Has anyone frozen Slab Pumpkin Pie before? Notes in the linked recipe say it freezes well, and in

wigs

Well-known member
the past 2 days I have made NINE of these which I cooled, wrapped well and popped into the freezer. (There is a picture of this pie at the link.)

My first question is: How should I thaw--at room temp or in the refrigerator overnight?

My second question is: How long of a thawing time should I allow for the various thawing approaches in my first question? TIA! Wigs

Pumpkin Slab Pie

Yield: 24 slices

Prep Time: 3 hours

Total Time: 3 hours, 45 minutes (plus cooling)

Ingredients:

Crust

4 cups (500g) all-purpose flour

1 and 1/2 teaspoons salt

1 teaspoon granulated sugar

1 and 3/4 cup (3.5 sticks; 400g) unsalted butter, very cold and cubed

3/4 cup (180ml) very cold ice water

Egg wash: 1 large egg, lightly beaten with 1 Tablespoon (15ml) milk

Filling

2 (15 ounce) cans pure pumpkin (about 4 cups total; 900g)1

2 cups (400g) light or dark brown sugar

4 large eggs

2 cups (480ml) heavy cream

1/4 cup (60ml) whole milk

1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract

2 Tablespoons cornstarch

2 teaspoons ground cinnamon

3/4 teaspoon ground ginger

1/2 teaspoon ground nutmeg

1/2 teaspoon salt

1/8 teaspoon freshly ground pepper

Optional: whipped cream

Directions:

Make the pie crust: Mix the flour, salt, and sugar together in a large bowl. Add the butter. Using a pastry cutter or two forks, cut the butter into the mixture until it resembles coarse meal (pea-sized bits with a few larger bits of fat is OK). A pastry cutter makes this step very easy and quick. Drizzle the cold water in, 1 Tablespoon (15ml) at a time, and stir with a rubber spatula or wooden spoon after every Tablespoon (15ml) added. Do not add any more water than you need. Stop adding water when the dough begins to form large clumps. I always use about 3/4 cup (180ml) water. Transfer the pie dough to a floured work surface. Using floured hands, fold the dough into itself until the flour is fully incorporated into the butter pieces. The dough should come together easily and should not feel overly sticky. Form dough into a ball. Cut off about 1/4 of the dough; this will be for the pie crust leaves and the rest will be for the actual pie. Flatten both into a 1-inch thick disc using your hands. Wrap each tightly in plastic wrap. Refrigerate for at least 2 hours (and up to 5 days) or freeze for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the fridge before using. *If not making pie crust leaves, just wrap all the dough up, chill, and use it all for the bottom crust.

Make the filling: Whisk all of the filling ingredients together in a large bowl. It will be a little thick. Cover and refrigerate until you need it; or refrigerate up to 3 days.

Preheat oven to 375°F (190°C).

Roll out the chilled pie crust: Remove larger disc of pie dough from the refrigerator. Keep the other in the refrigerator as you work. On a lightly floured work surface, roll the dough out into (roughly) an 18x13-inch rectangle. Make sure to turn the dough about a quarter turn after every few rolls. Carefully place the dough into a 10x15 inch jelly roll pan (I like this one too); there will be overhang on the sides. Smooth the crust out so it fits nicely into all the corners of the pan. Crimp the edges with your fingers, if desired. Brush edges lightly with the egg wash. Reserve remaining egg wash for step 6.

Spread filling evenly into the crust. Bake for 35-45 minutes or until the filling is only slightly jiggly in the very center. Remove from the oven, set on a wire rack, and allow to cool completely.

Pie crust leaves: As the pie cools, roll out remaining dough. Roll out into any shape you really want (doesn't matter) and 1/8 inch thickness. Using leaf cookie cutters, cut into shapes. Brush each lightly with egg wash. Cut leaf veins into leaves using a sharp knife or toothpick, if desired. Place onto a parchment paper or silicone baking mat-lined baking sheet and bake at 350°F (177°C) for 10 minutes or until lightly browned. Remove and set aside to cool before decorating pie.

Decorate pie with pie crust leaves and/or whipped cream. Leftovers keep well covered in the refrigerator for up to 1 week.

Make ahead tip:

The pie crust in step 1 can be made ahead of time, chilled for up to 5 days (see step 1) or frozen up to 3 months (see step 1). The filling can also be made, covered, and refrigerated for up to 3 days. See step 2. Baked pie freezes well up to 3 months.

Recipe Notes from Sally:

I prefer canned pumpkin, not fresh pumpkin puree in this recipe. I like to use Libby's brand.

I like to use a heaping 1/8 teaspoon of black pepper in this slab pie. If you like spice flavor, increase to 1/4 teaspoon.

Note from Wigs: I baked at 370 degrees F (yes, three hundred seventy) for 46 minutes which resulted in a pie perfectly done with no cracks. My internal temperature in the center registered 175 degrees F. (A 375-degree oven was too hot, IMHO, as I had some tiny hairline cracks in the first pie so I dialed it down to 370 degrees.)

https://sallysbakingaddiction.com/pumpkin-slab-pie/

 
Nine! Oh My!

I think I would go with a thaw overnight in the fridge to limit sudden change to texture. Although I do think you would be safe with both thawing attempts.

 
Okay. I know I need to do something overnight, but was concerned thawing in the fridge wouldn't be

long enough, but that a room temperature thaw would be too abrupt a temperature change! Decisions, decisions.

