Lemon meringue pie

Lemon meringue pie is a type of dessert pie, consisting of a shortened pastry base filled with lemon curd and topped with meringue.

Lemon meringue pie
TypePie
CourseDessert
Serving temperatureHot or cold
Main ingredients
Food energy
(per 127 g serving)
285 kcal (1193 kJ)
Nutritional value
(per 127 g serving)
Protein4.8 g
Fat16.4 g
Carbohydrate49.7 g

History

Lemon meringue pie in Paris

Fruit desserts covered with baked meringue were found starting in the 18th century in France. Menon's pommes meringuées are a sort of thick apple sauce or apple butter covered with baked meringue in his 1739 cookbook.[1] A custard flavored with "citron" (probably a mistranslation of citron 'lemon') and covered with baked meringue, crême meringuée, was published by 1769 in English,[2] apparently a translation of an earlier edition of Menon (1755?).[3] Similar recipes cooked in a crust appear in 19th century America: apple pie covered with meringue, called 'apple a la turque' (1832)[4] and 'apples meringuées' (1846).[5] A generic 'meringue pie' based on any pie was documented in 1860.[6] The name 'Lemon Meringue Pie' appears in 1869,[7] but lemon custard pies with meringue topping were often simply called lemon cream pie.[8]

Preparation

A stiff lemon-flavored custard is prepared with egg yolks, lemon zest and juice, sugar, and sometimes starch and baked in a pie crust. Uncooked meringue, usually shaped into peaks, is spread over the top, sometimes with a sprinkle of sugar, and briefly baked.

See also

References

  1. Menon (pseud.), Nouveau traité de la Cuisine, v. 2, p. 91
  2. B. Clermont, The Professed Cook, 2nd edition, 1769, p. 426
  3. anonymous (Menon), Les soupers de la cour, 1778, vol. 3, p. 86>
  4. A Boston Housekeeper (Mrs. N. K. M. Lee), The Cook's Own Book and Housekeeper's Register
  5. Louis-Eustache Audot, French Domestic Cookery, 1846, p. 206
  6. Mrs. T.J. Crowen, American Lady's System of Cookery, New York, 1860, s.v. "Meringue Pie", p. 256
  7. American Agriculturalist 28:7:p. 262 (New Series, No. 270)
  8. Rufus Estes, Good Things to Eat, as Suggested by Rufus, 1911, p. 89


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