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Issue Date: November 14, 2004

Also this week:
Rachel Ray: Relax and cook for the holidays
Rachel's 30-minute recipes for holiday meals
Quick, easy centerpieces
Leftover ideas, recipes
When kitchens marry

Online bonus: Elegant menu and recipes from the chef at Oceana, NY.
Online bonus: Goumet menu and recipes from the chef at Nine-Ten, La Jolla.
HOLIDAY
FOOD
ISSUE

Tired of leaky or half-baked crusts? Here's your solution.

Perfect Pecan Pie

By Pam Anderson

Of all pies, pecan is one of the trickiest to make. The problem is in the crust.

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Cream cheese makes the dough flavorful and easier to roll, less likely to tear.

A fat-filled dough is tender, flaky and flavorful, but likely to tear during rolling and to develop tiny holes during baking. Naturally, the lava-like pecan-pie filling seeps into these openings, baking rock-hard onto the pie plate.

A lean crust, on the other hand, is sturdy, but tough and dry.

The crust I've developed offers the best of both styles: The following recipe is rich and tender, yet baker-friendly.

Bonus: This silky-smooth filling tastes a little less treacly sweet, a plus for most pecan pie lovers.

Pecan Pie Filling
1 heaping cup pecans, coarsely chopped
1 cup dark brown sugar
3/4 cup light corn syrup
3 large eggs, plus 2 yolks
2 tsps. vanilla extract
1/4 tsp. salt
4 Tbs. melted butter
1 Tb. cornstarch
1/3 cup water

Easy Pie Dough
1 cup plus 2 Tbs. bleached all-purpose flour
1 Tb. sugar
1/2 tsp. salt
4 Tbs. (2 ounces) cold cream cheese, cut into 1/2-inch chunks
4 Tbs. frozen butter
2 Tbs. frozen vegetable shortening
3 Tbs. ice-cold water

To make crust: Mix flour, sugar and salt in a medium bowl. Rub cream cheese into flour mixture with fingertips to blend thoroughly. Using a box grater, grate frozen butter and shortening into flour mixture. Working quickly, rub fat into flour until it has the texture of coarse sand and small pebbles. Stir in ice-cold water with a fork until dough clumps form; press to form a cohesive ball. Wrap dough in plastic wrap, pressing it into a thick disk. Refrigerate until cold and firm, at least 1 hour. (Can be refrigerated up to 2 days or frozen for a month.)

Roll dough on a lightly floured surface into a 14-inch circle, turning frequently and dusting with flour to keep it from sticking. Fold dough in half; quickly lift it into 9-inch Pyrex (not deep-dish) pie plate and unfold. Fit dough into plate so it is not stretched in any way. Trim with scissors to 1/2-inch beyond pan lip. Roll overhanging dough under with fingertips so it is flush with pan lip, then flute. Refrigerate at least 30 minutes or up to 4 hours. (Do not prick shell with a fork.)

Adjust oven rack to lowest position and heat oven to 400 degrees. Line pie shell with a sheet of heavy-duty foil. Crumple 3 large pieces of foil into balls and place in shell to act as light weights. Bake (lightly pressing on foil if dough starts to balloon) until fluting turns golden brown, 18 to 20 minutes. Remove all foil; bake until bottom starts to turn golden brown, about 5 minutes longer. Remove shell from oven.

To make filling: Adjust oven rack to middle position and reduce temperature to 300 degrees. In a separate pie plate, toast pecans in oven until fragrant, about 10 minutes. Reduce temperature to 250.

Meanwhile, heat brown sugar and corn syrup in a medium heat-proof bowl over a pan of barely simmering water until sugar is almost dissolved.

In another medium bowl, whisk eggs, yolks, vanilla and salt. Slowly whisk warm sugar mixture into eggs. Return bowl to pan of simmering water. Whisk in butter.

In a small pan over low heat, stir together cornstarch and water until pasty thick; whisk into sugar-egg mixture. Heat in bowl over simmering water, stirring frequently.

Set pie shell on middle oven rack. Sprinkle in pecans, then pour filling into shell. Bake until pie puffs slightly and just sets, 35 to 45 minutes.

Cool to room temperature and serve.
Serves: 8.
Per slice: 577 calories, 7g protein, 32g fat (11g saturated), 70g carbohydrates, 2g fiber, 428g sodium.

Contributing Editor Pam Anderson is the author of three cookbooks, including CookSmart (Houghton Mifflin, $28).


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