Thanksgiving Pie idea- Triple Layer Pumpkin Pie

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My computer died a few weeks back and I fixed it, by myself :-), a couple of days ago.  So, I’m finally back online with more than a smartphone. 

 

I will be creating a quick pie crust tutorial but haven’t gotten to it yet.  This year for Thanksgiving I am making a sous vide apple cream pie (not all of it is made sous vide) which I haven’t attempted before. I wanted to give anyone a fabulous recipe (actually 2 different recipes) for a great Thanksgiving Day pie.  The following recipe(s) is one of my favorite pies– Triple Layer Pumpkin Pie.  It is time consuming, so unless you’re super organized and already have 3/4 of your Thanksgiving meal cooked, I suggest it for those who only need to take an item or three to family or friend’s house. 

 

This is a repost from a couple years back, but made it many times and it’s always a winner.  I’ve used several different custard recipes too.  Might try a sous vide one as well next time.  Pie 1 recipe comes from a pastry chef that used to work at Tavern on Main in Westport, CT many moons ago.

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 Keep saying that I should really call it Quadruple Layer as I put another layer of Whipped Cream on Top of this.

You’ll need a couple of hours to complete this.

Triple Layer Pumpkin Pie– 2 Ways

Pie #2 Crust

2 cups flour

1 stick cold butter, cut into pieces (increase by 1 Tbsp if you don’t use lard)

1 Tbsp cold lard (optional)

1 cup milk

1 tsp white vinegar

(if you use unsalted butter, add 1/4 tsp salt)

Preheat oven to 375F. Mix milk with vinegar and set aside.  In food processor, pulse flour with butter and lard until they are size of beans.  Divide in two and place in refrigerator for 10 minutes.  Take one ball of dough and place on well floured surface.  (If you have marble, granite or any cold counter, use that.) Roll out turning and flipping every 2-3 rolls so that it will become circular and won’t stick to surface.  Ease into pie plate.  Prick center with fork and weigh down center with aluminum foil or parchment topped with pie weights (pennies, dried beans).  Bake 10-15 minutes until lightly golden.   Set aside to cool.

Triple (Quadruple) Layer Pumpkin Pie

Mix together spices:

1 tsp cinnamon

1 tsp salt

3/4 tsp ground ginger

1/2 tsp ground nutmeg

1/2 tsp allspice

1/4 tsp ground cloves

 Then divide into two— one for custard layer, one for mousse layer.

Custard Layer:

1 cup pumpkin puree

3/4 cup brown sugar

1/4 cup granulated sugar

3 eggs

spice mixture from above

1 1/2 cups heavy cream

2 Tbsp brandy (I used Calvados)

Preheat oven to 350F. With a whisk mix pureed pumpkin and sugars in bowl, slowly add eggs then remaining ingredients.  Pour into pre-baked pie shell and bake until set (about 40 minutes).  When you gently shake it it should move like Jello not liquid, but don’t let it go until it cracks too much (overdone).  Let cool on wire rack then place in fridge for at least an hour.

Whipped Cream Layer:

2 cups heavy cream

1 Tbsp sugar

Whip together until stiff.  Use 1 cup to spread over custard layer.  Reserve 1/2 cup for mousse layer and 1/2 cup for top.  Place pie and remaining cream in fridge.

Pumpkin Mousse Layer:

1 Tbsp unflavored gelatin

1/4 cup cold water

1 1/2 cups pumpkin puree

3/4 cup brown sugar

4 egg yolks

3 egg whites (save or throw away the extra white)

spice mixture from above

1 Tbsp granulated sugar

Reserved1/2 cup whipped cream

Mix pumpkin and brown sugar in a medium sausepan.  Add egg yolks (if you separate using shells or hands, make sure no yolk gets in the white) and spices.  Over medium to medium-low heat warm until boiling, stirring constantly.  Remove from heat.  In small sauce pan put water then gelatin, then warm to dissolve (do not boil).  Add gelatin to pumpkin mixture and whisk until well mixed.  Place saucepan with mixture into a shallow pan of cold water (don’t let water get into saucepan) helping it cool.  Cool until mixture mounds slightly when dropped from spoon.

Whip egg whites and sugar until stiff.  (Copper bowls help egg whites stiffen) Gently fold reserved 1/2 cup whipped cream with egg whites then gently fold together with pumpkin mixture.  Finally spread over whipped cream layer heaping in center.  You can top with more whipped cream, or leave as is. Refrigerate until ready to serve.

