Thursday, January 16, 2014

Paleo Pecan Pie


This classic dessert was so easy to make over, I almost feel cheap in posting it. I adapted the famous recipe from a corn syrup bottle (yuck) and updated it with low-glycemic coconut sweeteners and oil for a gooey, crunchy and much healthier pie experience. Low-sugar it’s not, but it’s better for you than store-bought, for sure. Be sure to read the notes about the crust below before you give it a spin in your own kitchen.

Crust:
1/2 cup sifted coconut flour
1/2 blanched almond flour
2 eggs, at room temperature
1/2T honey
1/4 cup coconut oil
1/4 tsp salt

Preheat oven to 350ºF and spray deep-dish pie pan with non-stick cooking spray or grease with coconut oil. In a small bowl, sift coconut flour and stir together with almond flour and salt. Set aside.

In a medium-sized bowl, beat eggs with honey and coconut oil. Add dry ingredients to wet and stir. Knead together with your hands briefly until a smooth dough forms. If the dough feels too soft and sticky to roll, knead in a little more sifted coconut flour. 

Form dough into a ball and roll out onto a coconut-flour-dusted Silpat mat or other clean work surface (or between two sheets of waxed paper) in a circular shape. Flip mat over onto a deep-dish pie pan and cut edges. Patch up as needed until crust runs all the way up the sides of the pie plate evenly (important, as there is a lot of filling). Cover with plastic wrap and freeze overnight or for at least three hours (note: don’t skip this step; if you do, the crust will burn before the filling reaches the proper level of doneness).

Filling:
1 cup coconut nectar
3 eggs
1 cup coconut sugar
2T coconut oil
4 drops Medicine Flower vanilla extract or 1 tsp regular vanilla extract
1½ cups pecans

Preheat oven to 350ºF. Mix together coconut nectar, oil, sugar, eggs and vanilla extract. Stir in pecans.

Pour into frozen pie crust. Bake on center rack of oven for about 15 minutes, then cover sides of pie pan with foil and return to oven for 30 to 40 minutes until filling is lightly brown and no longer jiggly (it can still have a tiny bit of wiggle to it, as it will thicken upon cooling).

If the filling is getting too dark midway through baking, place a piece of foil over the top of the pie for the final segment of baking. Remove from oven and cool for several hours before serving.
 
Note: Even after pre-freezing the crust, it still gets far darker than it should. It tastes delicious anyway, but I wouldn’t recommend it as a picture-perfect dessert to take to a dinner party, simply because of appearances. If you make these into tarts instead of pie, I suspect the problem would be solved. If you try it, let me know how it turns out.

 

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