Easy Mince Pie Slice Traybake Recipe - What the Redhead said (2024)

Baking Recipes | Recipes

ByDonna Wishart

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Any regular reader will know that I love finding alternative ways to use mincemeat and my latest creation is this mincemeat slice tray bake. It has all the flavours of Christmas mince pies but feels like a much more decadent bake and makes a nice change from making mince pies over the festive season.

Easy Mince Pie Slice Traybake Recipe - What the Redhead said (1)

Mince pie slices are something I would happily eat through the spring summer autumn winter. It’s a shame I can only buy mincemeat through December! However, I have started making Slow Cooker Mincemeat so I always have a supply to hand and can make this easy mincemeat tray bake whenever I like!

I’ve got used to buying a couple of extra jars at Christmas just so that I can enjoy all the festive flavours at the start of the new year too. I love the fruit, the mixed spice and the pastry and cake combination of this slice recipe. It’s so moreish and one the whole family love. If you love mincemeat, you’ll need to try this traybake using mincemeat.

Easy Mince Pie Slice Traybake Recipe - What the Redhead said (2)

How do you slice these Mincemeat Slices?

When the traybake cake comes out of the oven it has a rustic unfinished edge to it. I slice the edges off before cutting the cake into prettier slices and we then have that served with custard for a really homely and easy dessert, a great crumble alternative!

Easy Mince Pie Slice Traybake Recipe - What the Redhead said (3)

This festive mincemeat traybake recipe makes a great alternative to a standard mincemeat sponge cake recipe and can be made in a food processor or by hand like with all our baking recipes. I love using the mixer as it cuts down the time involved but I always fold the ground almonds in by hand, making sure enough air stays in the mix. Once baked, it keeps well in an airtight container for a few days.

Easy Mince Pie Slice Traybake Recipe - What the Redhead said (4)

If you’re looking for other delicious Christmas recipes as an alternative to traditional mince pies or Christmas cake, why not try our Mincemeat Loaf Cake, Mince Pie Bakewell Tarts, Mince Pie Cookies or Mincemeat Flapjack? You can see all our mincemeat themed recipes here. We’re planning a Mincemeat Streusel Slice and a Mincemeat Crumble Slice next – I’ll keep you updated.

So here’s our Mince Pie Slice recipe

Ingredients:

  • Shortcrust pastry sheet
  • 100g unsalted butter or margarine
  • 125g caster sugar or golden caster sugar works well too
  • 3 eggs
  • 1 tsp of almond extract
  • 150g ground almonds
  • 80g self raising flour
  • 200g mincemeat
  • 20g flaked almonds

To decorate:

  • Icing sugar
Easy Mince Pie Slice Traybake Recipe - What the Redhead said (5)

Recipe:

  • Preheat oven to 180C/350F/Gas 4
  • Grease or line a deep baking tray or oven dish with baking paper or baking parchment before lining with pastry.
  • Spread the mincemeat over the pastry base.
  • Cream the butter and sugar in a large mixing bowl. Add the eggs and almond extract and beat well.
  • Fold in the ground almonds and flour and pour the mixture on top of the mincemeat inside the pastry case.
  • Top with flaked almonds.
  • Bake in the centre of the preheated oven for 30 minutes or until golden brown.
  • Leave to cool and mix icing sugar with a little water. Drizzle on top of the cooled bake.
  • Slice and serve.

If you’d like to pin or print this Mince Pie Slice recipe for later you can do so below. Happy baking!

Easy Mince Pie Slice Traybake Recipe - What the Redhead said (6)

Print Pin

Mince Pie Slice recipe

Mince pie slices are something I would happily eat through the spring summer autumn winter. It’s a shame I can only buy mincemeat through December! I’ve got used to buying a couple of extra jars at Christmas just so that I can enjoy all the festive flavours at the start of the new year too. I love the fruit, the mixed spice and the pastry and cake combination of this slice recipe. It’s so moreish and one the whole family love.

Course Afternoon Tea, Dessert, Snack

Cuisine British

Prep Time 10 minutes minutes

Cook Time 30 minutes minutes

Servings 15 slices

Calories 208kcal

Ingredients

  • 1 Shortcrust pastry sheet
  • 100 g butter
  • 125 g caster sugar
  • 3 eggs
  • 1 tsp almond extract
  • 150 g ground almonds
  • 80 g self raising flour
  • 200 g mincemeat
  • 20 g flaked almonds

To decorate:

  • Icing sugar

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 180C/350F/Gas 4

  • Grease or line a deep baking tray or oven dish before lining with pastry.

  • Spread the mincemeat over the pastry base.

  • Cream the butter and sugar.

  • Add the eggs and almond extract and beat well.

  • Fold in the ground almonds and flour and pour on top of the mincemeat inside the pastry case.

  • Top with flaked almonds.

  • Bake in the centre of the oven for 30 minutes or until golden brown.

  • Leave to cool and mix icing sugar with a little water. Drizzle on top of the cooled bake.

  • Slice and serve.

*Note: Nutritional information is estimated, based on publicly available data. Nutrient values may vary from those published.

