Paula Roy is a Canadian food writer, recipe developer, magazine food editor and host of the popular television and YouTube cooking show Paula Roy’s Favourite Foods. She’s busy these days creating and gifting all sorts of delicious foods for the holiday season.
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Posted on: 03-2023
Ever since I made (and devoured) salted caramel tarts made with shortbread cookie cups, I’ve been brainstorming on other fun ways to make little pie-like treats that are both cute and delicious. The enduring popularity of apple crumble pie is the inspiration for this recipe, which features an oatmeal cookie crust. You can use whatever apples you prefer for the filling; I like Cortland and Royal Gala; many people are fond of Granny Smiths for pies. Note that both the filling and the cookie cups + crumble can be made in advance and refrigerated for up to a week or frozen for longer storage.
ServingsMakes 15 cookie cups
Ingredients
For the apple pie filling:
2 medium apples*
Juice of 1/2 lemon
15 grams (1 tablespoon) butter
65 grams (1/3 cup) brown sugar
1.3 ml (1/4 teaspoon) ground cinnamon
.6 ml (1/8 teaspoon) ground nutmeg
.6 ml (1/8 teaspoon) ground cloves
Pinch salt
12.5 grams (5 teaspoons) cornstarch
For the oatmeal cookie cups:
195 grams (1 cup) brown sugar
227 grams (1 cup) butter, at room temperature
1 egg
5 ml (1 teaspoon) baking soda dissolved in 15 ml (1 tablespoon) boiling water
5 ml (1 teaspoon) vanilla
166 grams (1 1/3 cups) all-purpose flour
210 grams (2 1/3 cups) rolled oats
Few pinches salt
*Cortland, Royal Gala, Granny Smith, or other baking apple.
Preparation
For the apple pie filling: Wash, peel, and core apples and chop into 1.25 cm (1/2 inch) pieces. Put chopped apples in a large bowl and add lemon juice. Stir to combine and set aside.
2. Place a medium saucepan over medium heat and add butter, 180 ml (3/4 cup) water, sugar, cinnamon, nutmeg, cloves and salt. When mixture comes to a boil, add the apples. Reduce heat to medium-low and cover the pot with a lid. Simmer the apples for 6-8 minutes, until they have softened but are not mushy.
3. In a small bowl mix the cornstarch with 30 ml (2 tablespoons) of water until fully dissolved and add the slurry to the filling; simmer for 2 minutes to thicken.
4. Cool the apple pie filling to room temperature, transfer it to an airtight container and refrigerate if not serving cookie cups within 4 hours.
5. For the oatmeal cookie cups: Preheat oven to 177°C (350°F). Grease or line 15 compartments of regular-sized muffin pan(s). Line a medium baking tray with parchment and set aside. Using a stand mixer or electric hjand mixer, beat together the brown sugar and butter until creamy. Add the egg, baking soda mixture and vanilla and beat until smooth. Add the flour, oats and salt and beat just until no dry spots remain.
6. Scoop out 50 grams (1.8 oz) of cookie dough to form balls 5 cm (2 inches) in diameter. Put the balls in the prepared muffin pans then gently press down to form a cookie cup out of each ball (they should come almost all the way to the top of each indentation in the muffin pan. Try to make the bases and sides as uniform in thickness as possible.
7. With the dough that remains in the bowl after you’ve shaped the cookie cups, scoop out 4 – 6 cookies and place them on the prepared baking tray. Flatten slightly with your fingers. You will be crumbling these later to use as topping.
8. Transfer the muffin pans and baking tray to the preheated oven. Bake regular cookies on tray for 12- 14 minutes until golden brown and crisp. Bake cookie cups 15 minutes.
9. Remove pans from the oven. Cookie cups will likely have puffed up; immediately use a small jar or shot glass to press down firmly in the centre of each one, reforming the cooked dough into cookie cups once more. Cool in pans for 15 minutes, then remove cookie cups from pans and place on wire rack to cool completely. Let regular cookies cool completely, then use your fingers to break them into small crumbles. Place these in an airtight container.
10. To assemble, fill each cookie cup with apple pie filling. Sprinkle with about a teaspoon of reserved, baked oatmeal cookie crumble. Serve within 2 hours, with a scoop of ice cream if you like.
Paula Roy is a Canadian food writer, recipe developer, magazine food editor and host of the popular television and YouTube cooking show Paula Roy’s Favourite Foods. A lifelong enthusiast of all things kitchen-related, her speciality is healthy, inventive dishes prepared with passion using fresh, mostly seasonal elements. Finding new methods and ingredients to make eating as fun and flavourful as possible is constant source of inspiration. Find more of Paula’s recipes on her website Constantly Cooking which enjoys regular visitors from over 180 countries around the globe. If you wish, you can sign up on the site to get notified each time a new recipe is published.
Sounds really good.