Key lime pie
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Key lime pie is a dessert made of key lime juice, egg yolks, and sweetened condensed milk in a pie crust. The authentic pie is topped with meringue and baked until the meringue is a golden brown.[1] Some key lime pies use other types of whipped toppings or none at all. The dish is named after the small key limes (Citrus aurantifolia 'Swingle') that are naturalized throughout the Florida Keys. Their thorns make them less tractable, their thin yellow rind makes them more perishable, but they are more tart and aromatic than the common Persian limes seen year round in most U.S. grocery stores.
Key lime pie is made with canned sweetened condensed milk, since fresh milk was not a common commodity in the Florida Keys before modern refrigerated distribution methods.
Key lime juice, unlike regular lime juice, is a pale yellow. The filling in key lime pie is also yellow, largely due to the egg yolks.[2] Some cooks add food coloring to give the pie filling a green color. This practice is frowned upon by those who make traditional key lime pies.[3][4]
During mixing, a reaction between the condensed milk and the acidic lime juice occurs which causes the filling to thicken on its own without requiring baking. Many early recipes for key lime pie did not instruct the cook to ever bake the pie, relying on this chemical reaction (called souring) to produce the proper consistency of the filling. Today, in the interest of safety due to consumption of raw eggs, pies of this nature are usually baked for a short time. The baking also thickens the texture even more than the reaction alone.
[edit] Legislation
In 1965, Florida State Representative Bernie Papy, Jr. introduced legislation calling for a $100 fine to be levied against anyone advertising key lime pie that is not made with key limes. The bill did not pass.[5] As of July 1, 2006, key lime pie is the Florida state pie.[6]
[edit] Notes
- ^ "Conch Cooking" L.P. Artman, Jr., August 1975 Florida Keys Printing & Publishing, page 74
- ^ "Conch Cooking" L.P. Artman, Jr., August 1975 Florida Keys Printing & Publishing, page 74
- ^ History of Key Lime Pie
- ^ For further discussion see: Wiki Cookbook: Key Lime Pie.
- ^ A Chronological History of Key West A Tropical Island City, 3rd edition, Stephen Nichols
- ^ SB 676 - Official State Pie/Key Lime. Retrieved on 2006-08-14.