instructables Mini Apple Pies Made with 3D Printed Lattice Cutte Instructions
- June 9, 2024
- instructables
Table of Contents
instructables
Mini Apple Pies Made With 3D Printed Lattice Cutter
by kura_kura
Miniature, individual apple pies are great for casual gatherings, they don’t require plates and forks and keep the clean up to minimum. Made with sweet pastry and filled with caramel sauce and small, cinnamon infused apple pieces.
I made 3D printed pastry cutters to speed the process and keep the pies
looking neat and even. It’s a perfect solution for people who don’t want to
spend ages creating traditional lattice on each miniature pie, also great for
people who have to make large quantities of small pies, this methods saves a
lot of time and sanity, as well as people who own 3D printers, because let’s
be honest – if you have a 3D printer you don’t need much incentive to re it up
and make something useful.
Supplies:
FOR 10 PIES:
- PASTRY:
- 250G ALL PURPOSE FLOUR
- 125G UNSALTED BUTTER
- 60G CASTER SUGAR
- 1 SMALL EGG
- 1TBS MILK
- PINCH OF SALT AND 1 TSP VANILLA EXTRACT
- FILLING:
- 600-700G CRISP APPLES
- 70G CASTER SUGAR
- 2TBS BUTTER
- 1-2 TSP CINNAMON
- CARAMEL:
- 100G CASTER SUGAR
- 35G UNSALTED BUTTER
- 90ML CREAM
- 1 TSP VANILLA EXTRACT, PINCH OF SALT
- PASTRY EGG WASH:
- 1 SMALL EGG
- SPLASH OF MILK
Step 1: STL FILES
https://www.tinkercad.com/embed/2zpGycvKlOT?editbtn=1
- (RED) BOTTOM CUTTER, 85MM DIAMETER
- (YELLOW) LATTICE CUTTER, 95MM DIAMETER
- (GREEN) COOKIE PRESS
- (BLUE) COOKIE PRESS HANDLE
Bottom cutter has a second circle cutter inside, it won’t cut through pastry,
but it will leave a shallow indentation to show how much filling should go in.
Lattice cutter I made is just your traditional square pattern, but that’s just
basic. You can always make your own lattice cutter with different patterns.
Try circles, hearts, Cower patterns, geometrical shapes…there are countless
possibilities.
Notice that the top cutter is larger than the bottom one.
All walls in cutters have to be 0.6mm thick, so they can be printed in one
single wall. Print in 0.2 layer height, 10% infill, enable retraction to
prevent stringing.
Step 2: CARAMEL
Combine sugar, butter and cream in a saucepan, cook on medium for 6-8 minutes,
stir occasionally.
You will know it’s ready when caramel thickens and changes colour to light
brown. Add vanilla extract and a pinch of salt once it’s thickened.
Leave it to cool down to room temperature.
You want caramel to be soft and spreadable.
Step 3: APPLE FILLING
Peel and cut apples into small, 1/4 inch cubes.
Combine sugar and butter in a saucepan, cook on medium for about 5 min until
caramel changes colour to light brown.
Add apples to the saucepan, sprinkle with cinnamon.
Cook on medium heat for 10-15min, stirring occasionally until filling reduces
in volume, apples turn light brown and most of the liquid is reduced.
Leave it to cool down.
Step 4: PASTRY
Put flour, sugar, salt and cold, cubed butter into a food processor, pulse
until mixture resembles wet sand.
Whisk the egg, vanilla extract and a splash of milk together, keep the food
processor running and slowly pour the mixture through a feed hole. Mix for 30
seconds and turn off.
Tip the dough onto floured surface and quickly knead the pastry until it all
comes together. Shape into a flattened disc, cover in cling film and
refrigerate for 2 hours.
Step 5: PUFF PASTRY VERSUS SHORTCRUST PASTRY
In case anyone was curious how this recipe looks like with store bought
pastry.
In both pictures on the left we have puff pastry, on the right we have
shortcrust pastry.
Not much of a difference visually, both rise a little bit, but not enough to
distort the pattern.
Puff pastry is not as sweet as home-made shortcrust pastry, so I prefer to use
it with sweeter apple varieties. I only ever use sweet shortcrust with crisp
apples to balance the flavours.
Step 6: CUTTING THE DOUGH
Cut several sheets of baking paper, big enough to fit your baking tray.
Roll the dough directly on the pre-cut baking paper. Roll it to to 2-3 mm
thickness.
Cut 6-8 pie bottoms and leave them on the baking paper. Then, cut 6-8 lattice
parts and also leave them on the baking paper until they are needed.
Dip the cutter in a pile of flour beforehand to prevent sticking.
If your room is on a warmer side or you are working with large quantities of
dough, you might have to put the rolled out pastry in the fridge for 30 min
prior to cutting. The colder the dough, the easier it will be to cut.
Once cut, most of the small dough squares should just fall out on their own,
but if they don’t, just give them a poke with a chopstick.
Step 7: COOKIE DOUGH PUSHER
This part is not strictly necessary if you are making a regular amount of pies, but if you are making them in large quantities, this 3D printed part might be useful. Long prongs fit within the cutting squares and push out any dough bits that get stuck inside.
https://www.tinkercad.com/embed/1Xb4l2sUJx7?editbtn=1
Step 8: ASSEMBLY
If you take a look at the first picture, you will notice that pie bottoms have shallow circles stamped inside them. It’s there so it’s easy to remember to keep the filling within the circle.
Spread a teaspoon of caramel within a circle.
Put 1 tablespoon (or a little bit more) of apple filling on top of the caramel
and flatten it a little bit.
Cover the pie with lattice. Use your fingers to align the edges of the lattice
to the edges of the bottom and press the pastry down.
Dip the cookie press in flour, align it with the pie and press it down to seal
the top and bottom parts together.
If you want, you can use a regular circular cookie cutter to trim the finished
pies, so that the pressed sides look more neat.
Step 9: BAKING AND SERVING
Use the pastry brush to cover the cookies with an egg wash. If you want, you
can sprinkle the pies with sugar and cinnamon.
Bake at 180C for 20 min. Leave to cool on a cooling rack.
Step 10: ENJOY
Keep refrigerated for a maximum of 6 days. Best served warm, microwave for
15-20 seconds before eating.
Can be served on it’s own or with a bowl of custard or ice-cream.
These came out looking great and it’s need to see the different designs you made for different parts of the process 🙂
Mini Apple Pies Made With 3D Printed Lattice Cutter:
References
- Yours for the making - Instructables
- Kura_kura's Profile - Instructables
- Mini Apple Pies Made With 3D Printed Lattice Cutter : 10 Steps (with Pictures) - Instructables
- 3D design COOKIE DOUGH PUSHER | Tinkercad
- 3D design MINI APPLE PIE CUTTERS | Tinkercad
Read User Manual Online (PDF format)
Read User Manual Online (PDF format) >>