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Pasties are a great way to take whatever vegetables, meat, and cheese that need using and turn it into a tasty meal. (Stir fry is another good way to do this).
Flexible recipes like this are great to have on hand if you have a few bits and pieces from the garden to use up, if you’re trying to rely on as much homegrown food as possible and want to work with what you have, or if you’re trying to clean out the fridge.
The whole grain sourdough pie crust that I use for these is so tasty, easily digested, and easy to make, but you can use any kind of homemade pastry that you’d use for savoury pies.
These pasties can be made from any kind of leftover roast meat, ground beef, or no meat at all. You can use leftover cooked vegetables, or raw vegetables.
When working with leftover meat, firstly think about any spices or herbs you have used on the meat, and what might compliment that. Onions or leeks are always a good thing to add, along with any kind of root vegetable or cooking greens.
The key to making really excellent pasties from whatever meat and vegetables need using up is to taste the mixture towards the end of cooking and decide if it needs anything extra: usually they will need a dash more salt, but you can add any flavour that seems right – spices, herbs, leftover gravy, tomato sauceanything!
Use any combination of cheeses you like (feta goes very well in meat-free pasties). Taste your pasty filling and decide at the least minute which kind of herbs and spices would work in it – feel free to use curry spices, caraway, Italian, herbs, or any other flavouring.
Diced vegetables are really lovely with all kinds of meat. Use leftover gravy, tomatoes, or a dash of broth, and feel free to add any fresh herbs you like, or some curry spices.
For vegetarian pasties, the classic feta cheese with greens combination works beautifully, or a mix of ricotta and hard cheese with any kind of vegetable. Feel free to add in some cooked chickpeas or other legumes and play around with spices. I really like adding some caraway seeds to these, but curry spices and all kinds of fresh herbs go well too.

Pasties can be served hot or cold and are a perfect year-round staple homestead meal. Feel free to make some the day beforehand and serve them cold for a picnic or shared lunch at any time of the year, or serve them straight from of the oven on a cold day.
Pasties are great served on their own, but I like to serve them with some fermented vegetables or salad on the side, often with a little relish, chutney, or sauce on top.
• Your favourite pie crust dough (1 double crust worth of dough will make 4 to 6 pasties – which will serve around 2 people for a meal, or more for a snack. Double or halve your pie crust recipe to serve more or less people). I use the sourdough pie crust from my free sourdough discard recipe ebook.
• Onions or leeks – around 1 large onion for every 4 people.
• Optional meat – either ground meat/mince, chopped leftover roast, leftover pulled pork, anything. Use whatever you’d normally use in a meal, or use less and add some cheese as well.
• Vegetables of your choice – either fresh or leftover cooked ones, such as carrot, parsnip, turnip, swede/rutabaga, zucchini, pumpkin/winter squash, kale, silverbeet, other leafy greens.
• Optional cheese of your choice (use lots of this if you’re not using much meat)
Make your favourite pie crust dough and get it resting in a cool place while you make the filling.
Sauté some onions or leeks in tallow until tender and fragrant. If you’re using meat, add this straight after the onions. Throw in whatever vegetables you are using and continue to cook while stirring until they soften. Stir through some greens, if using, then allow the mixture to cool down a bit. Add a little salt, to taste, but go easy on it if you’ll be adding cheese later, as this will add some salt of its own.
If you’re making meat-free pasties, add feta cheese or ricotta and crumble it up into lots of small pieces. When it’s cooled a bit more, stir through some optional grated mozzarella or hard cheese, and herbs or spices of your choice. If the mixture seems really dry, you can add some egg or a dash of leftover gravy or tomatoes, but you don’t want it to be swimming in sauce.
Preheat the oven to around 200ºC (400ºF).
Divide your pastry dough into as many pasties as you’ll be making. Roll each one out into a circle and transfer the circles to a floured cookie sheet. Add the filling to each circle, seal, then prick with a fork a few times to allow steam to escape.
Bake for around 30 minutes, or until the pastry is starting to brown at the edges.
I often make these with kale, feta, and caraway seeds. Or with beef mince and root vegetables. The ones in the photo are made from a mix of onion, zucchini, dandelion greens, feta, and mozzarella. You can use leftover roast meat, any kind of vegetable, and mix through leftover gravies and sauces too.
Serve on their own, or with some relish, sauce, or chutney.








Pasties (or savoury hand pies) are portable, sealed pastries filled with a savoury mix of meat, vegetables, and/or cheese. They’re perfect for homestead meals, picnics, or turning random ingredients into a proper meal.
I use my whole grain sourdough pie crust (the one from my free sourdough discard ebook) because it’s tasty and easy to digest. You can use any homemade savoury pie pastry. One double-crust batch of dough usually makes 4–6 pasties (serve 2 to 3 pasties per hungry adult for a meal, or less if it’s a snack).
My favourites include kale + feta + caraway, beef mince + root vegetables, or onion + zucchini + dandelion greens + feta + mozzarella.
Prep: 15 minutes Cook: ~40 minutes Servings: 4 (makes 4–6 pasties)
Yes — they are delicious hot or cold. I often make them the day before for picnics or lunches.
On their own or with fermented vegetables, salad, relish, chutney, or sauce. They’re great hot straight from the oven on cold days or cold for a picnic lunch.
A rolling pin (or glass bottle), 1–2 cookie sheets, and a fork for pricking. Bake on floured cookie sheets.
Kate Downham has been growing, preserving, and cooking real food since 2007. She is the author of four books on homestead skills: A Year in an Off-Grid Kitchen, Natural Small Batch Cheesemaking, Backyard Dairy Goats, and Sourdough Without Fail.
Off-grid with her family of nine in the Tasmanian forest, Kate milks her own goats, makes all their cheese, mills all her own grain, and bakes fresh sourdough bread daily.






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