Mushroom Pie With Porcini and Thyme

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Intro: Mushroom Pie With Porcini and Thyme

Mushroom pie is a great meat-free dinner alternative. It's filling and full of savoury, wild mushroom flavour. Best served with rocket salad and some garlic bread on the side. Can be a main meal, lunch or an appetiser. Microwaves well and keeps in the fridge for 2-3 days.

STEP 1: CRUST

Line the pie dish with your chosen pastry. This recipe works great with both puff pastry and regular savoury shortcrust pastry.

Let the pastry rest in the fridge for an hour before blind baking.

Prick the base of the pastry with a fork.

Use aluminium foil or baking paper to line the inside of the dish. Add baking beans or dry rice to weigh the pastry down.

Bake for 20min at 200C. Take out of the oven and carefully remove the baking paper.

STEP 2: MUSHROOMS

800g of mushrooms is quite a lot of work when it comes to frying it, so I like to put them in the oven and dehydrate them slightly. It saves me a lot of time. Just cut the mushroom into small, 1inch pieces, spread them over the baking paper and bake at 160C for 20 min.

Alternatively, you can cook them in a frying pan with olive oil.

Reserve a few nice looking mushroom slices to use a decoration for the top of the pie.

STEP 3: REHYDRATING PORCINI

Pour boiling hot water over the porcini mushrooms, just enough water to cover them. Leave to soak for minimum 2 hours.

Strain the mushrooms and rinse them.

STEP 4: FRYING

Cut an onion into small cubes, fry with olive oil until translucent, add minced garlic and cook on medium low for 2 minutes. Don't let the garlic burn.

Mince the porcini mushrooms into small pieces and fry with onions. Add dehydrated mushrooms to the pan and mix it well.

STEP 5: FILLING

Mix sour cream, eggs, grated cheese, thyme and salt. Don't overmix, you don't want to aerate the eggs too much. Add mushroom/onion mixture to the sour cream filling and pour into the pie dish.

STEP 6: BAKING

Decorate the top of the filling with reserved mushroom slices.

Bake at 200C for 30 min (or 10 min longer if pie dish is very deep).

Cover the pie with aluminium foil halfway through baking to prevent burning.

6 Comments

What happens when a slice of the pie is removed? Is it runny or firm? Picture?
Looks delicious!
It's firm, everything is held together by cheese and eggs. I've attached a picture in the end, sorry about the quality though, I meant to take more pictures, but I left the kitchen for 2 hours and there were only crumbs left when I got back. I live with a pack of wolves ;)
Thank you! I am going to try this. It reminds me of my favorite part of Beef Stroganoff.
This sounds great. I am wondering why there is a need for dehydrating the mushrooms?
The Japanese mushroom gurus say that dehydrating mushrooms really concentrates their flavor, for use in soups. Perhaps it is similarly so in this case.
You don’t have to dehydrate them, you can just cook them in
the pan. I showed this method because 800g of mushrooms is quite a lot in terms
of volume and it usually has to be cooked in 2-3 batches. It takes time and you
have to keep an eye on it. I use the oven because it’s faster and easier when working with large volumes.