The nutrition facts were made at Calorie Count!
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| Original Recipe from 1955 Life Magazine |
Ingredients:
2 cups sifted (if you want) all-purpose flour
Directions:
Mix the dry ingredients together flour, salt and bakingpowder.
Measure the liquids - oil and milk by pouring them intoanother container without stirring it (a two cup Pyrex measuring cup would be perfect). Make a well in the flour. Pourthe liquid in all at once and stir gently with a fork only until most of theflour is moistened. Do not over stir.
For a two-crust pie or two pie shells: cut dough in half. Press each half into a ball.
Place the halves between two pieces of wax paper and rollout one ball with a rolling pin. Keep the dough between wax paper to keep it from sticking to your rolling pin. Hold the pie pan over the rolled out dough to make sureit is big enough. You want the dough to be larger than the pan by about ½-1inch all around. Don't get ridiculous about it, you just need some hanging over the edge for "fluting".
Spray the pie pan with cooking spray.
Carefully peel off the top wax paper (the dough is a bit sticky compared to dough made with shortening). Flip it over onto the pie pan and remove thebottom piece of wax paper. Press down lightly toshape to the pan. Don't fuss the tears and thin spots - the dough is moist and easily amended with a bit taken from the overhanging edges.
Add filling of your choice.
Roll out the other crust. Apply to the top and crimp edgesto seal with your fingers – create “ridges” of dough that poke up between yourfingers. Make a few slices with a sharp knife in the top crust to allow the steam to escape during baking. Place strips of aluminum foil over the fluted edge to prevent over browning.
A fun thing to do is to cut shapes such as leaves (see the pic from Life Magazine) out of thesecond crust and apply them artistically to the top of the filling. If you dothat, just crimp the bottom crust. No need to slice for steam vents.
Bake according to your pie filling directions.

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