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VegWeb.com  |  Recipes  |  Dinner Pies  |  Miscellaneous Dinner Pies  |  Barbecue Pie « previous next »
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Recipe submitted by My bestest friend, Stu Sushi (phoenix@ionet.net)

Barbecue Pie

Ingredients (use vegan versions):

    Baked beans (English-style), along with any other type of cooked beans you like
    Veggies {carrots, onions, mushrooms, leeks, courgettes/zucchini, sweet
    laying around except potatoes as they go on top)
    Barbecue sauce (any vegan brand)
    textured soy protein or soymince (optional)
    Potatoes (mashing tatties, not the nice little new ones, save those to roast)
    A bit of margarine or oil
    salt, pepper
    Mint or other herbs (optional)

Directions:

    First off, I should mention that there are no set amounts in this recipe.  Just use whatever you have handy.  Its good for using up leftovers.  If you need starter amounts consider:

    Ingredients (use vegan versions):

        One large onion
        Eight ounces/225g mushrooms (baby button shrooms are especially nice)
        One medium leek (careful, they're strong)
        Two carrots, cut fine
        Kidney beans, butter beans, navy beans (the baked beans are a necessary ingredient)

    Directions:

    You should get the idea, just nice, medium amounts which will fill a deep pie dish.  Remember to use enough potatoes to give it a good top layer of mash.  I think we used around a pound of them, but don't quote me.  Anyway, on to the recipe, with suitable anecdotes.

    Soon after I arrived in England this summer for an all-too-short visit, Stu decided to make a barbecue pie for me.  First thing he got me to do (slavedriver Wink was scrub and cube the unpeeled potatoes and set them boiling in lightly salted water.  While those were slowly cooking we cut the veggies up into bite-sized pieces.  Tiny mushrooms we kept whole (Ooh!  Baby shrooms!  Cuuuuute... *melting voice*adorable grin*little mushroom almost shoved up my nose*).  Onion chopped, check.  Mushrooms suitably tossed around, check.  Stepped on cat, check (MMROW! Well, don't lay right behind me, Puss!).  At this point he pulled out his handy-dandy fry-pan, and set it on to heat.  I usually realised that the leek was gritty and got to work separating the rings in a bowl of water to get it rinsed out.
    Anyway, we heated a bit of oil in the pan, just enough to keep things from sticking, and began to cook the veggies.  Onions (including leek) and mushrooms go in first, then carrots and other hard veggies.  Let them soften a bit in the pan and add the baked beans, a can of sweetcorn, whatever other beans are handy, soymince or textured soy protein (HYDRATED!) if you want em (Ew... Quiet, Carnivore Boy. MMROWR!  You too, Cat.), and a LOT of barbecue sauce.  See?  Easy.  Even the cat can help!
    About the time the veggie-bean glop is about cooked through, test the potatoes.  If a knife goes through them with no force, they're ready to be mashed.  If the knife gets stuck a few millimetres in and produces sparks, that's a rock.  Take it out and try again.  But, yeah, mash the tatties with a bit or marg/oil, maybe some soymilk if its too solid, and mix in some salt and pepper and maybe some basil or garlic or mint.  Trust me, mint in potatoes, if you can get the right balance, is fantastic.  (*prideful look from Stu* I'm SO good. Yes you are, hon.  Your beans are burning.)  Get the bean goop off the flame before it manages to burn or bubble AALLLLL over the stove.  Dump it in a deep pie dish or similar deep oven-safe dish.  Make sure the oven is heated to 200C/400F.  Now, let Stu be artistic and spread the mash over the veg mix until he's covered it with decourative fork furrows and quite possibly his name.  (See?  Its my name!  I'm so great. BARK!  Oh, no, not the dog too...)  Bung it in the oven for maybe half an hour until the tatties start turning brown and the pie is hot through.  Use this time to give your cooking partner a shoulder rub, or shut up the small and deafening dog
    Take the pie out of the oven, let Stu panic over the burn on your hand and spoil you for a while, cut great bits from the pie, and munch on it in front of the TV.  (No...  not Neighbours... NO!!!!!!!!!!! *cue terrifying theme song*)  Follow up dinner with getting Cat out of the rest of the pie, cleaning up, and rejoicing as the soaps go off.

    This is one of my fave dishes now (Stu would be happy to never see another one, as often as I begged him to make it), quite easy to make, gives you a few minutes to rest while its baking, nutritious, and cheap.  And the dog likes it, too! (Bag dog!  My dinner! *pitiful look from dog* Oh, okay, one bite...)

    Serves: 2-4, depending how hungry you are

    Preparation time: About an hour and a half

   
sounds good to me.....your story makes it sound even better...kept me reading all the way through instead of skipping around like i usually do.  this one goes to the printer

    Archived comment by: amanda
Fab story, can't wait to try recipe.

    Archived comment by: cheryl
HEY HEY I too have this weird aversion erm,...*stops to dwell on the idea of Neighbors a tv show in Britland* its a...love hate relationship at best! Yeah so your story cum cooking directions was sweet, cute and very amusing. Besides I miss being in London and this was a nice reminder. Its a long trip there from Chicago. Thanks for your story. Sounds yummie too.

    Archived comment by: marimonica

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swirlyveganstar
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« Reply #1 on: October 10, 2006, 07:51:57 AM »

I've made this loads of times now! My omni hubby and even my omni father loved it too. My father loved it enough to request a copy of the recipe!
It is so simple and you usually have all the ingredients already, so no last minute dashes to the shops or careful planning. It's also very filling and there's always enough left over for another meal in my home.
I can't recommend this recipe enough - delicious!  Grin
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dinkfeet
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« Reply #2 on: September 10, 2007, 10:00:32 PM »

So I was riding the bus home, bemoaning the fact that I wouldn't have time to stop at the grocery store because I knew that my fridge was bare! Once home, I did a vegweb search for "leeks and mushrooms" the two veggies I knew I had that were getting ripe. Hmmm....Portabello Yorkshire Pudding - nope, too schmany (that's a technical term)...oh hey, barbecue pie? Well, I do have a bunch of shallots, and few pounds of carrots, can o' kidney beans, leftover ear of cooked corn, ziplock of leftover seitan, and whoa! Some great barbecue sauce! But what about the topping...ah yes! Two old sweet potatoes. What goes better with barbecue than sweet potatoes! Perfect! It's the first rainy, gray day of fall, and 'though I don't have a best friend to visit with, Prairie Home Companion is on, and that's the next best thing.

I loved reading the instructions, and I even tripped over my dog at one point! I didn't give him a bite of the finished product, but he did get a nibble of the carrot end. And (smug smile at thought of own resourcefulness), I put the veggie ends in the potato water after scooping them out for the mas, and am simmering some veggie stock right now!

The flavors in this meal meld incredibley, the texture is warm and snuggly, and the directions, of course, a joy to read. Thank you for sharing this food story, Stu Shi.
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