deep-dish pie
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
- Noun:
- A type of pie, typically sweet, where fruit filling is placed in a relatively deep dish or pan and is covered with a rich biscuit or pastry dough, usually only on top of the fruit, rather than having a bottom crust.
Usage
- Noun:
- This term specifically refers to the food item itself. It is commonly used in culinary contexts, recipes, and menus to describe this particular style of pie.
Examples
- Noun:
- For dessert, she baked a delicious deep-dish pie filled with fresh peaches.
- The restaurant's specialty is its homemade apple deep-dish pie.
- A classic deep-dish pie, like a cobbler, often has a thick, cake-like topping.
Advanced Usage
- The term "deep-dish" in this compound noun distinguishes it from pies with a shallow filling or a full crust (top and bottom). It emphasizes the depth of the dish and the generous amount of filling.
- In some regional American English, similar desserts might be called "cobblers" or "slumps," though these can have slight variations in the topping's texture (e.g., more dumpling-like).
Variants and Related Words
- Cobbler (noun): A deep-dish fruit dessert with a thick biscuit or dough topping, often similar to a deep-dish pie.
- Slump (noun): A New England dessert similar to a cobbler, where the biscuit dough is dropped onto the fruit and steamed.
- Pie (noun): The broader category of baked dishes with a pastry crust and a sweet or savory filling.
Synonyms
- Fruit cobbler: Especially when the topping is biscuit-like.
- Pot pie (Note): This is a related but distinct term; a pot pie typically refers to a savory deep-dish pie with meat and vegetables, enclosed in pastry.
Related Phrases
- Deep-dish pizza (noun): A related culinary term for a pizza baked in a deep pan with a thick crust, but this is a distinct food item from a deep-dish pie.
Noun
- a pie made of fruit with rich biscuit dough usually only on top of the fruit