This homemade roasted strawberry rhubarb pie is on the menu whenever I need a burst of sweet and tangy goodness. Enjoy it warm with a scoop of ice cream or simply on its own.
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INGREDIENTS
– 1 recipe pie dough (https://www.wyseguide.com/best-pie-crust/)
For the filling:
– 4 cups quartered, hulled strawberries (1 1/2 lbs)
– 6 cups chopped rhubarb (2 lbs)
– 3/4 cup granulated sugar
– 2 tbsp fresh lemon juice
For the crumble:
– 1/2 cup all-purpose flour
– 1/2 cup light brown sugar
– 1/4 cup rolled oats
– 1/8 tsp kosher salt
– 4 tbsp unsalted butter, cubed
INSTRUCTIONS
– Make the dough and chill until ready to roll out.
– Meanwhile, make the filling. Preheat the oven to 325°F. Line a sheet pan with parchment paper.
– In a large bowl, mix together the strawberries, rhubarb, granulated sugar, and lemon juice. Pour onto the lined pan.
– Roast until the fruit and liquid are condensed and jam-like, 2 to 2 ½ hours, stirring as needed if corners get dark. Remove the filling from the oven and set aside. You should have about 2 cups of filling.
– When ready to bake, preheat the oven to 400°F.
– Roll the dough out to a 14-inch round and fit it into a 9-inch pie plate. If uneven, trim the overhang just enough to make the edge around the dish even. Roll under the excess dough to create a crust and crimp. Using a fork, dock the pie shell and refrigerate the crust for 20 minutes.
– Line the crust with parchment paper and fill with pie weights or dried beans. Bake the crust for 20 minutes. Remove the parchment and weights and reduce the oven temperature to 375°F. Continue baking the crust until it is dried out and beginning to brown, 15-20 minutes. If the edges look too brown, you may need to cover the crust with foil or a pie shield.
– Meanwhile, make the crumble. In a small bowl, combine the flour, brown sugar, rolled oats, and salt. Add the cubed butter and work it into the mixture until it is crumbly.
– Once the pie crust is baked, add the prepared filling and smooth to an even layer. Top with the crumble and return the pie to the oven. Bake the pie until the crumb is golden, 18-22 minutes. Let cool completely before slicing and serving.
CHAPTERS
00:00 Intro
00:30 Preparing the strawberries
02:44 Preparing the rhubarb
05:51 Making the pie dough
11:50 Rolling out the pie dough
13:18 Adding to the pie dish
15:59 Adding the fruit
18:55 Cutting the pie
20:08 Tasting the pie
#pie #strawberry #rhubarb #dessert #summer
From my farm to your home. 🏡
My name is Kaleb Wyse and here, you will find delicious recipes, videos from my farm, garden, and fun home projects. My knowledge has been earned from years of home cooks and farmers in my family. https://wyseguide.com
A farm is much more than a house to live in; it’s a lifestyle. My passion for gardening and landscaping came from outdoor work with my mom in our expansive farm yard, my love for baking came from innumerable short walks to my grandma’s house to make cookies, and as a farmer, my dad taught me that we are the stewards of our land.
So whether you live in a city center or have decided rural life is for you, I hope to inspire you with the projects and recipes I use in daily life. We can’t all live on a farm, but we all need farms in our lives. From the dirt in my vegetable garden to the flour in my kitchen, I’ll show you everything I love to do.
