Pasty’s

s&wchad

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… and just what were you expecting?
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They're fairly common in Michigan. These were made with some leftover corned beef, but you can use any meat you want. Not much to it, Martha Stewart's pie crust recipe, carrots, potato, rutabaga, onion, a little butter and some spices. Yummy!
 

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I'm going snowmobiling in the U.P. in a few weeks with the Son. I grew up there & will take a few back home with us. Just a little ketchup & your good to go.
 
Many years ago there was a Guinden cartoon of two tourists going to a UP pasty shop. The conversation went

"Can we look at a menu?"
"No".

You have to appreciate a complete meal that can be wrapped in newspaper and is still edible four hours later.
 
I ate a bunch of them during my visit to England, Scotland and Wales. I love them!
 
Back in the early 60s I worked around hancock/holton michigan. Never heard of them until then. Got to likeing them. Never did try those saunas and getting switched in a snowbank though!
 
Pasty's

Sourdough44; If you are close to Ontonagon go to Syl's and see if they are serving them. The pasties there are as good as home-made. When in Marquette area try Lawry's on U.S. 41 not as good as Syl's but very tasty. If you have room on the engine in your vehicle warp them in foil and set them on the engine. That will keep them toasty and tasty. I wish I hadn't read this, now I want a pasty.

Stinger
 
We make pasties from my grandma's recipe, with a mixture of diced beef and pork. Venision and pork make a great pasty too, but if you don't kill a deer in November you are stuck with beef and pork.

Vegetables are spuds, rutabagas, and onions.
No carrots! I think carrots make them taste too sweet.

Some folks (usually older) like buttermilk on the side. Some put gravy on pasties. I have tried buttermilk alongside but don't favor it.
No gravy either, please.

My brother used to drive up from Florida and stop at the first pasty shop in Iron Mountain.
"Then I knew I was back in the U.P.," he said.
On the way out he'd stop there again.
"Then I knew I was leaving the U.P."
 
The original Cornish Pastie had a thick "ridge" of pastry around it.

Idea was that the coal miners can hold the ridge and eat the rest without eating worrying about having hands covered in dirt/coal.
 
The wife and I were just discussing pasties the other day. Needless to say, you can't buy a pastie in Tennessee. We're gonna have to make some and, if I take one to work and heat it in the microwave for lunch, I should draw a crowd.

Nothing smells better than a hot pastie - meat, taters, onions -- it's got it all!
 
My mother-in-law used to make them for her sons when they went hunting in northern Minnesota. They'd stay warm until lunch time if put in the pocket of your mackinaw, wrapped in newspaper.
 
Pasties

Superb and heartwarming [and heart-clogging if made the way my grandmother made them]! They were working man food in England, among other places, along with roasted potatoes sold on the street [first you warmed your hands and then your insides, per my grandfather, born 1883] and fish & chips sold in newspaper.

Cousin in Essex, England extolls pasties' praises still.

Regards,

Dyson
 
Pot pies are a poor distant cousin of the pastie.

I'll pass on the Mackinaw pasties -- I bought a frozen pastie in Dearborn a few years ago and I woudn't have fed it to a dog. There used to be a GREAT pastie shop in Dearborn near Adray's -- Fox's Pastie Shop. Sadly they're gone now.
 
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My maternal grandfather was a miner in Bisbee, Arizona, and this family dish has now been handed down for four generations, still the favorite in my household. These were always referred to as "Cousin Jack Pastys." The Cousin Jacks were the Cornish miners that came over from England, and that's where the dish originated. We make it with steak cut into small cubes, potatoes, onions, and plenty of butter. Best when broken up on your plate and dashed with lots of garlic salt and black pepper. Nothing finer. I understand that the upper peninsula of Michigan is a breeding ground for this taste treat, 'cause they have a lot of miners there. There are a couple of restaurants here in Arizona, one in Tempe, and one in Mesa, that serve them. Try the Cornish Pasty Company, located at 960 W. University in Tempe. They have a lot of variety on the theme. BTW, "Pasty" is pronounced "pass-tee" which distinguishes it from an item of stripper apparel.
 
Glad you cleared it up how to pronounce pasties, Paladin. This dog-gone thread is sure making me hungry for one. I might have to run uptown to the Pasty Shop for supper -- wife is in Mesa visiting her folks.
 
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