French Apple Pie

Instead of a pastry top crust, this pie covers its apple filling with a delicious cinnamon streusel. The crumb topping crisps a little while baking to give each slice of French Apple Pie a scrumptious crunch.

A French Apple Pie topped with a golden layer of crisp cinnamon streusel.

Seasonal Variety

In Washington State, autumn is a multi-course feast of apples. Even at the local produce market down the street there are nearly a dozen different varieties. Many are locally grown and some are organic.

Piled neatly near the front of the store, the contrast between the different types of apples creates an appealing display. They come in colors from pink to green to yellow and bright red. Many have new and interesting names: Honey Crisp, Aurora, Sweetie, Ambrosia.

Walking past them as I do my shopping, with the fragrance of fresh apples in the air, I find myself craving a steamy mug of Mulled Cider. I begin to think this could be the perfect weekend to put on a pot of Slow Cooked Apple Butter. And then I start thinking about pies. Soon I am on my way home with bag full of colorful fruit.

Grafting Branches

The development of original apple varieties is not a new thing, nor is it unique to this area. Farmers and even casual gardeners have long tried their hand at apple breeding. Each dreams of coming up with the perfect apple.

While discussing family food traditions, my Father-in-law told us a little about the apples from his childhood in Yonkers, New York, during the Great Depression:

Grandfather used to always graft branches onto apple trees trying to come up with new varieties of apples. He would get an apple tree growing really well and then graft different branches onto it. He had one tree in the back he grafted seven or eight different branches onto, so every branch grew a different kind of apple.

I remember one apple he came up with that was the size of a cucumber. It was all pulp and had no flavor. We called those pig apples. Nobody really wanted to eat them but they fed them to the pigs.

Back then people were always trying something and if it worked out they would share it with others.

~ Art

Trying a New Apple Pie

I always enjoy making Apple Pies in autumn. They are quite possibly my family’s favorite pie. For the most part I make them the same way every time: a two crust pie with a simple filling. The greatest improvement in the last few years has been the addition of homemade pie crust to the equation. Even though I am not that good at making pie crust my crusts are still appreciably better than store bought, though I’m not above using store bought when time is short.

This year my first Apple Pie of the season took a slightly different turn. I gathered the apples and made the dough for the crust. When the filling was ready there was enough for more than one pie so I split the crust between them and looked up a recipe with a different topping. I found this one for French Apple Pie. It has a cinnamon streusal topping that crisps a little while baking to give it a scrumptious crunch.

Enjoy!

French Apple Pie

Course: DessertDifficulty: Easy
Servings

8

servings
Prep time

25

minutes
Cooking time

50

minutes
Total time

1

hour 

15

minutes

Instead of a pastry crust on top, this pie covers the apple filling with a layer of cinnamon streusel. The delicious crumb topping crisps a little while baking to give each slice of this pie a scrumptious crunch.

Ingredients

  • Single crust for a 9-inch pie

  • Topping:
  • 1 cup flour

  • 1/2 cup firm butter

  • 1/2 cup brown sugar

  • Filling:
  • 3/4 cup sugar

  • 1/4 cup flour

  • 1/2 teaspoon ground nutmeg

  • 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon

  • pinch of salt

  • 6 cups tart apples (6 or 7 large apples), peeled, cored and sliced

Directions

  • Preheat oven to 425F.
  • Line a 9-inch pie plate with pastry for a single crust pie, using the recipe for (Nearly) Foolproof Pie Dough, your own favorite recipe or a purchased pie crust of your choice.
  • Prepare the topping by combining 1 cup flour with the butter and brown sugar. Mix thoroughly until crumbly. Set aside.
  • Prepare the filling by combining the sugar, 1/4 cup flour, nutmeg, cinnamon and salt in a large bowl. Stir in the sliced apples until coated.
  • Turn the filling into the prepared pie crust. Scatter the topping over the pie filling.
  • Bake for 50 minutes at 425F. Cover the pie loosely with aluminum foil during the last 10 minutes of baking.
  • Serve warm with vanilla ice cream or whipped cream if desired.

Notes

  • Recipe Source: from Betty Crocker’s Cookbook

9 Comments

  1. Anonymous

    I have made this pie with this recipe for all our family/friend BBQs or parties and it is always a HUGE hit!! Thanks so much for sharing it 🙂

  2. The filling of pie is so tender. I love it.

    How many oz of flour for 1 cup of topping?

  3. I've spent several hours looking through my pie recipes for something new to add to the Thanksgiving pie lineup this year. Thanks! I've found it! That looks incredible!

  4. this kind of pie rocks because you get the yummy crust on the bottom AND a buttery batch of crumbs on top. delicious pie, lisa!

  5. Perfection on a plate….This would make a wonderful Thanksgiving Pie

  6. Having a tree with all different apple varieties on it sounds so Willy Wonka and fun. 🙂

    P.S. Thanks for coming over to say Hi.

  7. theUngourmet

    I've been wanting to make an apple pie but I didn't want to do a top crust. I love this cinnamon streusel topping idea! Tomorrow is the last farmers market for the year. I am going to pick up a bunch of apples for pie.

  8. Kathy Walker

    Perfect! I love the fall. There are so many apples and recipes it is hard to choose..I choose this one!

  9. YUMMM! Not much more can be said about absolute perfection. What a beautiful pie!

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.