Strawberry rhubarb. Roasted strawberry rhubarb. Strawberry rhubarb. That is not hard to say. That is not hard to say. Roasted strawberry. Roasted strawberry. Strawberry. Okay. Roasted strawberry. I don’t understand what’s wrong with me. Having a stroke. Okay. [Music] Strawberry rever pie is truly one of my favorite pies. And I am always pro fruit pie in the sense that I don’t like a lot of fillers and gummness and all that extra junk. I like it to be wonderful fruit, all the flavor. Now to do this, what we’re going to start with is the fruit. Starting with strawberries. What I want to show you and what I think is essential here is do you see the difference in two strawberries? So, I have some local beautiful strawberries. And I want to show you that yes, when you get local strawberries, they’re a lot of times more irregular sized. Sometimes they’re small, sometimes they’re larger. All locally grown. Beautiful farm just a few miles from me. My strawberries are over. So, I got some that were close by. Now, I had to supplement with a few store-bought strawberries, which are still somewhat in season, like in the States, but still have to travel quite a ways. But look how much bigger they are. Not a problem. Both can taste good. I do always think the more local you get, the more ripe they are. And in season, they didn’t travel. They’re going to have more flavor. But what I want to show, I’m going to haul them, which I haul all strawberries the same. I like to go in at an angle and put my knife right around that center so it gets out kind of that stocky woody both leafy part and the stem part. Now, you can make a tea out of the leaves. You can compost them. You can do all sorts of things. When they’re big like this, which a lot of times if you’re going to buy storebought strawberries, this is what they’re going to be. You definitely want to quarter them for this. And you can see they’re a little bit whiter inside. Do you notice that they don’t quite get fully vine ripened when they’re traveling like that? But when you get local ones, they’re not near as white and they have so much more color and I do think they have more flavor nuance. But do you notice how what I’m doing with these? I’m just having them because they’re not near as big. So I don’t need to quarter them necessarily. So for normal, what I would call normal sized strawberries, sometimes I think we get used to grocery store things and we don’t realize that’s not always normal. To me, what I’m cutting in half right here, this is a normal strawberry that I grew up with. Ours were done usually kind of late spring, but it kind of depends on where you’re at. If they’re really small, you can leave them whole cuz what we’re going to do is we’re going to make a really interesting concoction here where we are slow roasting fruit, which is one of my favorite things. So, I’m measuring as I go. This is the perfect amount of strawberries. We’re going to just put them right onto a parchment line baking sheet. So, this sounds kind of odd, but what I’m doing here is we’re just negating the whole idea for needing thickeners, for needing any type of like extra thing to make it kind of hold together like a pie. And we’re cutting that out by roasting it, condensing it into a beautiful jam. Now, if you don’t grow rhubarb, this is sometimes what you can get a big beautiful my rhubarb this year especially, but it gets so big. This is probably at least 3T, not counting the leaf, right? And look, now I will admit the leaf is getting a little wind whipped cuz we’re windy right now, but it is still beautiful. Usually I stopped using my rhubarb, you know, kind of early summer. It kind of depends, but I went out and got some, washed it. It’s beautiful. Now, again, with rhubarb, you can now find it, I feel like, a lot of times in stores. You can find frozen rhubarb that does work in this recipe. So, I pulled in what I actually harvested from the garden was different types. And do you see how they’re all kind of different? That’s okay. All of it works in this case because it’s going to roast. So, while some of them are a little bit bigger, and you can see this one’s really big. If I cut it in half, you’ll see that beautiful side profile of it. That’s okay. We’re going to have all different sizes, what I always do is just like to line them up. And if you’re not used to rhubarb, by the way, this to me is a Midwest staple. It is a farm staple because it is a vegetable that we use as a fruit usually growing on almost every Midwest farm. There’s a patch of it somewhere. And in the spring, it makes the best crisps, quick breads, cakes, muffins, and pies. And you’ll notice there’s different varieties of rhubarb. So, sometimes you’ll find some that are more green. Sometimes you’ll find some that are more red. And that’s okay. That’s the beauty of it, too. Now, what I have here are a full thing of rhubarb and all my strawberries. So, this is 10 cups total of fruit. And that’s what I like about this. It is a lot of fruit. And at first, you’re going to think that’s way too much for a pie, which no, it isn’t. but it’s