Bready or Not: Pecan-Whiskey Pumpkin Pie
This Pecan-Whiskey Pumpkin Pie is FANCY. It looks fancy, and let me assure you, it tastes fancy.
I’m relieved that the results are amazing, because honestly, this is the most complicated pumpkin pie recipe I have ever made.
I’m used to the basic, yummy Libby’s pie. This pie is substantially more intimidating, but doable.
I found the original recipe in the November 2019 issue of Bon Appetit. I do not like how the original recipe is written. It’s confusing at several points. Therefore, I largely rewrote it, creating what (I hope) is a more straightforward version.
But it is still complicated. I suggest making the pie crust a day ahead, just to avoid dirtying everything all at once.
The end result is a pumpkin pie with a custard that is delicately firm and soft, with nuanced spices that perfectly complement the candied pecans on top.
This is a pie to make to impress people. Truly, this is a Bake Off showstopper kind of pie.
Recipe heavily rewritten from original in Bon Appetit November 2019.
Bready or Not: Pecan-Whiskey Pumpkin Pie
Equipment
- deep dish pie pan
- parchment paper
- pie weights
- immersion blender or blender
Ingredients
Crust
- 1 3/4 cups all-purpose flour
- 1 Tablespoon white sugar
- 3/4 teaspoon kosher salt
- 3/4 cup unsalted butter (1 1/2 sticks) cold, cut into pieces
- 3/4 cup ice water
- 1 large egg white reserve yolk to use in pie filling
Pecan Topping
- 1 1/2 cups whole pecans
- 2 Tablespoons brown sugar packed
- pinch kosher salt
- 1 Tablespoon unsalted butter melted
- 1 Tablespoon pure maple syrup
Pumpkin Pie
- 3 large eggs
- 1 egg yolk
- 15 oz pure pumpkin puree
- 3/4 cup heavy cream
- 1/4 cup white sugar
- 2 Tablespoons rye whiskey
- 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
- 1 teaspoon ground ginger
- 1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
- 1/4 teaspoon ground cardamom
- pinch ground cloves
- 6 Tablespoons brown sugar packed
- 2 Tablespoons unsalted butter melted
- 1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
Instructions
Make the crust
- Note that the dough can be made as days in advance and kept chilled. The crust can also be baked a day or two before the pie is finished; keep it covered at room temperature in the meantime.
- Whisk together flour, sugar, and salt. Add butter and coat it with flour, then use fingers to press butter into shaggy pieces of varying sizes. Drizzle in about 5 Tablespoons of cold water and knead it into flour. Add additional small increments of water until dough just starts to come together. There should still be visible pieces of butter.
- Dump dough onto a clean, lightly-floured surface and knead a few more times to work in any dry, shaggy bits. Form the dough into an even, broad disc and encase in plastic wrap. Tuck inside fridge to chill for at least 30 minutes, or up to 3 days.
- To blind-bake crust, preheat oven at 400-degrees.
- On a floured surface, roll out dough to make about an even 12-inch round. Loop it over the rolling pin to lift it onto a deep dish pie plate. Shape it into pan. Form the crust edge as desired and trim away any excess dough.
- Line the inside of the crust with parchment paper. Fill entire crust with pie weights, such as dry beans.
- Bake until the edges of the crust start to brown, about 20 minutes. Use parchment to lift out pie weights and set aside to cool--do so with great care!
- Decrease the oven temperature to 350-degrees, and continue to bake for another 20 to 25 minutes. While it is baking, separate an egg; place the white in a bowl and beat it slightly, and reserve the yolk in fridge to use for the pie filling.
- Remove crust from oven. Immediately brush a tablespoon of egg white over the bottom, which will help it resist going soggy once the filling is added. Return crust to oven for another 5 to 10 minutes. Reserve the remaining egg white for use in the pie.
- At this point, the recipe can proceed to the filling stage, or the crust can cool completely and be covered to sit at room temperature for a few days.
