Somebody give me your best pecan pie recipe; the one "...momma" makes
That ain't how you make pie! Kolaches! Chili! etc...Bruce Almighty said:
http://www.darnellfamily.org/Albums/Thanksgiving2007/pecanpie.html
I love this one that Rick Bayless serves at one of his restaurants. Its a chocolate pecan pie with Kahlua.
Also, wtf are people sending hate mail over a pecan pie recipe?
was it relared to this tweet?HTownAg98 said:
Supposedly Stella Parks at at seriouseats.com has some ridiculous recipe that involves tempering eggs into molten caramel that if you can pull off the technique, is other worldly. Sadly, she pulled down the recipe because of all the hate mail she received from it. But if you email her, she will give it to you.
If you go another route, any recipe here that doesn't involve blind baking the crust before you bake the pie is not worth considering.
HTownAg98 said:
It's not that recipe; there's a different one.
And I hate the Karo syrup pecan pie recipe. They always taste fake and too sweet.
Tanya 93 said:
Is that an expensive and good bourbon?
I don't drink now and never drank Bourbons.
if they're too sweet its probably not from the Karo syrup but rather from the added cup of white sugar in the classic recipe.HTownAg98 said:
It's not that recipe; there's a different one.
And I hate the Karo syrup pecan pie recipe. They always taste fake and too sweet.
Shhh don't call it thatTanya 93 said:
I make maple Walnut pie. It is loved.
I hate pecans and don't really like Karo much.
Someone on here a few years ago suggested derby pie and I just tweaked that to make what I do now.
Quote:
World Famous Kentucky Horse Race Whose Name Rhymes with "Herbie" Pie dates back to 1950. That was the year it was invented by the owners of the Melrose Inn in Prospect, Kentucky: the Kerns. It was shortly named and, in 1968, trademarked. Ever since then World Famous Kentucky Horse Race Whose Name Rhymes with "Herbie" Pie has been synonymous with two things: the Kentucky Derby and lawsuits. Indeed the company which now goes by the name "Kern's Kitchen" has sued at least 25 times to protect its rights under the law.
Kern's has won against various cookbook publishers and most notably Bon Appetit magazine, which initially won the right to publish the recipe in court, only to have the decision overturned by the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals in 1987. Nowadays people publish the recipe pseudonymously as "Kentucky Pie", "Kentucky Chocolate Walnut Pie", "Run for the Roses Pie", "Not Derby Pie", etc. I think my name wins the title for the longest, but it certainly won't be the last.
Tanya 93 said:
Is that an expensive and good bourbon?
I don't drink now and never drank Bourbons.