going to condense actually quite a bit. It’s going to roast. But to do that, we need to do just a couple things to it. And so into this, we’re going to add some sugar. Not near as much as you think. Strawberries have a lot of inherent sugar. And the thing is, while rhubarb is a very tart, kind of sour thing. And I know some of you out there are going to say, “That’s a lot of sugar.” It really isn’t. It really isn’t a lot, especially when you’re working with rhubarb. And that’s because we’re slow roasting it. I’m going to add a little bit of lemon juice. So, anytime you can add some lemon juice, it kind of wakes everything up with the flavors. I think it brings out more flavor. It helps kind of make it more forward and prominent. Especially when you’re working with something like rhubarb, you want to make sure that flavor shines through. And now my hands are clean. Best tool. I’m going to just toss this together. What this does is just help kind of beginning merate some of the fruit. It helps that sugar just make sure it’s going to be on all the fruit. Cuz really what we’re making is a jam. a jam with a low amount of sugar compared to other jams, but one that’s going to slow roast in the oven. So, a lot of that excess water is going to leave and leave us with this perfect pie filling. I tell you what, I like pie. I love all pie. This pie makes me pretty excited. So, what I’m doing is just slightly spreading it out. Perfect. Ready to go. We’re going to pop this in the oven. Slowly let it go. And while it’s doing that, we can get the crust ready, too. You can make your pie crust ahead or while it’s roasting like it is now. You can make a pie crust. Now, a good pie crust, it takes a little bit of practice, right? But guess what? Once you get it, it’s like riding a bike and you’re going to have it forever. And it’s something that’s always going to be delicious and impress people. So, we’re going to start with flour. Allpurpose flour. This is a very simple pie crust. It is all butter. Sometimes in the past I have done lard and lard is delicious and you can use part lard if you want to. Butter will give it good flakiness and flavor if you do it correctly. That’s what we’re going to do. So we have the flour in here. We’re going to do a little bit of sugar. Not a lot. We don’t need an overly sweet dough, but it is going to add a little browning too. And then of course some salt. So you put that in there and you just stir that together to start. And then we need butter. So butter is what is going to add that beautiful flavor and the flakiness cuz the pockets of butter that are inside of here, they actually steam when they’re in the oven and that kind of grows these little pockets of flaky layers which is what you want. So we’re going to take the butter and we’re going to cut it into small pieces. This is right from the fridge. You want chilled butter because the whole point with a good pie crust is work with it cold, bake it hot because you want it to stay really cold so it doesn’t melt. that keeps the best texture for that butter to create flaky layers. So, we have it cold here. Some people will go as far as chilling everything they’re using. If you work quickly, I don’t think it’s too big a deal. It’s the hottest day of the year. Maybe you could put this in the fridge every so often and keep it cold. So, what I like to do first is toss that butter in that flour mixture just to make sure all those pieces are coated. I just think it’s easier to work with that way. You can use a pastry cutter. You can use two knives. The best tools you’re going to have though are your hands. And I think that touch and feel is so important when it comes to a pie crust. So, what I’m going to do is I’m going to start picking up these little pieces of butter. You can see they’re just about hardly even a/ inch big. And I’m going to pick up a couple, one in each hand and my thumb and forefinger. And it’s kind of like a f, but I just push it through. And you see how it creates kind of these irregular pieces of butter. And then I let those drop. And I pick up two others with flour. Push it through. And I keep doing that until I have the texture that’s starting to resemble kind of a coarse crumb. Just takes a couple minutes. And you can see by the end I go much faster. I just pick it up and I’m just kind of pushing it through. And it becomes these irregular pieces, which is what you want. One way to check when you’re done is maybe the size of a pee or smaller is what you want for the butter. Little pieces. But also I like to take a fist. It looks really dry and crumbly. Kind of like a strusel topping. I make a fist and it holds shape. See how it holds? But it just instantly crumbles back. That’s perfect. That means we are ready now to add the ice water. Yes, you can go the route of adding some vodka or vinegar. That’s the idea that it in the oven it dissipates quicker cuz it evaporates at a lower temperature and so you’ll be left with a flakier crust. It can kind of be true, but honestly, if you just know the right amount of water to put in, that’s all you need to