Filling
- Heat oven at 350-degrees; set a baking sheet inside oven at heat up, too.
- While mixing the filling ingredients, toast the pecans on a foil-lined rimmed baking sheet for about 8 to 10 minutes, stirring them once at the halfway point. The pecan should be a little darker and fragrant.
- If using an immersion blender, combine the following ingredients in an even-bottomed large pot (a slow cooker pot works for this) or use a large blender (in two batches, if needed). Combine eggs, egg yolk, pumpkin puree, heavy cream, and white sugar. Add the whiskey, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, cardamom, cloves, 6 Tablespoons brown sugar, 2 Tablespoons melted butter, and kosher salt. Blend until smooth.
- Pour into crust and bake until the filling is puffed and mostly set--a little wobble is okay--about 40 to 45 minutes.
- While that is finishing up, coat the pecans. Pull out the leftover egg white and whisk in 2 Tablespoons brown sugar and kosher salt. Add maple syrup and Tablespoon of melted butter, stirring until just combined. Add the pecans and toss to coat.
- Carefully use baking sheet to bring out the pie. Use a slotted spoon to add the pecans on top of the pumpkin, letting the excess egg white slurry stay in the bowl.
- Return pie to oven. Bake until filling is completely set, until a butter knife stabbed into center (avoiding pecans) comes out clean. This can take anywhere from 10 to 30 minutes. If necessary, cover the edge of crust with foil to prevent overbrowning.
- Let pie cool at least 2 hours before cutting in, chilling first if desired. Store pie loosely covered by foil at room temperature or in fridge.
OM NOM NOM!
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Bready or Not Original: Mixed Nut Bars
This has been a nutty year. Time to make it nutty in a delicious way with these Mixed Nut Bars.
The amount of nuts here is the equivalent of the can size found in many American stores, but I buy my nuts in bulk. (I’m cheap like that.)
Use whatever combination of nuts you like. I would recommend having at least two kinds mixed in, to make it fun. Really, throw in what you like.
If you’ve followed Bready or Not for a while, you know I love caramel chips. They are awesome in this recipe! They make these bars sweet without it being overkill.
Make this to share with numerous folks. You essentially end up with a 13×9 pan of little candy bars. I imagine that they will keep well for days or even a week, but I can’t testify as to how long. When my husband took these to his work (in those halcyon days when that was allowed), they were gone in hours.
Bready or Not Original: Mixed Nut Bars
Equipment
- 13x9 pan
Ingredients
Dough
- 1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
- 3/4 cup brown sugar packed
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 1/2 cup unsalted butter 1 stick
Nutty layer
- 11 1/2 ounces mixed nuts
- 1 cup caramel chips plus extra 1/2 cup for top, optional
- 2 Tablespoons unsalted butter
- 1/2 cup light corn syrup
- 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
Instructions
- Preheat oven at 350-degrees. Line a 13x9 pan with aluminum foil and apply nonstick spray.
- In a small bowl, stir together flour, sugar, and salt. Cut in the cube of butter until it resembles coarse crumbs. Dump into prepared pan and compress into an even layer; a strip of waxed paper and a heavy glass make this easier.
- Bake base layer for 10 to 12 minutes, until it looks set. Sprinkle nuts over the baked dough.
- In the microwave, melt 1 cup caramel chips with the 2 Tablespoons butter by cooking for 20 second increments and stirring well between each pass, until smooth. Stir in corn syrup and vanilla extract. Pour over the nuts to cover as much as possible.
- Bake for 12 minutes. If adding extra caramel chips, do so now, covering any thinner areas atop crust. Bake another 5 minutes.
- Cool completely at room temperature. Use foil sling to lift contents onto a large cutting board. Slice into bars.
- Store at room temperature in sealed containers.
OM NOM NOM!
