Okay. Now those of my readers who are Yoopers (specifically) or Michiganders (generally) will know exactly what I’m saying. Those of you who don’t have kith or kin in either Michigan or Cornwall might need a little explanation. The pasties of which I speak are pronounced ‘PASS- tees’. The ones you’re probably thinking about are pronounced ‘PAY- steeze’. My pasties are handheld meat pies and not little adhesive backed ‘modesty’ panels worn over, well, you know what. So from now on, each time I type ‘pasties’, please think the correct pronunciation, k? That way I don’t have to blush every time you read it.
And also for those of you not from Michigan, I should probably toss in a few other definitions:
- Yooper: A resident of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.
- U.P.: A widely used acronym for the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Well, heck, you’d get tired of typing out Upper Peninsula of Michigan every time too, eh?
- Big Mac: A nickname for the Mackinac Bridge; the 5 mile long suspension bridge that links the U.P. to the lower Peninsula.
- Trolls: Residents of the Lower Peninsula of Michigan. Get it? They live under a bridge?
- Summer: Two months of bad snowshoeing.
But back to the food…
Pasties are a Yooper (and Cornish) specialty. The Cornish miners that came over to the Upper Peninsula during the golden era of iron and copper mining brought the pasty with them as part of their homeland’s cuisine. Owing partly to it’s convenient, hand-held-meal portability and mostly to the fact that it’s mouthwateringly delicious and warms you from the inside of your toes to the tips of your ears in cold U.P. weather, pasties were soon not just the fare of Finnish and Cornish miners, but were adopted as a favored food through the entire region. More than just popular in the U.P., though, pasties make an appearance in troll restaurants under Big Mac, too. One of the best in the northern part of the lower peninsula is Cousin Jenny’s in Traverse City, Michigan.
A pasty is so representative of Yooper culture and food that those of us who are Yoopers-in-exile get wistful when we whip up a batch or talk to relatives who just picked up their pasty boxes at the local church’s fundraising drives. I had actual hunger pangs when Val emailed me the ‘pasty order form’ from an insert in their church bulletin a few Sundays back. I pictured a couple dozen Finnish grandmas up in Marquette whipping together hundreds of succulent pasties to sell to benefit the local community chest, booster club, or whatever worthy group they decided to support that year.
Then I did what I often have to do when I finish talking to Val. I walked into my kitchen because I was starving. All that pasty talk had left me with two options; feeling sorry for myself or making my own. I decided to whip up a couple dozen pasties.
Perhaps ‘whip up’ is not the best description of the process involved in making pasties. It’s a bit of a job, but if you have sisu* you can manage.
*Sisu: A Finnish term that translates roughly into English as having an inner strength of will, obstinacy or persistence to power on in the face of adversity regardless of the cost.
I heard someone describe pasties once as ‘hand held beef stew pies”. I think beef stew wishes it was a pasty. While there are variations in pasties based on what the cook can get -beef, venison, chicken, turkey, etc…- and the ratios of vegetables there are some things you’re likely to find in them all. Potatoes, onions, carrots and rutabaga are the traditional pasty veggies and I’m happy to stick with them because you don’t mess with perfection! You’re not likely to hear me saying that often in the kitchen, but we’re talking about food as tradition when it comes to pasties, people. I admit that I frequently make cheese pasties, and they’re divine, but that’s a completely different animal than a Yooper pasty. Truth be known, I don’t think of the cheese ones as pasties. I think of them as cheese pastries. Delicious, to be sure, but in a different food family altogether.
Yooper Pasties
This recipe yields about 16 plate-sized pasties. Feel free to adjust amounts but you might want a few of these in your freezer. They’re the ultimate winter meal-in-one.
Yooper Pasties
Rate RecipeIngredients
- 1 large rutabaga and 1 small rutabaga peeled and diced
- 2 large carrots peeled and diced
- 2 medium onions peeled and diced
- 8 medium potatoes preferably a waxy variety like Yukon golds or reds, peeled and diced
- 4 pounds lean ground beef
- enough sturdy pie dough for eight double crust pies - I use the butter tart crust dough from the Fannie Farmer cookbook. If you need the recipe or eight boxes prepared refrigerated pie crusts, email me and I'll happily pass it along!
- salt and pepper to taste
Notes
Nutritional information is an estimate and provided to you as a courtesy. You should calculate the nutritional information with the actual ingredients used in your recipe using your preferred nutrition calculator.
