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Cheap
Eats:
Quebec Sugar Pie
by Cynthia Clampitt
Sugarcane has an often vague and definitely checkered past.
Because there is now no wild sugarcane growing anywhere in the world, it is
hard to pinpoint its place of origin, but most scholars think it originated in
India, on the shores of the Bay of Bengal. From there, once its sweet secrets
were discovered, it spread rapidly to Malaysia, Indonesia, Indochina, and
southern China.
It appears that the Dravidians, India’s denizens before the
Aryans invaded from the north, pushing them southward, were the first to
utilize sugarcane, though they were making molasses, rather than refined sugar.
When the Aryans swept in around 800 b.c., they “rediscovered” sugarcane, and by 500 b.c., appear
to have created a machine that allowed them to create “crystal sugar.”
Sugar may have moved into Persia, after Darius the Great
visited India in the fifth century b.c., but if it did, it remained too costly for
commoners. It is possible that, instead of sugar, cane cuttings and technology
were what the Persians carried away, but historians disagree on this. People in
the ancient Middle East and Mediterranean did not have sugarcane at this time,
but they knew about it, and the Bible refers to “sweet cane from a distant
country.” Though they’d heard of it, Greeks and Romans didn’t use sugar.
It is not known when or where sugarcane was introduced
to the West, but it is known that the introduction was made by Arab traders.
Our clues as to a relatively wide acquaintance with sugar are largely anecdotal,
but they are compelling. Shakespeare and other writers in Elizabethan England
were writing about sugar in the sixteenth century, using it in ways that
suggest common knowledge. Marco Polo was familiar with sugar when he
encountered it in China during the thirteenth century, and indeed, during the
Middle Ages, Polo’s home town of Venice, the acknowledged
queen of the spice trade, had made this new “spice” part of her lucrative trade
monopoly.
Once sugar was commonly available, Italians became the first
major addicts. Because sugar was expensive, it was another way the wealthy
could show off, and soon every part of the meal was being sweetened, including
the pasta dishes. France was a little more restrained, but still took to sugar
wholeheartedly. Household accounts began
to list “white sugar” in the 1300s, and Charles V was known to sprinkle sugar
and cinnamon on his toasted cheese. The first book about cooking with sugar was
published in Venice in 1541 and had been translated into French by the following
year. The first book on sugar written in French was published (rather
surprisingly) by Nostradamus in 1555.
The Age of Exploration brought about the next big jump in
sugar’s history. Once Vasco da Gama
reached India, Portugal was able to break Venice’s monopoly on the sugar trade.
And gosh, hadn’t Europeans just discovered the best possible places to
introduce sugarcane. Soon, fields of cane were waving beneath the bright sun of
South America and the Caribbean (or West Indies, as the islands were then known).
Coffee, tea, and chocolate were gaining in popularity in Europe, and that meant
the demand for sugar was skyrocketing. Unfortunately, the solution hit upon for
growing the increasing amount of sugarcane needed was the slave trade. The West
Indies and sugar became an important part of the notorious Triangle Trade and
were major players in the early economy of the New World.
Sugar is still big business. With slavery ended, we can eat
sugar without pains of conscience, but there is an increasing concern over the
health effects of eating too much sugar. Interestingly, while too much sugar is
a health hazard, sugar itself is less damaging than some of the alternatives
now being widely used in the U.S., most especially high fructose corn
sweetener. In small quantities, sugar is a soothing and pleasant treat that is
now one of life’s cheapest thrills.
The recipe below is for a pie I discovered years ago in
Montreal. This traditional confection is almost as old as Quebec itself, and
there are myriad versions. The version I have developed incorporates the most
widely documented ingredients and produces a pie that mimics the best sugar
pies I had in Canada. Despite its name, it is not overly sweet. It might be
described as something like pecan pie without the pecans. Enjoy.
Quebec Sugar Pie
9-inch pie crust, unbaked
2 cups brown sugar, firmly packed
2 Tbs. flour
Pinch salt
2 eggs
1 cup evaporated milk
1 tsp. vanilla extract
1 Tbs. melted butter
Preheat oven to 400 degrees F.
In a bowl, combine the sugar, flour, and salt, blending
thoroughly. In another bowl, whisk eggs until frothy. Whisk in milk and
vanilla. Add egg mixture into sugar mixture, stirring until smooth. Whisk in the
melted butter. Pour into pie crust.
Bake in center of oven. Bake at 400 degrees for 10 minutes,
then reduce to 350 degrees, and continue to bake for an additional 30 minutes,
or until crust is golden brown and filling is set.
Let cool on rack. Great plain, but especially nice served with unsweetened or
lightly sweetened whipped cream.
Important Note: The filling is heavy and fluid. If you are going to make this in a foil pie
pan, put the pan on a cookie sheet before you fill it. Otherwise, the weight of
the filling will cause the foil to buckle when you lift the pan, and a lot of
the filling will pour out. The other advantage to using the cookie sheet is, if
some does boil over during initial heating, it won’t goop up your oven.
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