra water or juice to make up for the canned berry juice.

I had enough filling for 2+ pies so I ended up making another pie crust and doubling the sour cream topping. 

For the whipped cream I made a "stabilized whipped cream frosting" which works really well. It tends to hold up much better than regular whipped cream, which has a tendency to "melt", or disintigrate, even in the fridge.

Here's the recipe for that, again copied straight off the internet:

Stabilized Whipped Cream Frosting
     --adapted from cdkitchen
  • 1/2 tsp unflavored gelatin powder
  • 2 tbsp cold water
  • 1 cup whipping cream (regular or heavy--I always use heavy cream)
  • 2 tbsp confectioner's sugar
1. Sprinkle gelatin over cold water in small bowl to soften. 
stabilized+whipped+cream+gelatin+mix.jpg
Gelatin mixture--I let this get too firm in the fridge, but it worked.
2. Scald 2 tablespoon of the cream; pour over gelatin, stirring till dissolved.
3. Refrigerate until consistency of unbeaten egg white. (This takes about 10-15 minutes.) Then, with a whisk, beat until smooth. 
4. In a stand mixer with a whip attachment, or with a hand beater, whip remaining cream and sugar; whip in the smoothed gelatin mixture, stopping to scrape the bowl twice.

Fills and frosts top of 2 8" or 9" cake layers; or frosts 10" angel
cake or spongecake. Tops one standard 9" pie with some left over to enjoy from a spoon.  Stands up well, even in warm weather. Keep leftover frosting and any product topped with it in the refrigerator until ready to eat.


The pie turned out to be a big hit and we all agreed it tasted very close to the original Marie Callender's pie.

This recipe is a keeper for our family!

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

But would it hold up being chilled with dry ice? Not sure? You can always do a test, and send one to California, just putting it out there, I would be very willing to accept the package!!
Lots o' love,
Patti

LilSwift68 said...

This is my favorite pie and yeah I have to call ahead to order one so when I drive the ,1hr.drive to the only Marie Calendar that I know of to make sure they have one, what a pain! So o thought " I'm gonna make one myself and by George I think you've got it !! Thank you

McKenna Miller said...

I am 5 1/2 months pregnant, and this is the only thing I've been craving!! Our location's just barely closed, not even a month ago, and this recipe made me and the baby extremely happy 😍

Jen said...

Sorry but this recipe did not turn out at all. The sour cream filling wasn't close to enough so i made a second batch and it still wasn't nearly enough. I would at least quadruple it and add more gelatin. There was a ton of blueberry filling- too much of you want to leave room for a nice sour cream layer on top, like the Marie Callendar's version. I used fresh blueberries as you described using frozen blueberries and it turned out not thick enough- where you say you used frozen blueberries you should probably say to add more cornstarch.

Rosie said...

I’ve seen copy cat recipes all over the internet and it’s always this same recipe. I’m confused because the double cream blueberry pie picture and description on Marie Calendar’s website is very different. Theirs is a bottom layer of blueberry then a thick layer of custard then a thin sour cream layer on top. Am I looking at a different pie than these internet recipes are giving me?

PG said...

This recipe sucks!!! Portions were measured accurately and all instructions were followed, yet neither the blueberry filling nor the sour cream topping no worked out (both waaaaayyyy too liquify). There is no way the poster has actually ever made this successfully.

Anonymous said...

Okay so.. I also LOVE the Marie Callander Blueberry Sour Cream Pie but moved to an area with no restaurant in sight. I used this recipe as a guide.. But tweaked it. Here's what I did different:
Firstly, I reduced water in blueberry mix by 1/2c and allowed to cook longer, added 1tsp more corn starch as well. Worked great. I agree with other reviewers, this made way more filling than just 1 pies worth. It was a little liquid as well so had to add another Cornstarch slurry
2. I tripled the sour cream topping and added a whole envelope of gelatin, which was about 1/2tsp more than recipe called for. I also added some lemon juice and Zest. This was delicious and made more than enough for 1 pie. Next time I will double instead of triple the recipe.
Turned out pretty darn close!! I will tweak more next time to get the right flavor... Maybe some vanilla to the sour cream and more lemon to the blueberry. But good concept. 👍

Anonymous said...

This recipe should be considered a base guide... But definitely NOT one that you follow to a T. I'll make it again and again because I am trying to perfect it, but will be playing with the measurements and ingredients quite a bit.