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First you are going to sharpen your knife so that if you slip and take off a finger while wrestling your rutabaga it’ll be easier to reattach. I kid. Sort of. My point is this. Exercise caution with the rutabaga because it does not go gently into that good night.
The best way to prepare the recalcitrant little beast is to slice a sliver off one end of the rutabaga so that it stands sturdily on your cutting board. Then use your biggest sharpest knife to lob it in half. If it’s freaking you out too much to try to hold a slippery, wax covered, round and really hard vegetable while trying to cut it, feel free to whack it in half with a hatchet or an axe. Just don’t do it on your kitchen counter!
Once you have the brute opened, lay it on the flat side and dismantle it further so your original sphere is in quarters. Take another little bit off the bottom so you can stand the quarters up on their ends and use another sharp knife to remove the peel from the insides.
From this point on, cut the rutabaga into 1/4″ slices and stack them like a deck of cards.
Now you’ll take your rutabaga cards and slice them into 1/4″ strips that will then be cut into 1/4″ cubes. Isn’t that wonderfully symmetrical? Combine all diced vegetables in a gigantic mixing bowl. Break up ground beef over the top, add salt and pepper to taste, and mix up thoroughly.
Roll out a piece of pie crust to a diameter between 8″ and 10″. Lay on a pie plate with the crust hanging over the lip of the plate by about 1/4″. Use your hands or a large spoon to transfer as much filling onto the crust as you can, mounding and pressing down lightly with your hands, to fill the half of the crust that is hanging over the plate.
Now fold the empty part of the pie crust over the filling, pinch the seams together, transfer to your countertop and crimp the edges with a fork. Using yet another sharp knife, slice three little vents into the top of the pasty and transfer it to a baking dish or parchment lined baking pan.
Now slide those pans into a preheated 375°F oven and bake for 45 minutes to an hour. Since pasties don’t traditionally get an egg glaze, they won’t be a shiny brown when done, but a deep crispy looking golden brown. Oh I’m getting so hungry talking about these.
Serve hot, cold, or anything in between. My Dad used to heat his pasties up on the steam-pipe at the factory where he worked or on the manifold of the log skidder he operated. I meant it when I said they were portable!
To eat in true Yooper fashion, smother with good ketchup. If you have an aversion to ketchup you can serve with whatever gravy you prefer. Either way they’re soooooo good.
Reader's Thoughts...
James Cleft says
Don’t ever, ever, EVER call a pasty a pie again or i’ll hunt you down and feed you pies until you burst.
martina says
My Mum used to make these w/ spinach, sausage and rocotta. We would grow the spinach, harvest. Butcher the pigs and make the cheese from the goats milk. It was a dauting tast, but one that produced an amazing meal as a child… Your blog takes me back to my childhood… I love to read your treasures.. Thank you for sharing~
~M~
Maggie says
Your pasties look great! I’m a huge devotee to Cousin Jennie’s but I do make a batch or two at home every winter. The only difference between my recipe and yours is I swap out parsnips for rutabaga and sometimes do ground turkey thighs instead of beef. I never liked rutabaga as a kid and for some reason haven’t given it a second chance as an adult.
Amy says
I’ve heard about pasties before but have never had one. They look delicious!
Dea says
I make pasties all 5he time with venison and pork. I would like your Fannie Farmer butter tart crust pastry for my pasty crust. Please send. Thank you
Kirsten says
Oh man! I have been looking for a pasty recipe for so long! They are my favorite kind of food this time of year. I’m not a yooper, but spent a ton of time there in the summer growing up.
Da Poppa says
Ok, I know this won’t count for the constest but I’ve already won because I’m the husband and father of your FWF crew.
My work once took me to a small county fair in Lancaster, PA far from the UP. In the crowd near me I could hear the distinctive UP accent between two visitors to the booth I was staffing. Ya, da yoopers have a distinctive sound eh! Round here it’s called talking Finn even though the person could hail from any of a number of nordic backgrounds. So, I subtly listened in and when I heard them mention a town in the UP I introduced mself but not yet as having lived in the UP. I said I had a question for them if they had time to answer it. I asked them simply catsup or gravy? A great big grin came over the couple faces and they knew right away. Her’s was catsup but his??? Well you might not want to know and it left doubt in my mind as to his claim of having lived here. He puts maple syrup on them. He claims it was an accidental discovery. Hrmmpf.
Anyway nice job on the recipe Becc.
Rebecca says
Heather- Give the ketchup a shot. you might be pleasantly surprised. And you want more bug recipes? My sons’ll love you.
