The best pasties can be found in the U.P. and Northern Minnesota. MMMMMM, a rutabaga pastie and a bottle of ketchup.
I can't figure that one out, Minnesota? OK I guess.
Yea ketsup and a good size pastie, nothing better on a cold day.
Ark, they are not well known outside of the great lakes for some reason. I have found them in Arizona (made by a Mexican who told me she learned from her 'english' grandmother), I found them in PA, I found them in of all places Tampa, the same place that I get my cubanos from.
I grew up on them (maybe why I am fat?), was taught to make them from scratch on a wood range (which by todays standards is really hard) and still miss them - there is no place to get them here that are of any quality. They are meat pies... well sort of... some use just onions, potatoes, and a swede (rutabaga) with salt and pepper added some add carrots and some even things I don't want to think about. While the purists don't ever use carrots, the Cornish who were the miners here in the north brought them here when they came in the mid 1800s. I had some made by Finlanders which were... well.... good.
Layout, the reason they landed here was because in the late 20's a lot of miners left the copper country and migrated here to work in the auto plants. I had a distant cousin who opened up a bake shop in the 30's selling them to the salt miners, she claimed (don't know if this is true) that she and her freind were in competing bake shop and were the first ones to bring them here. I would think they were here before but who knows?
If you go to Han**** in the UP of michigan, there is a place you have go to Kaleva Cafe on main street (Quincy), they serve the closest thing to the way they should be made and lets not forget if you can make it there for the Pastie Fest in Calumet, it will be June 27, '09..... yum.....