Bready or Not Original: Spiced Maple Macadamia Nut Cookies
These Spiced Maple Macadamia Nut Cookies mix maple sweetness and warm spices and chocolate with the wonderful crunch of macadamias. They are perfect for fall–and throughout the year.
A food processor will be a big help in this recipe. The nuts and chocolate need to be in fine slivers. If the chunks are too big, the sliced cookies won’t be cohesive.
These are fridge cookies. Form the dough into tube shapes, wrap up well, then stash them in the fridge or freezer. Then thaw, slice, and bake when you need cookies.
If you do the full batch at once, you’ll likely get a lot of cookies, depending on your tube size and how you slice them. I got about 70 cookies.
These are perfect cookies to warm up your belly on a cool autumn or winter night (or in Arizona, to make-believe in such a temperature shift).
Bready or Not Original: Spiced Maple Macadamia Nut Cookies
Equipment
- food processor
Ingredients
- 1 1/2 cups unsalted butter 3 sticks, room temperature
- 1/2 cup white sugar
- 3/4 cup real maple syrup
- 4 cups all-purpose flour
- 3 teaspoons ground ginger
- 3 teaspoons ground cinnamon
- 1 teaspoon allspice
- 1/2 teaspoon ground cloves
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1 1/2 teaspoons baking soda
- 1 cup macadamia nuts
- 3/4 cup chocolate chips semisweet or dark or mixture
- 1/3 cup candied ginger finely chopped
Instructions
- In a food processor or by knife, finely chop macadamia nuts, followed by the chocolate chips. Set aside. (If these are not in fine pieces, the dough will fall apart when sliced.)
- In a large bowl, cream together butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Beat in maple syrup.
- In a separate bowl, stir together the flour, spices, salt, and baking soda. Gradually work this into the creamed mixture. Fold in the nuts, chocolate, and candied ginger until incorporated.
- Divide dough in half and shape into foot-long logs. Encase in plastic wrap. Chill at least two hours, or freeze for later baking.
- Preheat oven at 350-degrees. Unwrap log and cut dough into 1/4-inch thick medallions, reshaping with fingers as needed. Place spaced out on parchment-covered cookie sheet.
- Bake for 10 to 12 minutes, until set with a firm, golden base. Cool on pan for 5 minutes then move to rack to completely cool.
- Cookies keep for at least 3 days in sealed containers at room temperature.
OM NOM NOM!
Bready or Not Original: Hazelnut Hand Cake [cake mix]
Doctor up a basic yellow cake mix box into an amazing Hazelnut Hand Cake!
It’s called hand cake because it’s convenient to eat without a knife and fork. Heck, napkins are optional, if you don’t mind a dropped crumb or two.
This cake has a mild chocolate flavor–milder than that of a typical chocolate cake, from a mix or not. Nutella (or use a store-brand equivalent, as I did) is whipped into the batter, with some extra chocolate chips adding a gentle layer of flavor.
This thing is all about convenience. The cake comes together fast. Bakes fast. Give it some initial time to cool at room temp, then stash it in the fridge, and you can eat it even faster.
The end result is a cake with a soft, high, very moist crumb. The scattered nuts and toffee add extra flavor and crunch.
My husband’s co-workers inhaled this cake. One guy said it was the best Cato treat ever. Considering the goodies that come their way, that is high praise indeed.
Bready or Not Original: Hazelnut Hand Cake [cake mix]
Equipment
- 13x9 pan
Ingredients
- 1 box yellow cake mix
- 3 large eggs
- 2/3 cup water
- 2/3 cup Nutella or similar hazelnut spread
- 1/4 cup canola oil or vegetable oil
- 1/2 cup semisweet chocolate chips
- 1/2 cup chopped hazelnuts toasted or not
- 1/2 cup Heath toffee bits
- confectioners' sugar to dust top, optional
Instructions
- Preheat oven at 350-degrees. Line a 13x9-inch pan with foil and apply nonstick spray.