Cindy- Pastry recipe on the way…
Hot Garlic- Thank you, ma’am. I’d never heard of the Utah scones, either. We’re even!
Candace- Thank you. Ask and you shall receive. More quick recipes coming up!
Noel- You’re right. Ketchup is kind of crucial.
Pinkbowl- I think broccoli in pasties might be a prosecutable offense. Broccoli? Huh? How does that resemble potatoes, onions, rutabagies, carrots or beef? Try Cousin Jennys…
Cheri- That sounds very not Yooper, but still very yummy!
Leah- Marquette rocks. I hail from L’Anse. My Dad went to MTU. I learned to love hockey before I learned to walk.
Sherri- Jamaican meat pies are awesome. I used to buy them from a little Jamaican grocery on Genesee St. in Rochester, NY. Good stuff… Try the Yooper ones on for size some time.
Darryl- Oh heck, yeah. Lard is my friend. “First Day of Deer Camp” is a classic. Make the pasties, watch ‘Escanaba in da Moonlight” and yell ‘Hey! Buckless!” at the tube. Da U.P. is da best.
Melissa- You got it. If you try a pasty, you’ll understand me as a human.
For Everyone… How do you respond to this question, “Is ‘dis da Saudy deer camp?”
Melissa says
More of your wonderful recipes and tips please. 🙂
I’d love to try one of these. I’m intrigued.
Darryl says
I love Pasties, don’t ya’ know, hey!! We moved south from Milwaukee a decade ago, and I was JUST thinking (a few weeks ago) how much I missed heading to the local pasty shop for lunch. It was always mobbed, but absolutely delicious and worth the wait. The last time we were in da UP, the US Women’s soccer team beat the Chinese for the championship. We were eating Pasties at a downtown bar… Fond memories.
I think most of the “authentic” pasties use lard in the crust, which adds that certain bit of artery-clogging yumminess you can only get in da UP! I’m gonna throw on a “Yoopers” CD, open a beer, think about deer camp, and make a big ol’ batch of dese-here pasties!!
Sherri E. says
Mmmmm! These somewhat remind me of the Louisiana meat pies– aka Natchitoches meat pies– that I grew up with. Of course, I think ours are an inheritance from West Africa by way of Jamaica, but still….
Leah says
This is so funny and makes me feel so cozy. I’m originally from Marquette, MI and we enjoyed many Jean Kay Pasties. Thanks for taking me back!
Cheri weeks says
I make these with ground turkey, sweet potatoes, red onions and curry powder, yum!
pink bowl says
oooohhh, I LOVE pasties! Grew up on em, even as a troll! Grandma had a cottage up but we lived we lived under the bridge.We used to be be able to get as trolls but thats nearly impossible now. You gotta cross big Mac to get the good ones. I’ve never made them and Albies just aren’t the same. You know, Albies actually puts broccoli theirs. Can’t you go to jail for that? Thanks for sharing, I’m going to make em next week!
Noel says
Pasties are my all time favorite comfort food. My grandma’s recipe is cubed beef & potatoes with shredded rutabaga and onion. KETCHUP….and lots of it…. is required though. 🙂
Heather says
Well, I’m posting again, because I”d like to be entered, and I’d definately like to see some more fried chocolate covered cricket recipes. . . Ok, not really. I enjoy frugal speedy recipes and recipes that I can make in bulk and freeze for later. 🙂
Candace says
I love reading FWF!
The variety is great but a few more quick recipies is always appreciated.
Hot Garlic says
YAY! How exciting!
And thanks for the cultural learning explanation. As a Westerner I wouldn’t have known any of this and a big LOL about the paysties. Hilarious!
Okay, they look unbelievably tasty {pronounced T-A-STY} no matter what they are called!
Ann says
yum, comfort food! I love that you use rutabaga in them — the lowly rutabaga is an underappreciated vegetable! I will have to try this recipe!
Congratulations on your 100th Post!
Cindy says
mmmm….I was thinking about pasties just the other day, even though the weather does not match the season here (It was 80 today!) We moved to Baltimore from MI a little over a year ago and I don’t know what my chances are of finding a pasty around here. I will have to try this recipe and make them for myself. I would love the pastry recipe you use with it too.
Congrats on the 100th post!
Heather says
Yum. My Mom used to make a version of these when I was a kid. (we’re Scottish and Irish) We didn’t smother ours with ketchup though. 😉
Congratulations on your 100th post!!