<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?><oembed><version><![CDATA[1.0]]></version><provider_name><![CDATA[Occasionally Coherent]]></provider_name><provider_url><![CDATA[http://blog.bimajority.org]]></provider_url><author_name><![CDATA[Garrett Wollman]]></author_name><author_url><![CDATA[https://blog.bimajority.org/author/garrettwollman/]]></author_url><title><![CDATA[Thinking about pumpkin&nbsp;pie]]></title><type><![CDATA[link]]></type><html><![CDATA[<p>I just got back from a short (two-day) trip to Toronto, which is my last travel before November.  In Canada, they celebrate Thanksgiving in October, on our Columbus Day, which is only two and a half weeks away &#8212; so the well-prepared home cook will already be thinking about menus.  We, on the other hand, still have a couple of months, but I at least will be traveling for a good chunk of November, so it behooves me to start thinking about Thanksgiving myself &#8212; and since I won&#8217;t be taking care of the main meal (thanks to my parents&#8217; relocation to the other end of the country), I&#8217;ll have to get my holiday cooking fix in beforehand.</p>
<p>Which brings me to the question of pumpkin pie.  As I noted in my <a href="/recipes/pointers/">recipe pointers</a> pages, there are a lot of pumpkin pie recipes &#8212; even once you discount the standard back-of-the-can recipes that vary mostly in how over-spiced they are, and whether they use sweetened condensed milk or not.  I went through my cookbooks to identify interesting pumpkin pie recipes, and I&#8217;m going to use my Columbus Day holiday to bake some of them, and bring them in to work as a combination treat/tasting adventure.  (Because obviously I&#8217;m not going to eat four or more pumpkin pies on my own!)  If it goes well, I may do more on a subsequent weekend.  Here are the contenders:</p>
<ul>
<li>Alton Brown, &#8220;Pumpkin Pie&#8221;, <cite>Good Eats 3: The Later Years</cite>, p. 370 (from &#8220;American Classics IX&#8221;, <cite>Good Eats</cite> episode 239) &#8212; one I&#8217;ve done before, this uses a gingersnap crust and is otherwise spiced only with nutmeg</li>
<li>Joanne Chang, &#8220;Super-Pumpkiny Pumpkin Pie&#8221;, <cite>Flour</cite>, p. 214 &#8212; standard spices; vanilla, heavy cream, brown sugar, and evaporated milk; pumpkin puree is reduced significantly as a flavor boost</li>
<li>Emily Elsen and Melissa Elsen, &#8220;Brown Butter Pumpkin Pie&#8221;, <cite>The Four &amp; Twenty Blackbirds Pie Book</cite>, p. 168 &#8212; uses cream and milk; heavily sweetened with molasses and brown sugar; lightly spiced; vanilla, lemon juice, and carrot juice</li>
<li>Moosewood Collective, &#8220;Pecan Pumpkin Pie&#8221;, <cite>Moosewood Restaurant Book of Desserts</cite>, p. 57 &#8212; a layered pie, with a(n optionally maple-)pecan filling on the bottom, and a standard pumpkin custard on top; uses an unusually large 10-inch pie plate</li>
<li>David Page and Barbara Shinn, &#8220;Honey Pumpkin Pie&#8221;, <cite>Recipes from Home</cite>, p. 394 &#8212; heavy cream; honey, brown and white sugar; standard spices except no cloves; cornstarch</li>
<li>Richard Sax, &#8220;Best-Ever Pumpkin Pie&#8221;, <cite>Classic Home Desserts</cite>, p. 539 (recipe also appears in Brooke Dojny, <cite>The New England Cookbook</cite>) &#8212; black pepper in addition to the usual spices; milk and heavy cream; adds bourbon or rum; brown and white sugar, with an option for maple syrup</li>
<li>Richard Sax, &#8220;Sour Cream Pumpkin Chiffon Pie&#8221;, <cite>Classic Home Desserts</cite>, p. 541 &#8212; a layered chiffon (refrigerator) pie, with gelatin; vanilla; standard spices; pecans</li>
<li>Alice Waters, &#8220;Pumpkin Pie&#8221;, <cite>The Art of Simple food</cite>, p. 368 &#8212; standard spices; uses cream for the custard rather than evaporated or condensed milk; lightly sweetened with brown sugar</li>
<li>anon., &#8220;Golden Pumpkin Pie&#8221;, <cite>King Arthur Flour Whole Grain Baking</cite>, p. 471 &#8212; a special oat and whole-wheat p&acirc;te bris&eacute;e; sweetened only with honey; dairy is half-and-half; standard spices plus optional dark rum</li>
</ul>
<p>Surprisingly, I didn&#8217;t find anything especially interesting in the Test Kitchen files: they have one recipe from 2008 that uses candied yams in addition to the pumpkin, <a href='http://www.cooksillustrated.com/recipes/1656-the-best-pumpkin-pie?incode=MCSCZ00L0'>a recipe from very early on</a> that&#8217;s very heavy and heavily spiced as well, and a <cite>Cook&#8217;s Country</cite> recipe that is similar in concept to the Moosewood recipe above, except that the pecan layer is on top rather than on the bottom.  There&#8217;s also a no-bake recipe that uses a precooked custard filling (rather than chiffon) and a graham-cracker crust.</p>
<p>Stay tuned for the choices and the results.</p>
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