Meat Pies

Roast Chicken Pie: File Under Leftover Heroes

Roast chicken pie

We’re all trying to do more with less, and we know what food waste has become a huge issue. I, for one, am not the kind of person who can eat the same meal day in and out, so it pays to have a few ideas when it comes to transforming leftovers into new dishes.

This pie was made from about half a roast chicken I baked, along with the veg. I shredded the meat, and collected the leftover jelly/gravy and veg. In a deep frying pan, I sweated off half a leek and some brown onion, then threw in a cup of roughly chopped mushrooms. After a few minutes, throw in the leftovers with a cup of stock. To round out the gravy, I added a heaped tablespoon of cream cheese and a tablespoon of dijon mustard. Bring everything to a simmer, and thicken with a teaspoon of potato starch, or my favourite trick, liquid kombu. Season to taste and set aside to cool and there you have it, the easiest pie filling.

…but here’s the thing. You can use this process with so many leftovers. Whether it’s a curry, Bolognese (even with the pasta), stew, leftover veg… you can make pretty much anything into a pie filling.

Joe taught me an olive oil pastry recipe that bears sharing (thanks babe!), and it’s brilliant because you need zero pastry skills to pull it off. It’s based on the principle of halves. So for however much plain flour you have, add half that in grams of water, and half that again, of olive oil. So if you have 200g flour, mix in 100g water and 50g oil. It’s also a vegan friendly, should you need a good vegan dough recipe on hand.

For a galette style pie to serve 4:

Ingredients

200g plain flour

100g water

50g olive oil

Sea salt

Method

Make a well in the centre of your flour. Combine the water and oil, then add to the centre of your flour well with a good few pinches of sea salt and bring the dough together. Knead lightly until the dough is combined, soft and pliable. Cover with a clean damp tea towel until ready to use.

When ready to use, heat the oven to 200c. Roll out the dough to about 1/2cm thick and gently drape it over a lined or non stick pie tin. Spoon in your cooled (at least room temp) pie filling and then bring the edges over. brush the pastry with melted butter (you can use Nuttelex if you want to keep it vegan), milk, or egg). Garnish the pie with fresh tarragon or thyme leaves, and sea salt. Cover the exposed filling with a small piece of silicon bakeware or baking paper, and cook for 40 minutes or until the pastry is golden.

Allow to cool slightly so that the filling solidifies again and you can slice it neatly. You can eat it room temp, chilled a picnic, or simply reheat slices in the oven. Serve with cornichons and Dijon mustard.

Beef Rendang Meat Pies

Almost every culture in the world has a meat pie and this is another one to add to your delicious repertoire. #BringBackTheClassics

Makes: About 8 party pies

Preparation time: 40 minutes

Cooking time: 4 hours 20 minutes

Level of difficulty: medium

Ingredients

Rendang paste
1 tbs coriander seeds
2 thumb-sized pieces of fresh turmeric
1 generous knob of galangal, peeled and coarsely chopped
2 red eschallots, peeled and halved
3 bird's eye chillis (de-seeded if you prefer a milder heat)
1 thumb-sized piece of ginger, coarsely chopped
1/2 stalk of lemongrass, coarsely chopped
2 green shallots (scallions), topped and tailed
1 tsp white mustard seeds
½ cinnamon stick
1 candlenut

The rest
500 g beef oyster blade, chopped into bite sized chunks (beef chuck, lamb neck or shanks also work well)
270 ml tin coconut cream
1 tbs kecap manis

Salt

White pepper

4 sheets short crust pastry

¼ milk for glazing

Crispy chilli oil, or your favourite sauce, to serve

Method

Preheat an oven to 180˚C. Blitz the paste ingredients in the blender or food processor until you achieve a rough paste (add a small amount of water to the paste if it has issues combining). In a heavy based pot on a medium heat, add a slug of olive oil and stir fry the paste for 2-3 minutes, until aromatic. Stir the mixture continuously to prevent it catching on the bottom. Remove the paste from the pot and set aside while you brown the meat. 

Add a little more oil, then in batches, brown the meat on all sides. Once all the meat is browned, return all of the meat to the pot, along with the paste and stir to combine. Add in the coconut cream and ketchup manis and combine well. Bring the curry to a simmer, taste and season with salt and ground white pepper and place the lid on the pot. Place the pot in oven and reduce the temperature to 120˚C for 4 hours.

When the time is up, remove the pot from the oven and check the meat. The meat should be soft enough to break apart with a spoon. When the meat is done, place the pot on the stove on high heat with the lid on for 15-20 minutes to reduce the sauce and thicken the texture. Once thickened, taste and adjust seasoning if necessary, then set aside to cool. Refrigerate overnight if possible.

When you’re ready to make your pies, preheat the oven to 200˚C. Thaw the pastry and cut it to fit the base and sides of your pie moulds. For party pies, a deep muffin tray works well. Fill each pastry case with the rendang and top with a pastry lid. Use a fork to crimp the edges to seal, then glaze with milk. Cook for 20 minutes or until the tops are golden. Set aside to cool slightly, then serve.

Note

Make the rendang a day ahead and refrigerate it…it’ll be easier to work with while slightly cold, and next day stews always taste better!

SBS cook’s notes

Oven temperatures are for conventional; if using fan-forced (convection), reduce the temperature by 20˚C. | We use Australian tablespoons and cups: 1 teaspoon equals 5 ml; 1 tablespoon equals 20 ml; 1 cup equals 250 ml. | All herbs are fresh (unless specified) and cups are lightly packed. | All vegetables are medium size and peeled, unless specified. | All eggs are 55–60 g, unless specified.

 Photography, styling and food preparation by Melissa Leong

Feeling nostalgic? We want you! For the month of November, SBS Food is asking food lovers far and wide to get creative by putting a multicultural twist or your creative spin on an Australian classic... Welcome to #BringBackTheClassics - enter now!