Pumpkin Custard Layer #2 (Alice Water’s Pumpkin Pie)

1 cup cream

2 tsp flour

1 1/2 cups pumpkin puree

3 eggs

1/4 cup brown sugar

1 Tbsp granulated sugar

1 tsp ground cinnamon

1/4 tsp ground cloves

1/4 tsp ground ginger

1/2 tsp salt

pinch fresh ground black pepper

1 1/2 tsp brandy (optional)

In small saucepan whisk together 1/4 cup cream with flour over low heat until it comes to a boil and thickens.  Slowly whisk in remaining cream.  Continue whisking until it returns to boil.  Remove from heat.  In a medium bowl whisk together pumpkin and eggs.  In another bowl combine sugars and spices.  Combine all three mixtures and whisk in brandy (Again, I used Calvados).  Pour into pre-baked pie shell and bake for 45 minutes until center is just setting.  Place foil around rim if it’s browning too much.  Let cool on wire rack then fridge before adding other layers.  This one I did the mousse next then the whipped cream. 

They were both delicious, though I couldn’t decide which one I liked better.  My kids were so excited to try it during the baking/making of it and when I was carrying it to car,  but once we got there and there were so many other foods and desserts only my eldest was as enthusiastic enough to eat any.   He loved them both too!

Either custard layer can be used as your traditional pumpkin pie without all the layers. 

Sorry to see them go

This is different from many of my normal posts. This is an homage to a friend with similar interests and whose kids really eat healthy foods too. She and her family moved across country.

Amy cooks a mean meal. And my kids and I were lucky enough to enjoy many… but not anymore. Or at least not for some time to come.

She and I didn’t hit it off right away- well we did but it was in an as acquaintances sort of way, until a few years back when our friendship really blossomed. Now it’s much deeper than when we met over 10 years ago. Wow, 10 years- how time has flown!

We met through my friend, Jane, who worked in comedy club in NYC— Amy’s husband is a comedian. Jane is from NZ and Jane was friends with him and found out that Amy and Andrew just happened to live around the corner from us in CT.

Her eldest son is 2 weeks younger then my eldest. Her middle son is 8 1/2 months older than my middle son and my youngest is 4 1/2 months younger than her daughter. Her birthday is 4 days after mine. Her husband’s birthday is 4 days before my husband’s. Our eldest sons even walked their first steps on the same day; the day of her son’s first birthday party.

She doesn’t roll her eyes when I get up on my soapbox. Actually she’s quite likely to join me up there.

She keeps her house tidy and gets rid of the clutter that I’m constantly battling. When she sets her mind to something, it’s done. She’s a constant source of inspiration.

Amy makes friends easily. Sometimes, to people I’d never give a second glance to. I admire that. She’s a beautiful person. We’ve laughed together so many times.

She’ll call me up and say I’m coming over with dinner. Or Come on over— what have you got in the fridge, so we can make dinner together? I make cocktails and one seemed to be ours (chili mango margarita). Spur of the moment get togethers were common.

Our kids love each other.

Our dogs love each other.

Our husbands love each other.

They’ve moved before. Even left for California before. But this time is different. This time they’ve moved to where we can’t just drive over in 25 minutes or less. They left for the other coast. They left a hole behind.

When we had a freak snow storm in October they let us move into their house for days and when our electricity returned we didn’t rush home but ate dinner together and regretted leaving so we got together just a couple of days later. And during that time our towns cancelled/delayed Halloween so she had us all get dressed up in costumes and trick or treat around her house— the kids went to the 2 diff back doors, the garage door, the front door where the 4 adults were stationed to hand out candy.

When her kids come over I don’t have to worry about what they’ll eat or not eat. They eat like mine; almost everything. Amy can cook great food and we are often giving each other ideas for meals. We would cook together most times we hung out at each other’s homes. Her kids really eat this too!

It’s a loss for our whole family and I feel it more because it’s not just me. I feel it especially for my eldest son who doesn’t make friends as easily as my other sons. Her son signed Harry’s birthday card: “From your best, best, best, best, best friend in the world!”

I know we’ll get to visit and they’ll visit, but it’s just not the same.

I’ve said goodbye so many times over the years. But it’s usually me who’s leaving. I’ve usually got something to look forward to— instead of this emptiness in our lives.

I will miss her, them, us… together.

Girlfriends– a source of inspiration

I am blessed in my friendships— I have such wonderful friends around the globe.  I’ve been helped out of many a mess; shared in fun times; been proud of their accomplishments (I truly have some super-women friends); and inspired by so many of them.  One area (not surprisingly) in which I have been inspired, is in my cooking and baking.  I love cooking with friends too — my house or theirs, I find it a fun thing to do together with a glass of wine or cocktail in hand and fresh news to share. 