know. So, what I’m going to do is have my water right here. I have a couple ice cubes in it. I want to keep it cold again because my butter I don’t want it to get too warm. So I always start I always have a range. I have four to six tablespoons on all my single pie crust. And I start with four. So that’s three and this is four. I usually always go up to at least five if not six. Sometimes in the winter it’s drier so you’ll go for sure to the six. In the summer sometimes with more humidity you only use five. Once in a while four but usually often for me it’s always five. So I toss in that water. And at first it doesn’t look too different, but we’re hydrating that flour and everything with that water. And I can see instantly it’s not quite ready. You make a fist, it holds much better. You see how it doesn’t crumble near as much, but we’re not quite there. So, we’re going to add another tablespoon. This is the one where takes a little touch and feel, but I really think after one time, you’re going to totally get it. So, again, I’m tossing, making sure I incorporate that water fully. And then what I’m doing again is making a fist. And look how just that one tablespoon. So different, isn’t it? I’m still going to add just a little bit more. And this is now I never go over six tablespoons. And I’m hardly even I’m not even adding a full tablespoon there. Just enough so it holds a little bit more. And it still looks crumbly, but what we’re going to do now is just kind of group it together. So just slightly in this bowl. I’m starting to notice I can make a nice dough ball. That’s what I’m starting to do. It’s not perfect yet, and that’s okay. You don’t want to smash it together. You don’t want to like kind of melt all the butter or push it too much. But I can see now I can make a nice dough mass. Do you see that? So what we do is we clean our hands off just a little bit. Never fully clean when we’re making pie. But we’re making a surface here. And get a piece of plastic wrap. Going to set that here. They make wonderful compostable plastic wrap now. And I’m going to put this right on here. And we’re going to finish it right on the wrap. So what it’s best to do now is always chill a dough. You can make dough way ahead. You could once it gets into a disc or into the pie dish, you could freeze it so it’s ready to go. You can keep it in the fridge for over a day. What I’m doing is just pushing it together and it’s creating, if you notice, a nice mass. I’m not overworking it. We don’t want to overwork it. We want those pieces of butter because those are what are going to give us those flaky layers. So instead, what I’m doing is just using the plastic wrap to allow me not to overwork it, but make a disc. And while it doesn’t look like it’s coming together, all of a sudden, if you look, you’re left with this beautiful disc. So, I’m about there, that’s when I kind of tightly wrap it up all around. Flip it over. And then I just use my hands here at the end to kind of push out any of the creases I see, anything that just needs to make it be more of a perfect disc. Because I think once you go to roll it out, if you start with a nice round disc to start with, and I’m going to get all those little cracks out, because then when I go to roll it out, I think it rolls out nicer, personally. But what it’s going to do now is just kind of relax and rest in the refrigerator. That’s going to chill it. Make sure that butter stays nice and cold before we roll it out. The dough has chilled. That’s super important. You want to make sure it chills. But now we’re going to put it on a flowered surface. And I know, you know, you don’t want to add a ton of flour to it, but you don’t want it to stick either. So having a chilled dough is going to be our first line of defense. Flour is the next one. We’re going to take it out from the wrapping. And you can see what a gorgeous disc this is. And do you see the pockets of butter still in it? That’s super essential. So what I’m doing is put a little bit of flour on top. Now my thing is when I am rolling out dough with a good rolling pin. It’s not tapered. It is just flat. I think that’s essential. I make a roll. I turn. I make a roll. I turn. And I’m doing this the whole time because what that does to me is it keeps it moving so it doesn’t stick but also helps it maintain a better round shape. It’s not going to be perfect. And if you get I’m going to get little cracks around the edges. That’s normal. Don’t worry about those. If you get a crack down the middle then we’ll have to maybe do a little bit of mending. But what you can do and you can always check it. You can always lift it. Hopefully it’s chilled so don’t feel bad. Hopefully quickly lifting it. You want to work semi quickly, but you can see, look how quickly I’m turning and rolling. As I get to the end, if you know the size of your rolling pin, that’s usually how I eyeball it cuz I know what size I need. Otherwise, get a ruler. Don’t just guess. You don’t need to. You don’t have to have everything perfect by knowledge before you get used to it. If you need a ruler the first