Easy Mince Pie Slice Traybake Recipe - What the Redhead said (7)
Easy Mince Pie Slice Traybake Recipe - What the Redhead said (2024)

FAQs

What shape were mince pies baked in originally? ›

They would have been served on important feast days such as Easter or Christmas (which were both preceded by lengthy fasts). As the pies were often baked in a rectangular shape, people began to associate them with the manger Jesus had laid in.

Why were mince pies coffin shape? ›

These were nothing like our mince pies of today. They were large, seriously large, and oblong as they were designed to serve a number of people. The pastry case, called a coffin, was just a container for the delicious filling and was never meant to be eaten – well not by the rich!

When making mince pies which way should you stir your mincemeat for good luck? ›

Even today there are traditions associated with mince pies. When making the mincemeat mixture for the pies, for good luck it should be stirred in a clockwise direction. You should always make a wish when eating the first mince pie of the season and you should never cut one with a knife.

Why is it mince pie? ›

The reason mincemeat is called meat is because that's exactly what it used to be: most often mutton, but also beef, rabbit, pork or game. Mince pies were first served in the early middle ages, and the pies were quite sizeable, filled with a mixture of finely minced meat, chopped up fruit and a preserving liquid.

What was the original filling for mince pie? ›

A pie full of spices and meat appears in 1390 in A Forme of Cury, an English cookbook originally written on a scroll, under the name “tartes of flesh”. To make these morsels, cooks were instructed to grind up pork, hard-boiled eggs, and cheese, before mixing them with spices, saffron, and sugar.

What did mince pies used to be called? ›

Mince pies were always a festive pie and eaten around Christmas time. Other names for mince pies include 'mutton pie', 'shrid pie' and 'Christmas pie. ' What has changed dramatically is the mince pie recipe, having begun as savoury pies filled with minced meat, suet, dried fruits, spices cloves and nutmeg.

What is a coffin pie? ›

A coffin or coffyn referred to a container made of pastry, a precursor of the modern pie crust, and food was served in the coffin it had been cooked in. The first printed use of the word coffin as a box for a corpse appeared later, in the 16th century. ​ Historians trace pies back to ancient times.

What is the difference between mince pie and mincemeat pie? ›

A mince pie (also mincemeat pie in North America, and fruit mince pie in Australia and New Zealand) is a sweet pie of English origin filled with mincemeat, being a mixture of fruit, spices and suet. The pies are traditionally served during the Christmas season in much of the English-speaking world.

Why are mince pies only eaten at Christmas? ›

According to reports, medieval people believed that if you ate a mince pie every day between Christmas and Twelfth Night, you'd be brimming with luck and happiness for the next 12 months. While there may not be any truth in the old myth, the tradition of eating mince pies every Christmas has certainly stuck.

How many mince pies should you eat on the 12 days of Christmas? ›

Go with the tradition and eat a dozen

There is a tradition of eating one mince pie each day over the 12 days of Christmas from Christmas Eve to 5 January.

What is the best way to eat mince pies? ›

Hot, cold or slightly warmed. Top off or top on. Custard, cream, clotted cream, ice cream, brandy cream, brandy butter or, dare we say it, hard, crumbly cheese… The ways to serve a mince pie are practically endless.

How do you pimp up mincemeat? ›

Heat a pile of mincemeat in a pan with sugar, orange and lemon juice, orange peel, half a cinnamon stick and brandy, wait for it to thicken and then stir in some whipping cream.

Do they eat mince pies in America? ›

Mincemeat pie is a dish that isn't very common in the American kitchen, which can lead to some confusion for cooks, even those on the Allrecipes staff.

When did they stop putting meat in mince pies? ›

The exact time when meat was taken out of the mince pie recipe isn't clear. However in 1747, Hannah Glasse's cookbook featured a meatless mince pie recipe. By the Victorian era they became sweeter, resembling the modern mince pie we know and love today.

What ingredients are in a minced pie? ›

Image of What ingredients are in a minced pie?
Mincemeat is a mixture of chopped dried fruit, distilled spirits and spices, and often beef suet, usually used as a pie or pastry filling. Mincemeat formerly contained meat, notably beef or venison. Many modern recipes replace the suet with vegetable shortening.
Wikipedia

Were mince pies coffin shaped? ›

Early pies were much larger than those of today, and oblong shaped. "The coffin of our Christmas-Pies, in shape long, is in imitation of the Cratch" (Jesus's crib). In old English cookery books the crust of a pie is generally called 'the coffin'.

What were mince pies made of in Victorian times? ›

Ingredients included dried fruits like raisins prunes and figs, lamb or mutton (representing the shepherds) and spices like cinnamon, cloves and nutmeg (for the Wise Men). By late Victorian England, mince pies ceased to contain meat and had all fruit fillings (with suet).

When pies were first baked what purposes did the crust serve? ›

The Romans took the concept of pies even further. They would make a pastry of flour, oil and water to cover up meat but this was intended to preserve the juices and flavour of the filling and was not intended to be eaten. A Roman cookbook from the 1st Century, called Apicius, mentions recipes that include pie cases.

What odd ingredient did mince pies once contain? ›

Markham's recipe called for an entire leg of mutton and three pounds of suet which were mixed with salt, cloves, mace, currants, raisins, prunes, dates, and orange peel, a list of ingredients that, save for the meat, which is remarkably like that used today.

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