S’Mores Pie

- Total Time
- 1 hour, plus 1 hour's refrigeration
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1½cups graham cracker crumbs (10-15 graham crackers)
- 8tablespoons melted butter
- 7ounces milk or dark chocolate, or a mixture of both, broken into chunks
- 1cup heavy cream
- 1egg
- Pinch of salt
- 1teaspoon unflavored gelatin
- ½cup cold water, divided
- ¾cup sugar
- ¼cup light corn syrup
- ½teaspoon vanilla extract
Preparation
- Step 1
Make the crust. Crumble graham crackers into the work bowl of a food processor and process until finely ground. Alternatively, you can put them in a bag and whack them with a rolling pin until finely crushed. Pour melted butter into crumbs and mix (hands are best for this) until the butter is fully incorporated and the texture is that of wet sand. Butter or oil a 9-inch pie pan and firmly press the graham cracker crumbs against the sides, then against the bottom of the pan (the underside of a measuring cup works well for smoothing the bottom crust). Chill for at least 30 minutes to avoid crumbling when serving.
- Step 2
While the crust chills, preheat the oven to 350 degrees and prepare the chocolate filling. Put the chocolate in a large mixing bowl. Heat the cream in a saucepan until scalded — do not boil. Pour the cream over the chocolate and allow to stand for 1 minute. Whisk the cream and chocolate together until glossy and smooth. Add a pinch of salt, then crack the egg into the chocolate mixture and whisk to fully incorporate. Pour into chilled crust and bake for 25 minutes, or until the filling is set but still slightly wobbly in the center. Remove from the oven and cool completely.
- Step 3
Prepare the marshmallow topping. Pour ¼ cup water into the bowl of a stand mixer and sprinkle the gelatin on top. In a large saucepan over medium-high heat, stir together the remaining ¼ cup of water, sugar and corn syrup just until sugar is dissolved. Heat until a candy thermometer reads 260 degrees, or hard-ball stage. Remove from heat, turn stand mixer to medium speed to begin beating the bloomed gelatin, and slowly pour in sugar syrup, aiming it down the side of the bowl to prevent splatter, and scraping any remaining syrup from the pan with a heat-proof spatula. Slowly increase the speed of the mixer, and beat until the mixture is white, fluffy and doubled in volume. Add vanilla and beat for a few moments more. Pour the mixture on top of the cooled chocolate layer, gently spreading it to the edges of the crust with a spatula. Refrigerate, uncovered, 30 to 60 minutes.
- Step 4
The last step: brûlée the marshmallow. A torch is best for this (a propane torch from the hardware store or a butane crème brûlée torch). If using a torch, clear the area of any flammable items, ignite the torch, and slowly wave the flame over the surface of the marshmallow until you achieve the desired level of toastiness. If you do not have a torch, use the broiler of your oven. Preheat the broiler, cover the edges of the pie crust with foil or pie shields, place the pie on a baking sheet and broil — watching carefully to prevent burning — for 2 to 3 minutes, rotating as necessary.
- Step 5
To slice the pie, it helps to dip your knife in hot water, then dry it with a towel. The heat facilitates easy slicing through the marshmallow layer.
Private Notes
Comments
Dear NYT food editors: Know what I (& others) would love to see? "How to store" your pie; and/or "how long this will keep" for certain recipes.
Do I cover with foil? plastic wrap? Not a great idea because it'll stick to the wrap and peel off all the marshmallow. Tupperware?
Will it water out after a day? Will it do all right for 24 hours UNrefrigerated?
As a former professional baker these are things I used to tell my customers. Can you too? Thank you!
Great recipe! We really enjoyed this dessert at a recent weekend dinner. One comment on step 3. The directions say to "beat" in the stand mixer, which to me implies that one should use the paddle attachment. However, based on my experience in making marshmallows, one should use the whip attachment for this step, and that is what I used. I would have liked the wording to be a bit clearer on this step.
Can you skip making your own marshmallow crust and just layer marshmallows on top and brullee them? Not proud, but sometimes I need a shortcut.
A family favorite - so good!!
I took others suggestions about mixing the type of chocolate to both milk and semisweet. They were right the chocolate turned out perfect. Now for the harder part the marshmallow. The first time I made this I followed the marshmallow part directly and it didn’t stiffen up as much as I would have liked. Also wish I would have doubled the amount of marshmallow to cover the pie in a thicker layer. This is the second time ever making marshmallow and I didn’t know it would need to be whipped for so long. Adding times for some of these parts of the recipe would have been helpful. Overall great tasting pie I’ll make it again for our next company picnic. Just doubling the marshmallow amount next round.
Used store bought gluten free graham cracker pie crust. Baked the filling for closer to 30 mins in the oven because it was really wobbly the day before and stored covered in the fridge overnight. Use whisk attachment to beat marshmallows. Really yummy!