- In a large bowl, beat together the cake mix, eggs, water, hazelnut spread, and oil for several minutes, until thoroughly combined and no lumps remain. Fold in the chocolate chips, hazelnuts, and toffee bits. Pour batter into prepared pan.
- Bake for 25 to 30 minutes, until center is no longer jiggly and passes the toothpick test.
- Cool completely to room temperature; place in fridge to speed process along. Use foil to lift contents onto cutting board. If desired, sprinkle confectioners' sugar over top. Slice into pieces.
- Store in sealed container(s) at room temperature.
OM NOM NOM!
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Bready or Not Original: Cardamom Cashew-Walnut Butter
This is a two-for-one Bready or Not posts: recipes for Cardamom Cashew-Walnut Butter, for both small and large food processors.
For the past few years, I had an 8-cup Cuisinart food processor. The thing was great, but as I tried more recipes, I found that most were designed for a larger food processor. Darn.
So when Costco advertised a Cuisinart double the size, I circled the ad and shoved it toward my husband, saying, “This is what I want for Christmas.”
After overcoming my initial anxiety about operating the darn thing (blades and pieces galore! confusing!), I delighted in the increased capacity. Now I can make bigger batches of stuff like nut butter!
This recipe is a particular favorite of mine. I created the original small batch recipe for my old unit, and then modified it for the shiny new machine.
You can substitute other nuts in the recipe, but the mixing time may be different. Almonds are harder, and take longer to process.
Also check out my Maple Nut Butter recipe!
Bready or Not Original: Cardamom Cashew-Walnut Butter [Small Batch]
Equipment
- 8-cup food processor
Ingredients
- 1 1/2 cups cashews
- 1 cup walnuts
- 1/2 teaspoon sea salt
- 1 Tablespoon honey
- 1/2 teaspoon ground cardamom
- 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
Instructions
- If the nuts are unroasted, roast them first for a boost of flavor. Line a rimmed baking sheet with foil and preheat oven at 350 degrees. Spread cashews and walnuts in an even layer. Bake for about 6 minutes, whereupon they should smell pleasantly toasty. Let cool at least 30 minutes before continuing with next step.
- Fit processor with an S-shaped blade inside. Pour in cashews, walnuts, and sea salt. Process for about 5 to 10 minutes, stopping sporadically to scrape sides. The nut butter is done when the mixture looks smooth and flows over the blades like a thick river.
- Add the honey, ground cardamom, and vanilla. Process another two minutes to incorporate.
- Place nut butter in a clean glass jar (or jars). Store sealed at room temperature for as long as a year. Some separation of nuts and oil is natural--just stir them together again, if needed. If the nut butter dries out, warm what is needed in a microwave-safe bowl to make it spreadable.
OM NOM NOM!
Bready or Not Original: Cardamom Cashew-Walnut Butter [Large Batch]
Equipment
- 16-cup food processor
Ingredients
- 3 cups cashews
- 2 cup walnuts
- 1 teaspoon sea salt
- 2 Tablespoon honey
- 1 teaspoon ground cardamom
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Instructions
- If the nuts are unroasted, roast them first for a boost of flavor. Line a rimmed baking sheet with foil and preheat oven at 350 degrees. Spread cashews and walnuts in an even layer. Bake for about 6 minutes, whereupon they should smell pleasantly toasty. Let cool at least 30 minutes before continuing with next step.
- Fit processor with an S-shaped blade inside. Pour in cashews, walnuts, and sea salt. Process for about 5 to 10 minutes, stopping sporadically to scrape sides. The nut butter is done when the mixture looks smooth and flows over the blades like a thick river.
- Add the honey, ground cardamom, and vanilla. Process another two minutes to incorporate.
- Place nut butter in a clean glass jar (or jars). Store sealed at room temperature for as long as a year. Some separation of nuts and oil is natural--just stir them together again, if needed. If the nut butter dries out, warm what is needed in a microwave-safe bowl to make it spreadable.
- OM NOM NOM!