RECIPE: REC: Julia's Fluffy Pumpkin Pie. Separating the eggs and beating the whites.....

RECIPE:

joe

Well-known member
makes an extraordinarily light pumpkin pie. It was a big hit last night. Even my youngest niece and nephew passed up the Marie Calendar's pumpkin pie that their mom brought just for them in favor of "fancy pumpkin."

A FLUFFY PUMPKIN PIE

from The Way to Cook by Julia Child.

For one 11-inch pie or two 9-inch pies, serving 16-20

About 1 lb. of butter pastry dough, (or any pie dough--enough for a double crust pie)

3-1/2 cups (1 large can) cooked pumpkin

1 cup brown sugar

1 cup granulated sugar

1 tsp. salt

3 Tbs. light molasses

3 Tbs. bourbon whiskey or dark rum

3 tsp. each cinnamon and ground ginger

1/4 tsp. each nutmeg and ground cloves

4 egg yolks

1 cup heavy cream

5 egg whites

A pinch of cream of tartar

Whipped cream or vanilla ice cream for serving.

Preheat the oven to 450*F. Roll out the chilled dough and fit it into the pie pan(s) making a strong fluted rim that extends 1/2-inch above the top of the pan.

Blend together the remaining ingredients except the egg whites. Beat the egg whites with the cream of tartar into stiff peaks. Stir 1/4 of the egg whites into the pumpkin mixture to lighten in. Delicately fold in the rest.

At once, ladle the mixture into the pie shell, filling only to the rim of the pan. Proceed at once to baking

Set into the 450*F oven and bake for 15 minutes. Reduce heat to 375*F and bake 15 minutes more. Reduce heat again to 350*F and bake 15 minutes more, or until puffed in the center. Turn oven off and leave the door ajar for 20 minutes before removing the pie(s).

Serve warm or cold.

Notes: Julia specifies "solid pack" pumpkin but I haven't seen that term on cans in years. Her recipe calls for 3/4 cup milk in addition to the cream but I find that makes the filling too soupy, so I leave it out. Maybe the difference is in the pumpkin.

 
Thanks for reviews guys, been thinking about making a chiffon pie, been a long time. Saved.

 
Interesting comment about the can. Would I understand that the diff is chunks in liquid as opposed

to a solid mass of mashed pumpkin? I had lways thought so but I'm still trying to rethink this recipe for the sweet potato rolls and the diff between the canned and the solid fresh that I used.

And I have a huge whack of fresh pumpkin left so would prefer to use it in this pie.

 
No, it was a purree. I think "solid pack" is denser, Julia says that the mixture "should hold it's

shape softly in a spoon" before you fold in the egg whites, and to add more milk if it seems too stiff. I've always had the opposite problem, with runny filling and the pie taking too long to cook, so now I leave out the milk. Use whatever pumpkin you like, and just go by texture.

 
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