Photo courtesy of Nikki Freihofer

Here is Nikki Freihofer’s prize-winning recipe for a pie she describes as “a pancake breakfast that grew up,” and “the kind of thing people take one bite of and immediately start plotting their second.” She suggests using a darker Hudson Valley maple syrup aged in bourbon barrels, if you can find it. And, she says, don’t be shy with the salt.

MAPLE BOURBON CUSTARD

• 10 tablespoons (1 ¼ sticks) salted Irish butter, melted and cooled a bit

• 1 cup high quality dark maple syrup (I like Tree Juice brand Bourbon Barrel Aged)

• 130g light brown sugar

• 14g fine yellow cornmeal plus 19g medium grind yellow cornmeal (This is me being extra… you can use all fine or medium cornmeal and the pie will be lovely, promise. It’s about 1/4c total cornmeal in that case)

• 1/8 teaspoon kosher salt (Yes, more salt on top of salted butter – it can take it)

• 3 large eggs, at room temperature

• 1 large egg yolk, at room temperature

• 3/4 cup heavy cream, at room temperature

• 1 teaspoon vanilla bean paste

• 3 tablespoons bourbon (Bulleit or nicer, if you fancy)

• Maldon salt (to garnish)

CRUST

• 270g AP flour

• 3 teaspoons sugar

• 1 teaspoon salt

• 2 sticks (226g) salted Irish butter, very cold

• Ice water + a few tablespoons vodka

VANILLA MASCARPONE WHIP

• 2 tablespoons mascarpone

• 1c heavy cream

• 1 teaspoon vanilla bean paste

• 1/4 teaspoon kosher salt

• A few teaspoons powered sugar

FOR THE CRUST

• Whisk flour, sugar, and salt in medium bowl

• Cut each stick of butter into 4 equal pieces (twice lengthwise and once across) and add to bowl, toss to coat. Turn bowl out onto clean countertop.

• Roll butter out into long flat strips, laminating the butter into the flour mixture with rolling pin, scraping surface and rolling pin as needed with bench scraper.

• Once the dough starts to form long, thin sheets, use a bench scraper to pile into a loose shaggy mound and drizzle exactly 6 TBSP ice water over. It won’t seem like enough! It is enough!

• Roll out several times and fold top and bottom into the center like an envelope, re-rolling/laminating and folding until dough holds together well and looks fairly uniform (about 5 rolls)

• Form into a disc with a diameter of approximately 5-6 inches and wrap with plastic wrap

• Rest in refrigerator overnight

• Roll out rested dough into a circle 16” wide for a 9” pie and transfer to pie plate.

There will be lots of overhang but that’s what gets you a gorgeous crimp. Roll

the overhang onto itself and crimp away.

• Freeze until solid (overnight is best)

• Blind bake at 425°F for 25min (lined with tin foil and pie weights) and let cool

FOR THE CUSTARD

• Preheat your oven to 350°F.

• In a medium bowl, combine the melted butter and maple syrup – give em’ a good hearty whisking together. Whisk in the brown sugar, cornmeal, and kosher salt.

• In another medium bowl, whisk together the cream, eggs, egg yolk, and vanilla.

• Slowly pour the egg mixture into the maple mixture and whisk just until combined. Add the bourbon and mix until just combined.

• Place the blind-baked shell on a baking sheet and brush the edge with another beaten egg. Pour the filling into the pie shell until it reaches the bottom of the crimps.

• Transfer the baking sheet to the oven and bake for 50 minutes to 1 hour, until the edges are puffed and the center jiggles only slightly when shaken. It will continue to set as it cools.

• Remove the baking sheet from the oven and transfer the pie to a wire rack to cool for 4 to 6 hours. Once fully cooled and at room temperature, sprinkle generously with flaky Maldon sea salt.

FOR THE WHIPPED CREAM

• Add mascarpone, heavy cream, powered sugar, salt and vanilla bean paste to a medium bowl and whisk gently until soft peaks form.

• Serve on the side

Join the Conversation

2 Comments

  1. I got as far as baking the crust and stopped. The crust was overly buttery, lost its shape and literally dripped over one edge. I went back and checked my ingredients and method and could find no mistake from the directions.
    Any suggestions on the crust making process?

  2. Tricia, I find that using Irish or other European butter in a pie dough often ends in a greasy disaster. I recently used Plugra butter in a Graham cracker crust for a cheesecake, and melted butter oozed out of the pan and ruined the whole thing.
    Use American style butter in your crust and you should be OK. Make sure you also chill the dough thoroughly and freeze it briefly before filling.

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