This isn't an idiom. Soggy means damp and moist, no longer crispy. This sounds like a dialect speech, talking about a pie that got soggy.
It is not an idiom. When you see "as ___ as ___" you are dealing with a simile, and those are just comparisons between two things. "As nice as pie" would be very nice, because pie is a nice, tasty dessert.
The origin of the idiom finger in every pie is unknown. The saying means being involved in a lot of things or knowing about a lot of things.
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Nothing. It's "finger in every pie," and it means he is involved in many different projects or things.
Wow Grandma, your apple pie is so good it blows Mom's apple pie out of the water!
There are several terms that mean easy. Easy as pie is one expression. The image is that making a pie is simple -- just toss some fruit on top of a crust and bake. Another expression is piece of cake -- again, the image is one of a dessert. Cake is fun to eat, so something that is a piece of cake would be fun and easy. Children often say "easy peasy" as a rhyming idiom. Some examples would be "That math problem was a piece of cake!," or "Riding a bike is easy as pie."
Some idioms in "Pie" by Sarah Weeks include "easy as pie" (meaning very easy), "pie in the sky" (referring to an unrealistic goal), and "as American as apple pie" (describing something quintessentially American).
In perfect order or condition or in tidy condition for example: everything was apple pie order
Nothing. However, to have a finger in every pie means that you have a lot of varied interests and business contacts.
There's not an idiom, but some slang terms include hog, chopper or bike.
Some do some don't it depends on what kind of pie.
It's not an idiom - it means a cup with some tea in it. NOT your cup of tea, however, is an idiom - it means that something is not to your liking or preference.