Strawberry Icebox Pie
Published Sept. 1, 2021

- Total Time
- 1 hour, plus at least 18 hours’ macerating and 5 hours’ chilling
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1pound thinly sliced strawberries (about 3 cups)
- 3tablespoons/38 grams granulated sugar
- 2teaspoons/6 grams powdered gelatin
- ½teaspoon freshly squeezed lemon juice
- 3tablespoons/42 grams unsalted butter, melted, plus more for greasing
- 3½cups/200 grams vanilla wafers (such as Nilla wafers) or about 1¾ cups crumbs
- 2tablespoons/25 grams granulated sugar
- 10ounces strawberries (about 2 cups)
- 1cup/ 240 milliliters cold heavy cream
- 2tablespoons/15 grams confectioners’ sugar
- 13vanilla wafers/45 grams, cut into halves
- Whipped cream, sweetened or unsweetened
For the Strawberry Gelatin
For the Pie Crust
For the Filling
For the Topping
Preparation
- Step 1
For the strawberry gelatin: combine sliced strawberries and sugar in a medium heat proof (preferably metal) bowl, cover the bowl with plastic wrap, and refrigerate 18 to 24 hours.
- Step 2
To make the crust: Heat oven to 325 degrees and lightly grease a 9- or 10-inch pie dish (don’t use anything smaller). In a food processor combine wafers, sugar and melted butter. Process until mixture is well blended. Transfer to prepared pie dish and, using the bottom of a flat-bottomed measuring cup, press crumb mixture into an even layer on the bottom and up the sides, pressing up about ¼-inch past the rim of the pie pan. Bake until the crust darkens slightly at the edges, 8 to 12 minutes. Transfer to a wire rack to cool.
- Step 3
To make the filling: Purée 3 ounces strawberries in a food processor, blender or immersion blender until smooth. You should have about ¼ to ⅓ cup strawberry purée. Set aside. Quarter another 2 ounces of strawberries to yield about ⅓ cup, and set aside.
- Step 4
With a whisk or an electric mixer fitted with the whisk attachment, beat heavy cream and sugar until soft peaks form, 2 to 3 minutes. Whisk in strawberry purée until just combined, making sure not to over beat. Using a rubber spatula, fold in quartered strawberries. Scrape strawberry cream into the cooled pie crust and smooth the top. Press the halved vanilla wafers vertically into the filling so that it is studded throughout with wafers. Cover pie with plastic wrap or parchment paper, place on rimmed sheet pan and chill in refrigerator for at least 3 hours (and up to 3 days). The longer the pie sits, the more cakelike the cookies get.
- Step 5
Once the pie has chilled, thinly slice the remaining 5 ounces of strawberries. Remove pie from refrigerator and place sliced strawberries over the filling to cover it, overlapping slightly if necessary. Place back into the refrigerator, covered, as you make the strawberry gelatin.
- Step 6
Put an inch or two of water in a medium saucepan and bring water to a simmer. Place the still-covered bowl of strawberries on top of the saucepan. Be sure the water is not touching the bottom of the bowl; if so, pour some water out. Heat strawberries to release more juice, swirling the bowl occasionally (use oven mitts), for 15 minutes; they should look very juicy. Using a fine sieve, strain strawberries until there is about ⅔ cup juice. You can press gently on the berries to release more juice but don’t press too hard or the gelatin will get cloudy. Save the strawberry solids for something else, like smoothies.
- Step 7
Transfer about 2 tablespoons of the hot strawberry juice into a bowl and sprinkle gelatin over the top; let it sit for a few minutes to soften. Add remaining strawberry juice to gelatin mixture and whisk until completely dissolved. Whisk in lemon juice.
- Step 8
With the pie still in the refrigerator on a sheet pan, pour the gelatin over the sliced strawberries (pouring the gelatin over the back over a spoon suspended over the pie can be helpful to get an even layer of gelatin over the top and doing this work while the pie is in the fridge ensures the glossiest topping and keeps everything from spilling). Let pie chill in the refrigerator, uncovered, until the gelatin sets, at least 2 hours or overnight. Serve with whipped cream dolloped on top.
Private Notes
Comments
Made this over the last couple of days. Gorgeous endeavor with an amazing result. To all of you hesitating because of the naysayers in the crowd, ignore them and make this pie. It was totally worth it!
The two ingredient icebox pie is the one she describes in the first paragraph of her article, made from whipped cream and chocolate wafers -- a totally different recipe.
The vertical wafers are essential to ensure that the filling solidifies to a sliceable texture. The filling is whipped cream with extra moisture from strawberry puree, which will turn into soup as it sits in the refrigerator. Juxtapose it with the wafers, however, and those wafers will soak up all of that moisture, turn soft and cake-like, and enable the whole shebang to firm up. Don't omit those wafers!
I followed every step as that's the only fair way to see if this is worth the effort. Sadly, it just isn't. Lots of work in each step, uses every dish in the kitchen, and in the end a very pretty dish that lacked in flavor. Bummer, I really wanted this to be worth it.
I was drawn in by how gorgeous this pie is and just made two for a church fundraiser. I discovered there are lots of people who loooove strawberry pie, especially this one. I agree the recipe is very do-able, you just have to think out when you are going to do the early steps. That, coupled with your strawberries rapidly passing their prime means this takes a large batch of berries and a good plan. I am still trying to picture the configuration of the author’s refrigerator where she is pouring gelatin over a spoon onto a pie on a cookie sheet in the fridge! That’s some equipment!
I found this recipe poorly written and a little difficult to follow. That said, the pie was delish. I upped the amount of strawberries in every quarter, and it was a hit. Very strawberry and beautiful in the table.