Two of my girlfriends are a constant in inspiration and cooking camaraderie.  One (AK) has 3 kids and one (SO) 2 kids— all that eat well (as in, they like our food).  I love when we can all get together and cook/eat/play.  We always have fun.

Recently for SO I tried out one dish that AK had cooked for my family- stuffed pork roast— which is stuffed with stuffing (as in traditional Thanksgiving-style sausage stuffing).  I think my girlfriend made it better than I did, but it was still quite good.  I was too afraid of getting the stuffing mushy that I erred on the side of too little stock to moisten the stuffing so it was too dry. The pork itself was great. 

I also introduced SO and her girls to kale chips which my boys and I love. I made some with sesame oil, canola oil and salt and some with olive oil, salt and pepper.  The boys were cheerfully exclaiming, “kale chips!” when they saw them.

Simple Sausage Sage Stuffing
4 links, casings removed, Italian sweet sausage
1-2 stalks celery, diced
1 small onion, diced
4 cups croutons
Handful fresh sage, chopped
Approx 1 cup chicken or veg stock
salt & pepper

In a large stock pot sauté the sausage until cooked.  Set aside. Then sauté the onion and celery in olive oil (or sausage fat) until onions are translucent.  Add sausage back in with croutons, sage, ½ tsp salt and pepper. Mix well and slowly add stock until stuffing sticks together nicely but isn’t too mushy.  Add more salt if necessary.  Let cool then stuff your meat/bird. (Tie if necessary to keep in the stuffing.)

I’d never stuffed anything with this type of stuffing besides a turkey or chicken.  Now, I figure I’ve tried something new thanks to my friend.  And this is only one of many dishes/desserts these two are introducing me to…and inspiring me to do it too.

It can happen… in time.

I just finished a spur-of-the-moment dinner with a friend and her kids. They are my biggest challenge. Not all of them, really just two. But since they aren’t mine I can only suggest, but not as persuasively as I would with my own. With my kids they get what they get and they don’t get upset.  Well, at least I ignore if they whine and try to make sure they get everything I’ve made— with a few modifications— like not giving the child who absolutely won’t eat a certain vegetable that one if there are other veggies to serve him.  But this is different; these two are extremely picky and I feel bad if I can’t get them to at least try some things. I certainly won’t push and just try to find things they will like. This is where the hiding foods inside other things might work. But I think it will happen in time if they’re not made to feel bad about their choices and stress them out.

I had originally planned to make this great pork stir-fry I created from a hodgepodge of several recipes. Since time was not on my side and I knew none of the other kids would eat it I made Mystic & Trader Joe’s Pizzas that I had in the freezer and made a large (what I consider) kid-friendly salad. It was romaine, orange bell pepper, cucumbers, celery, and red cabbage. I used a Paul Newman’s dressing because, again, it was late.  I love these children and their mom and I’d rather them stick around longer with something they would eat than scare them away with my cooking.  One of her kids actually tried something for the first time!

When should you start kids eating healthfully?  From the beginning. Is it ever too late? Probably not; there are plenty of stories of people becoming chefs or food critics because their parents were awful cooks or didn’t feed them well. And as my mother says kids get on “jags” of things and will eat something until you’d want to puke before eating it yet again, yet they’re perfectly healthy. But then there are the other stories, the ones more common these days, of childhood obesity, diabetes and other health issues. I look around and see so many kids and teens who don’t look healthy and I assume (maybe incorrectly) that they don’t eat well.

If your parents didn’t feed you well, how do you change? Is it harder to learn to eat well if you were brought up with bad food choices? I think those who’ve been eating well from day one (or at least from 6 months old) have several advantages- they will have better health benefits from an earlier age and less likely to be obese or ill; they will have a better relationship with food; less likely to have food-related issues or constantly on the latest diet; they will enjoy food for the tastes and pass on the suitable food lessons to their own children. But that doesn’t mean you’re doomed if you got a bad start. I know my friend’s mother was a bad cook and had issues with food, but my friend is trying to give her kids the healthier choices and never once have I felt her decisions were made because she doesn’t care, she just didn’t have the same foundation that I had. But she’s learning really quickly and for that I’m proud of her. She even says I inspire her, which is flattering. Her kids are beautiful, inside and out, and I am so happy they will have a better start than their mom. 

So, my tips on a proper foundation: start them off feeding them those strained beans they might spit out a few times, not just the apple, pears and sweet potatoes. Eat with them. Let them see what you eat, feed them what you eat. Get them interested in foods by planting vegetables, shopping at farmers’ markets or farms and cooking with them. Don’t treat the vegetables like a punishment, they are delicious, but kids need to get accustomed to them.  Don’t quit. Really your kids will eat them.  

Eventually.