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A Genius Five-Minute Pumpkin Pie Improvement—Comfort in Hot Praline

We all need a little comfort food right now.

James Ransom

This post originally appeared in Genius Recipes from Food52.

When you’re feeling helpless or frustrated and like throwing a pie at the wall might be a valid answer—remember this one small, productive release: It will make your pumpkin pie something special and new this Thanksgiving, a welcome relief in a time of comfort-seeking, and perhaps do even more for you, in this moment.

It will channel your free anger into vigorously bubbling caramel, take all of five minutes, and give back immediate return—even though it means adding a full pecan pie experience on top of a perfectly good pumpkin pie.

The pumpkin-wearing-pecan pie look was a novel idea to me, when I learned about it via Food52er Antonia James and Yankee, a regional New England magazine founded in 1935.

The recipe was neatly placed next to articles on the 2016 Fall Foliage Forecast, the 10 Prettiest Coastal Towns in Maine, and Methods to Deskunk Your Dog, which made Yankee magazine seem like a pretty great place to live.

James Ransom

I’ve since learned that there are close to a million recipes for pumpkin-pecan combo pies already chugging around the internet, and just about every major food brand has their own version. This one has apples, too (a three-fer). This one has a whole cheesecake resting on top.

James Ransom

But one big difference here, from the million-ish masses, is that most of the hybrid pies out there require either baking both filling strata simultaneously or carefully layering on the pecan goo after the pumpkin custard has a short head start.

Only one of those takes a fully functional pumpkin pie and just keeps going: After baking a pumpkin pie to completion, you—very briefly—blast on a layer of pecan praline under the broiler.

James Ransom

It might sound risky to subject a custard pie to such intense heat, but the time in the danger zone is very brief, and this actually allows you more control: Sizzle it exactly as long as you like, rotating and checking when you want.

Want to serve it still warm and bubbling? Do it. I like giving mine enough time to cool for a thin crystalline shell to form. You’ll have even more flexibility if you forgo the concentric rings of decorative pecan halves, which, as you can see—like the canary in the coal mine—signal char first.

James Ransom

Until I tasted the pumpkin and pecan hybrid myself, I assumed it would be sweet-on-sweet and over the top—and frankly, some of the recipes out there probably are. But this particular mashup brings out the better in both—the sugar in the pumpkin base is quite low, so that the gooey praline topping brings out the pumpkin’s savory, spiced side, and the slick crackle and crumble up top gives clarity to the extreme smoothness it floats above.

With either layer alone, it would be easy to get bored and move on to the Dutch apple crunch, but not here. Your attention will be blissfully occupied, in this moment.

Yankee Magazine’s Pumpkin Pie with Pecan Crunch
Serves 8

For the pie

  • 1 fully baked 9-inch pie shell (we used Erin McDowell’s All-Buttah Pie Crust, also on Food52)
  • 2 cups pumpkin puree
  • 1/4 cup granulated sugar
  • 1/2 teaspoon each cinnamon, nutmeg, and ginger
  • Pinch of salt
  • 3 lightly beaten eggs
  • 1 tablespoon dark rum or bourbon
  • 1/2 cup half-and-half

For the pecan crunch

  • 1/2 cup light brown sugar
  • 3 tablespoons melted butter
  • 2 tablespoons heavy cream
  • 1 cup chopped pecans
  • 1/2 cup pecan halves (optional)
  • Whipped cream for serving (optional)

See the full recipe on Food52.

More from Food52:
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The Recipe That Will Convince You to Cook Duck at Home 
Our Guide to Making Thanksgiving Dishes Work for All Dietary Restrictions
We Put Four Potato-Mashing Techniques to the Test
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The Little Touches That Make Thanksgiving Cozier