Rich and decadent with an unexpected twist, Chocolate Bourbon Pecan Pie is an easy crowd-pleasing dessert, perfect for your holiday table… or any time of year!
So. Thanksgiving is in three days. It’s pretty late in the food blogging game to be sharing new recipes for Thanksgiving, but here’s the thing.
Last year, the single biggest traffic day for my food blog was Thanksgiving Day. Mostly from Google searches like “quick and easy pie” or “what to make for dessert” or “Thanksgiving dessert not pumpkin.”
So Thanksgiving morning, a whole lot of you woke up…. with no idea what you were going to make for dessert.
YOU ARE MY PEOPLE! PROCRASTINATORS UNITE!
As I always say, nothing is worth doing if it’s not worth doing at the last possible minute so you get that fantastic extra adrenaline boost as you try to beat the deadline! Including deciding what to make for your Thanksgiving dessert… the morning of Thanksgiving.
And so, I decided that three days before Thanksgiving was not at all too late to share a Thanksgiving dessert. Especially when it’s as amazingly delicious as this chocolate bourbon pecan pie, which really deserves to be an Everyday Dessert and not just a Thanksgiving Dessert.
(Poll time: do you say PEE-can or pee-KAHN? I’m from the northeast, so I can PEE-can. But every time I say it now, I hear my southern friend Rachel’s voice, yelling at me that a PEE-can is what you keep in the house if you don’t have indoor plumbing, and a pee-KAHN is the nut that you eat.)
You say to-may-toh, I say to-mah-toh – but we can all agree that pecan pie was made to include chocolate and bourbon. The slightly gooey custardy center, the chewy pecans, the rich chocolate, and just a hint of bourbon… yes, yes, yes.
I normally don’t have a huge sweet tooth, so I’m able to show a lot of restraint when it comes to most of what I bake. Except when it comes to this pie, apparently. A sliver when I took pictures. Another sliver late at night.
The only reason I didn’t eat the entire remaining half a pie for breakfast is because my two year old was watching, and I can’t very well tell him he can’t have cake for breakfast when I’m downing a slice of pie!
Pecan pie is basically the procrastinator’s dream come true. Unlike an apple pie, which requires peeling, coring, and chopping all those apples, or a pumpkin pie, which requires par-baking the crust before pouring in the liquidy custard, a pecan pie requires no extra effort.
The pie crust should be frozen beforehand, but no need to par-bake — the filling is thicker than pumpkin pie. There’s no need to cook the filling beforehand, and nothing to peel or slice. The hardest part is chopping some pecans, but if this is too much, just buy them already pre-chopped!
This is the dump cake equivalent of pies: add ingredients to bowl. Whisk. Pour into crust. It just doesn’t get any easier. And the addition of bourbon and chocolate means it just doesn’t get any more delicious, either.
A big part of what makes pecan pie so delicious is the texture contract between the slightly hard nuts and the rest of the chewy, gooey filling.
Have you ever wondered what makes the filling so perfectly chewy? It’s the corn syrup! Corn syrup is made from corn starch and sugar, and added to foods to soften the texture and prevent sugar from crystallizing. How does it do this? It’s time for my favorite subject – kitchen chemistry!
Kitchen Chemistry
Corn syrup undergoes caramelization during baking as the sugar molecules break down under heat. As the sugars in the corn syrup break down, it forms a web-like structure in the filling. As the pie cools, the sugars solidify again in the new structure, creating a gooey matrix binding together the chocolate and pecans.
Baking the pie for the right amount of time is important for this process. If you don’t bake long enough, the sugars won’t fully transform, leaving the filling too liquidy. But if you overbake the pie, the sugars over-caramelize and have a bitter taste. The visual cues of a golden-brown color and just barely jiggly center with set edges indicate the ideal time to remove your pie from the oven!
Rich and decadent, chocolate bourbon pecan pie is an easy, gluten free, crowd pleasing dessert, perfect for your holiday table… or any time of year!
Use this pie crust recipe for a gluten free crust.
Leftover pie can be stored at room temperature for up to 4 days or frozen for up to 3 months.
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