Pecan Pie
Updated Sept. 23, 2022

- Total Time
- 1 hour 45 minutes, plus several hours’ chilling
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 8ounces/222 grams French-style butter (82 percent fat), at room temperature
- ¾teaspoon/6 grams salt
- 2tablespoons/30 grams sugar
- 3cups/375 grams flour, sifted
- 4tablespoons/2 ounces/60 grams unsalted butter, at room temperature
- ½cup/118 milliliters mild honey, such as clover or acacia
- ¼cup/59 milliliters Lyle’s Golden Syrup
- 1teaspoon/5 milliliters vanilla extract
- 1tablespoon/15 milliliters dark rum
- ¼teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
- Pinch of salt
- 4extra-large eggs
- 2cups/235 grams shelled pecans
- Whipped cream or vanilla ice cream, for serving
For the Crust
For the Filling
Preparation
- Step 1
Mix butter, salt and sugar in a standing mixer on low speed for 1 minute. Add flour and mix on low speed just until ingredients come together. Add 6 tablespoons water and mix only until dough comes together; if it doesn’t come together right away, add another tablespoon water. Do not overmix. Scrape mixture out onto a sheet of plastic wrap and flatten into a square. Wrap well and refrigerate overnight.
- Step 2
Very lightly butter a 9-inch pie dish. Divide dough into two equal pieces. Refrigerate one piece while you roll out the other. Ease the dough into the bottom edges of the pan and crimp the top edge. Pierce the bottom in several places with a fork. Refrigerate uncovered for several hours or overnight. (Other dough half may be rolled out and frozen for up to 3 months.)
- Step 3
Heat oven to 325 degrees. Line crust with parchment and fill with pie weights. Place on a baking sheet and bake for 15 minutes. Remove from oven and carefully remove pie weights and parchment. Return crust to oven and bake 15 to 20 minutes, until lightly browned. Let cool completely.
- Step 4
Increase oven temperature to 350 degrees. Cream butter in a standing mixer fitted with the paddle, or in a food processor. Add honey and golden syrup and cream together until smooth. Scrape down bowl and beater. Add vanilla, rum, nutmeg and salt and mix. Add eggs, one at a time, beating each one until incorporated before adding next.
- Step 5
Fill pie shell with pecans and smooth them out to make an even layer. Scrape in butter and egg mixture, using a rubber spatula to scrape the bowl clean. Place on a baking sheet and bake 30 to 35 minutes, until nuts are lightly browned and filling is just about set. The filling will puff up and may be bubbling, but it will settle as it cools. Do not overbake; if you leave it in too long, it will crack. Remove from oven and cool on a rack. Serve with whipped cream or vanilla ice cream.
Private Notes
Comments
The lack of corn syrup attracted me to this recipe. I couldn't easily find Lyle’s, thought I could probably make it from scratch. I discovered too late that I needed 24 hours for the syrup to rest so I substituted maple syrup. The disturbing "too liquidly" comments prompted me to use large (not extra) eggs and add an egg yolk. I also chopped 1 of the 2 cups of pecans which I placed as a first layer under the pecan halves. The result? Delicious "not cloyingly sweet".
I just saw in video for pecan pie that using a mixer or cuisinart will yield runnier results because the mixture will be too fine. Instead, you should just use a whisk to blend. Here's where I saw it (Trish Yearwood's Pecan Pie): http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/trisha-yearwood/pecan-pie-recipe.html
You don't need to watch the video. Waste of time. All you need to know is whisk instead of mixer.
Tried to use Karo light syrup instead of golden. Otherwise made as instructed. The pie looked beautiful but Did not set. Second round through the oven turned it into something that was edible instead of a liquid but still not right.
I want to keep the comment here: The lack of corn syrup attracted me to this recipe. I couldn't easily find Lyle’s, thought I could probably make it from scratch. I discovered too late that I needed 24 hours for the syrup to rest so I substituted maple syrup. The disturbing "too liquidly" comments prompted me to use large (not extra) eggs and add an egg yolk. I also chopped 1 of the 2 cups of pecans which I placed as a first layer under the pecan halves. The result? Delicious "not cloyingly sweet".
This turned out really well for me. The only issue I have is how little filling it leaves you with. My pie was tasty but shallow. Best to double the filling amount
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