few times, that’s going to be great to use. And it’s going to let you know how big you want to go. Because the thing is having the right size round to go into your pie dish to me is essential. So you can see I was able to keep a fairly good circle. You had this little irregularity, but that’s just about perfect. So pie dish. I’m not using a glass bottom. If you’re not used to pie, I think a glass bottom is a great way to start cuz you can watch the bottom. We’re going to blind bake this though. So we won’t have a filling covering up the bottom. We can watch it anyway. I’m going to just turn this over about halfway. See how you can easily work with it. It’s still cool to the touch. Going to set it right in my pie dish about halfway in. Open it up. And look at that. Now, never force pie dough into the corners. That’s going to help it shrink. If you kind of stretch it, you don’t want to do that. You want to let it just lift and let it fall down in. That means it won’t shrink. And then I’ll show you again how we don’t shrink it. So, what I like to do is leave most of my excess on so I get a nice sturdy, beautiful edge crust. So, if you notice what I’m doing, kind of just rolling it, setting it kind of over that rimmed edge. And I’m not pressing it. If I need to put it in the corner, I feel I will lift it and make sure I can get it down in without stretching it. Now, if you want to even it up, you can. I’m checking all around. I don’t think I really need to. I try to have it even enough that I don’t cuz I like to just roll the whole thing under. Once it’s all rolled under, I do like to kind of just go around, make sure it’s nice and set, and then I just take my thumb and forefinger and my knuckles. How I do it, I like a very homey, cozy, just traditional crimp. Do you see how it’s just very quick to go in? This is just you can do, you don’t have to crimp it. It more does just keep those two kind of that rolled edge together, but then it also makes it look kind of like a little bit finished and homey and perfect if you ask me. I love a simple crimp. So now what I’m going to do once this is done, I’m going to actually dock it just so that’s ready to go cuz I’m going to set this in the freezer now just for about 10 15 minutes. I just want to make sure it’s well chilled before it goes into a hot oven. That’s the key. It’s cold. We’re going to bake it hot. So the essential thing when you’re doing a blind baking, you see I docked it. That’s to release some extra steam so you don’t get pockets in there. I’m going to crumple a piece of parchment. This helps it put into this nice chilled chilled in the freezer just so it was quicker. So now I’m going to put in the pie weights. And I want them all the way in. What I mean by that is I want them filled all the way to the top. The one big problem when a pie slumps, it’s either too warm or you did not fill it all the way. So if you’re using dried beans or something, all the way to the top. And I even go in and if you notice, I’m pressing them out. Roll this over. pressing them out so they really are hitting the edges and they’re going to keep that crust intact. Now, we’re going to bake it hot. I have it on a tray with parchment paper just in case any butter drips down. It’s going into a different oven than my filling. All the components are pretty much ready. So, if you look here, you can see this gorgeous crust. What I did was after 20 minutes at a high heat, I took out the pie weights because you want it to set before you take them out. Otherwise, it’s going to slump. So, you want this edge to be really set. And also having a nice crimped edge on top here is what really helps it hold its shape too. Then I took them out and let it kind of fully bake and dry out. You can see it’s starting to get golden brown on the bottom. You always want to watch the edges if you need to cover them. I will say I like certain old tools that like my grandma and my mom used. Something like a pie shield you can buy. You can buy silicone ones too. I haven’t used it yet, but sometimes now when it’s going to go back in the oven, I use something like this to keep if you don’t want to get it too dark. You can see we also pulled out our beautiful filling. Now it looks really different, right? It was piled high. What happened was during this whole time. I didn’t ever stir it until the very end to see kind of how done it was. We now have this thick syrupy jam-like delicious filling. So, it’s pretty much all fruit. That’s what’s wonderful. It has the condensed flavors. It’s complex. It’s really beautiful. You can always just only stir it enough if you feel like the edges are getting dark. I honestly feel like I never need to. I have made this pie out of my cookbook. If you remember, I have a cookbook out. This is my favorite pie on page 241. And I have made this pie probably more than anything else in there cuz I just keep making it cuz it’s the time of year right now. So this I’m going to set here as we finish up just the strusel topping. So we have flour, brown sugar, a few oats, a little bit of salt and butter that’s cold and