You can easily find tapioca pudding in just about any vintage cookbook, but today's recipes from American Home All-Purpose Cookbook (ed. Virginia T. Habeeb and the food staff of American Home, 1966) remind us that tapioca was a pretty common thickener in pies, too.
I'm used to seeing strawberry and rhubarb ream up, but this book offers a lesser-known couple: Rhubarb Cherry Pie.
That one is good for late spring/ early summer-- perfect for Tapioca Day!
If you want to keep the tapioca party going a little later in the summer, there's a Deep-Dish Plum Pie.
I really hope the plums are small since they're only halved! I can just imagine trying to figure out how to at least semi-gracefully deal with a big slab of plum tumbling out of the pastry.
And then for even later in the season-- if you really want to keep the tapioca fun-- we have Colonial Grape Pie.
And now I understand why I rarely see recipes for grape pie in old cookbooks. This one seems like a lot of work, what with stemming and skinning 2-1/2 pounds of Concord grapes, then cooking and sieving the pulp to get rid of the seeds, re-adding the skins to the pulp, and doing some more cooking before finally turning the whole mess into a pie shell and trying to give it a lattice top crust when the filling is still pretty hot. It's way easier just to make a pumpkin pie or pudding pie. (Or a fruit pie if you can just plunk the filling out of the can and into a waiting pie shell!)
Just thinking about tapioca is as far as I'm going to go for this holiday, though. That's about as festive as I get these days.
Thankfully these recipes are from before people starting dumping tapioca in tea. I've heard that boba tends to end up with a snot like consistency. They also come with a choking warning since the lumps of tapioca are so big. I'll take the bland rubbery pudding thanks.
ReplyDeleteYes-- my books are definitely from before boba was popular in the U.S.
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