APPLETON’S Butchers is marking its 150th anniversary by creating a special edition celebration pie using York ham and rose veal.

The pie will be available to customers in the shop it opened last year in Lendal, from August 14-18.

Appleton’s is best-known for its handmade pork pies and pork products like cured whole hams, sausage rolls, Scotch eggs and faggots.

Owner Anthony Sterne said: “Reaching our 150th anniversary is a very proud moment for Appleton’s. Despite the sad decline of many butcher’s shops in Britain in the past few years, we are lucky to be supported by fantastic loyal customers, who come to Appleton’s for high welfare local meat, prepared with care and great service.

"We have created the anniversary pie using a recipe resurrected from the Appleton’s vaults, and we hope many of our customers will join in our celebrations and try it next week.”

Last year Appleton’s opened the shop in York, returning a traditional pork butcher to the city walls for the first time in years.

Since opening, the family behind Appleton’s now rear their own Yorkshire pigs on their farm and have produced their first home reared York ham. Dry salted in two stages and air dried for two months before being cooked, it’s the quintessential British ham, with a distinctive pear shape and fatty covering.

You can try making your own celebration veal and ham pie with the recipe below:

VEAL AND HAM PIE RECIPE

For an oval pie mould measuring 9cm deep, 22cm long and 12cm wide.

Ingredients

Pastry

570g plain flour

270g lard

1 heaped teaspoon salt

170ml boiling hot water

Filling

500g Boiled York Ham

500g Veal Shoulder

300g fatty pork belly (rindless)

1 onion finely chopped and sweated in a knob of butter.

1 sprig sage leaves

1 tsp mace

Salt and pepper

Jelly

If you can get a couple of pigs trotters add them to the ham cooking water with an onion, carrot and bouquet garni. Skim the surface during cooking to remove any scum and strain once the ham has been removed. Once cooled this should set.

Alternatively add gelatine leaves or powder to the ham stock according to the packet instructions once the ham has been removed and the stock strained.

You’ll need about ½ pint of jelly for the pie.

To make the pastry crumb 100g of lard into the plain flour and salt using your fingertips. Melt the remaining 170g lard in a saucepan over a low flame. It should be hot enough that when you flick a drop of water into the lard it sizzles. Boil 170ml water in a separate pan. Using a tabletop mixer fitted with a dough hook (or a large heatproof bowl and wooden spoon) gradually add the hot lard and boiling water to the flour mixing vigorously until all the water is thoroughly mixed in.

The pastry should cool for a good hour before using although it’s best not letting it get too cold.

To make the filling chop everything up into small pieces (1cm cubes) and mix together.

To assemble the pie take ¾ of the pastry and roll into a ball. Place in the bottom of the pie tin and carefully but firmly flatten out over the bottom and sides of the tin using your fingers. Try and ensure an even thickness and plug any cracks with more pastry.

The ends of the pastry should hang over the lip of the tin. Now put the tin in the fridge for 20 minutes for the pastry to harden.

Meanwhile roll out the remaining ¼ of the pastry to form the lid.

Put the pie filling into the tin using wet hands to stop it sticking and tamping down to avoid any air pockets. The filling should be domed above the sides of the tin. Brush the pastry rim with water and place the lid on top. Cut off excess pastry and crimp. Decorate if you like and cut in a hole in which you can pour the jelly. Brush with an egg yolk and water glaze.

Bake at 190oC for 20 minutes then turn the oven down to 160 oC for a further 30 minutes until the pie is an even, golden colour.

Cool for at least 30 mins before carefully taking out of the pie tin. Cool for a further hour at least, before filling with warm jelly.