November is not cherry season, but you can still serve cherry pie in the fall. The trick is finding a recipe that makes good use of canned or frozen cherries. In this recipe, you mix canned pitted sour cherries with frozen raspberries to make Canned Cherry Berry Pie.
While you won’t get the firm texture of fresh, cherry-season cherries, the canned cherry and frozen raspberry combo has such a great flavor that combined with a good crust, will make most cherry pie lovers happy. Or at least the ones around here. We really enjoy this pie, and I love that the filling is so simple.
Canned cherries are pretty easy to come by, but sometimes finding frozen raspberries is tricky. They're usually available in the freezer section of the grocery store, but I remember one year we had to try 2 or 3 different grocery stores to find them. If you can't find frozen raspberries, there's another version of the pie that's not canned cherry berry pie, but rather frozen cherry and mixed berry pie. So the other pie is similar, but not quite the same. It's also one of my daughter's favorites.
Recipe
Canned Cherry-Berry Pie
Ingredients
- 1 9-inch unbaked pie crust, double crust (can use Pillsbury)
- 1 can 14 to 16 ounce can pitted tart cherries, drained, liquid reserved
- 12 oz package frozen raspberries, thawed, drained, juice reserved
- ⅔ cup granulated sugar
- ⅓ cup brown sugar lightly packed
- ¼ cup cornstarch
- ½ teaspoon almond extract
- ½ teaspoon vanilla extract
- 4 tablespoon softened regular butter
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 375 degrees F. Line a shallow 9-inch pie dish with one of the refrigerated pie dough circles.
- Combine half cup of cherry liquid and half cup of the raspberry juice to make one cup combined. Set the juice and fruit aside.
- Combine sugars and cornstarch in a small saucepan. Whisk in the 1 cup of fruit juice and cook over medium heat until thickened and bubbly. Cook and stir 2 minutes more. Remove from heat. Stir in almond extract, vanilla and soft butter. Stir in drained cherries and raspberries.
- Fill pie shell with cherry-berry mixture. Roll out second portion of dough into a 12 inch circle and cut into 1 inch strips. Arrange in a lattice pattern over cherry filling, weaving strips crosswise over and under lengthwise strips. Trim pastry strips even with edge of bottom crust. Fold bottom pastry over lattice strips and seal. Flute edge.
- Shield edges of pie with foil to prevent excess browning if you feel you need too. I didn’t. Set pie on a baking sheet and bake for 45 to 50 minutes until crust is golden brown. Remove foil strip during final 15 minutes of baking time.
- Let cool completely before serving.
Christie says
Beautiful pie, and I love the idea of making it for Thanksgiving...definitely a deviation from the pumpkin and apple pies, although I do love making those, too.
Anna says
Last time I made the pecan pie I used a foil pan, but normally I use a glass pan.
Clara, I think I'd pick the raspberries over the blackberries, but you can always experiment.
Clara Curtis says
Cherry pie is by far my favorite. Well, other than pumpkin, but cherry is a close-contender.
Are there any more other berry choices that will really compliment cherry? I'm wondering if blackberries would work too.
Gloria says
How about for the pecan pie? I used a disposable foil pan, but I just purchased a glass pan. And do you recommend aluminum over glass or visa versa? Thanks for your hellp!!!
Anna says
Gloria, I used a glass pie plate for this so they should be the same.
Gloria says
Do you know if there is any difference in baking times and temps if I use a glass pie plate?
Barbara says
Oh gosh! I'm gonna love this pie. Cherries AND raspberries? YUM.
Hendria says
The pie looks great....nice combo of fruit... 🙂
teresa says
That crust looks divine! And so does the filling.
Chris Mower says
*drooling*
katherine says
Wow Anna! What a beautiful pie. Cherry pie is the best.
Anna says
Louise, I do too.
Sue, this wasn't runny yesterday and it's even less runny today after having been refrigerated overnight. Thanks
Gloria, that baking sheet tip is a good one. I'll try it. Also, thanks for the comments on my pecan pie.
Katrina, it's our favorite too.....which is why I'm making it in November.
Dolce, I still need practice. Believe me ;).
Dolce says
Awww this looks really flaky and nice. Maybe you don't need at all new tutorial whatsoever now 🙂
Katrina says
Cherry is one of my favorites, but I love the idea of usings berries with it!
And your crust does look de-lish!
gloria says
This is not a comment about the pie that looks delicious. It is a comment about how I have learned to keep the crust from getting soggy. What works for me is to sprinkle a little bit of extra flour on the bottom of the pie crust once it is in the pan AND always preheat the baking sheet with the oven so the baking sheet is hot when you put the pie on it. I did this for Anna's Browned butter pecan pie last night and the crust stayed crisp even after being refrigerated!!!!!
Sue says
That looks really excellent! When I made a similar pie earlier this year I had some issues with a slightly runny filling, but yours looks like it was trouble free! Your lattice top is pretty too.
Louise says
That looks yummy. I wish I could drop by for a slice. 🙂