I am serving a crowd of 216 tomorrow afternoon at 2 pm so that's why nine of these guys. I know my baked pastry leaves will thaw in a jiffy--I cranked out 235 of those puppies last night.

If anyone is interested, this William and Sonoma pie crust cutter set is the cat's meow! I used the gold leaf and the red leaf, and all came out beautifully with excellent "vein" detail. I got it for a gift several months ago, but this was the first time I used any of them. I have always relied on my small metal cookie cutters in leaf shapes, but typically don't have time to "draw" or cut in any veins. This set would make a good stocking stuffer for your favorite baker....YOU!

https://www.williams-sonoma.com/products/fall-pie-crust-cutters-set-of-6-2018/?cm_src=AutoSchRel

 
deb,just found an answer @ "thekitchn.com". In a nutshell--thaw for 12 hours in the refrigerator ==>

Thawing a Frozen Pumpkin Pie. Remove the pie from the freezer and move it to the fridge at least 12 hours before you'd like to eat the pie. Thawing at room temperature can cause the filling to weep, leaving a soggy crust in its wake. A long, slow thaw is the way to go. From "thekitchn.com" on Nov 16, 2017

 
YAY YOU!!

How do you do all you do? Do you work alone or have staff? At a commercial kitchen?

I am in awe!!

 
I had a catering partner from 1989-1997, but then health problems forced her into an early

retirement from this line of work so I have soldiered on alone since 1997. I had to quit taking the really big jobs that she & I could easily handle as a team, but were too much for one person to cook alone. I do hire server(s) as I need to. I quit advertising when my partner quit, and my clients continue to be folks that have been with me since the beginning. I also do sporadic temp work for a financial institution, and my two "little" part-time jobs keep me plenty busy at this time of the year.

I am a firm believer in doing all the advance planning that is possible and am an inveterate list-maker. For each catering job I will compile daily To Do lists; grocery lists for advance buying as well as purchases that need to be made the day before or the day of delivery/pickup; packing lists; cooking lists; client instruction lists; yadda, yadda, ya. All these lists are begun and completed as soon as I land a catering order and the menu is agreed upon.

I do as much of the work in advance as what I can. Two weeks prior I had my catering tubs packed, and all the dry ingredients for my 9 Slab crusts were measured, sifted together, covered and sitting in 9 bowls on our dining room table. One week in advance all the crust fats (Crisco & butter) were measured with butter sliced and packaged w/ Crisco per recipe and kept chilled in the fridge. Same approach was used for the filling ingredients. On Tuesday (a day off from the office) I cranked out 4 Slab Pies and froze them; Wednesday after work I made 3 more to freeze, and Thursday after work I finished by baking the final 2.

A gross oversight was when it dawned on me I'd neglected to think about a thawing timetable because I'd never frozen pumpkin pie before. Ergo, the SOS sent out to this community.

At 9 pm Thursday evening I pulled my 9 pies out of the freezer and put them into the refrigerator. Upon checking them at 5 am, they were still pretty cold and firm in their middles so they were removed from the refrigerator to await delivery at room temp. I dropped the 9 pies off at our Senior Center about 7:30 am along with slicing and garnishing instructions since I was subbing at a financial office 20 miles south of town and couldn't hop back over on my lunch break to help with any of the plating this month. Thus, the pies had an additional 5 hours to sit at room temp, and the ladies who cut and plated at 12:30 pm said they were perfect. They added dollops of whipped cream on top that were sprinkled with hand-grated nutmeg plus a baked pie crust leaf was placed on each portion in addition to either a red, white or blue hard candy star to honor the 216 guests who'd signed up for the Veteran's Day Memorial celebration this year. I was at my office desk at 8:25 AM and worked there until 5 o'clock pm.

REALIZE, though, that I am still digging out of my kitchen! I can keep up with loading items that go into the dishwasher to run whenever full, but I let dirty hand dishes accumulate until after my deadlines. I crashed Friday night right after supper; began major cleanup yesterday; and will finish up today.

Note that it will require a couple more days for my body aches & pains to subside! Rolling out so much pie crust is not a good position for my back, but w/ some Tylenol it'll eventually recover. lol.

I have OFTEN thought what a dyn-O-MITE catering company this group of forum folks would make. Can you imagine what we could create and sell if we all lived in the same town? That thought boggles my mind! But in reality, you help and have repeatedly helped me considerably in the past. I know recipes from this site are tried and true and will go over every single time. It's amazing how close technology can bring such far-flung individuals. A big thank you to one and all!

 
I think U cook and give away more than what I sell, M! And yr gingerbread houses are works of art!

 
Thank you so much for taking the time to explain it all!

I can't even imagine taking on a big catering job (which, to me, means 9 slab pies!) Am so impressed with your organization, enthusiasm, dedication and HARD WORK!

Glad the pumpkin pies worked out so well - yay for you! And yay for all those they were fortunate enough to eat them:)

 
I'm stressing because I can't get my family organized enough to let me know who is

able to come for Thanksgiving. I want to get my table setting planned, and take all the dishes out, check them. Also want to get place mats, napkins out, make sure I have matching sets, ect.. We are at a point where grandkids are working, in college, have other plans and everyone is up in the air about who will take care of the dog, cat, house, and on and on. Each year it gets harder, as I age, and everyone else is super busy with jobs, lives, and those who work on the Wednesday before and Friday after! smileys/frown.gif So, this year, I said, let's do it on Saturday to make it easier....LOL - NOT

 
Back
Top