cubed. We’re going to mix it all together. And we’re just going to do pretty much the same thing with the pie crust where we just kind of push it out and make a strusel. With the strusel ready, we really just assemble everything. So, I have my crust. It’s still warm. That’s okay. We’re going to scrape everything of the filling right into it, which at first you’re like, I don’t know. That filling doesn’t look like a lot. But then all works down into this and just the perfect layer. You need it all. You know, even those little syrupy bits, they’re just like that perfect little accompiment. I could lick that out, but I won’t. And I even dropped a little bit here. I’m not going to let that go to waste. It’s going in. So, I smooth this out. You can see. Look at that. Look at that filling. It fills it up just perfectly. I just love this pie. I love strawberry rhubarb. You get the tartness. You get the sweetness. It’s so seasonal. And you might as well just enjoy it fully when it is in season. I’m spraying it out to the edges. Look at all that. And it’s just packed with flavor. And then right on top, we’re going to put that strusel we just made. So, I kind of like to pile it all on. And it’s a lot. But notice we didn’t put any cinnamon in it. We don’t want any other flavors. We want this really to shine through with the strawberries, with the rhubarb. Kind of just pile it on. It’s okay if you see a little bit of red around the edge. It’s kind of pretty. We’re going to pop this right back into the oven. Just enough to kind of set the top here. And if you need to put a shield on with this or even tin foil and I’m going to let it cool. We’re going to eat. Are you ready? I’m ready for pie. I love pie. So, what we have right here is a a cooled pie now. Because like any pie, you want to cool it. Unlike though pies that are thickened with flour, cornstarch, you don’t need to let it fully cool because it has a great viscosity already. Do you hear that? That nice sound when I cut through and slice that crust. It’s crisp. It’s flaky. It’s delicious. So, what I’m going to do is cut two pieces because I always think it’s easier to get a piece out if you cut two pieces of pie cuz it gives a little bit of movement than to it. So, what I’m going to do is get in here. Look at that. Doesn’t that look good? I just Nothing is more accomplishing than when you have a good piece of pie, right? So, what we’re going to do, it’s the law, by the way. I forgot to tell everyone about this law. A lot of people don’t realize it, but I think you do. You have to have ice cream. So, you don’t have to have it homemade. I do have homemade. Um, but a little bit of ice cream is needed when it comes to a fresh pie. There’s there’s a law about that, I think. I don’t think it’s just in Iowa. I think that goes for a lot of places. You have to have the two together. So, what we’re going to do is have a little bit of ice cream. H just a perfect softness to it and some pie. It’s perfect. It’s delicious. What I like about this strawberry rhubarb pie, it’s so much more nuanced than a lot of strawberry rhubarbs. You get this tartness from the rhubarb. You get the sweetness from the strawberries. The strusel adds a little bit more sweetness. And then ice cream finishes it perfectly. You get that creaminess, the sweetness that kind of mellows into all that rhubarb. It’s delicious. I really just want to eat the whole thing. Well, let me see if I can show you something else about this pie that I like. We’re going to look at this crust. See how it’s fully baked? It’s hard to see on camera, but pre-baking the crust, you don’t have a soggy bottom. You have delicious, perfect crust, too. So, all these elements will give you such a good flavor forward pie that’s slightly different than what other people make, that’s going to make you the star of anywhere you take this. Even if it’s just to your kitchen with yourself, you’re going to give yourself a gold star for this because it’s so good. As always, what do I hope you take away from this? That this is doable. If I can do it, I know you can do it. We just did it together and now you can do it on your own. So, please make this pie. Share this recipe around. It’s in the description of the video. It’s on my website, wiseguy.com. So you can go back to it time and time again just like I do. Enjoy. It’s summer and that means it’s pie time.
10 Comments
Get the recipe: https://www.wyseguide.com/roasted-strawberry-rhubarb-pie/
That was cute
💙💙💜💜Hey! I know this is gonna be GREAT. I LOVE YOUR VIDEOS💜💜💙💙
A man of my heart, who loves to bake! Yeah! ❤😂 I’m a terrible cook! I do like to bake but very rarely do I get in the kitchen to do so. 😂
❤❤❤❤❤❤
I love this recipe and I love everything about this love how you always show the steps by step how to make the crust. Thanks again for sharing. Kabel ♥️
Good Morning Kalob, this pie sure looks delicious, I'm going to try making this today. Thank you so much for sharing this video 😊❤
This looks so delicious!!
Looks so yummy! I think there should be a law. No pie is complete without ice cream for sure❣️
Great recipe.