Pumpkin Pie with Chai Spices
For one deep-dish 10-inch pie, or two smaller pies, you'll need:
Bake at 350 degrees for about 45 minutes to 1 hour until crust turns golden and pumpkin pie filling is set.
My "Traditional Thanksgiving Dinner with an Asian Fusion Twist" recipes:
Apple Crumble Pie
Ca Ri Ga (Vietnamese Curry Chicken) Pot Pie
Chai Black Tea
Cranberry Sauce
Cranberry/Plum/Hoisin Sauce
Mashed Okinawan Purple Sweet Potatoes
Peking Duck-Style Roast Turkey with Flour Wrappers, Scallions, Cucumbers and Cranberry/Plum/Hoisin Sauce
Pumpkin Pie with Chai Spices
Sichuan Green Beans
Taro Dinner Rolls
And the leftover turkey recipes:
Shichimenchou (Japanese Turkey Bone) Ramen
Turkey and Cranberry Grilled Cheese Sandwich
Turkey Vegetable Soup
*****
1 year ago today, my geraniums give me Christmas colors year-round.
2 years ago today, I finally got around to writing an "About this blog" post.
For one deep-dish 10-inch pie, or two smaller pies, you'll need:
1 Sugar pumpkin, also called pie pumpkin, about 2 cups
1 Pie crust per my recipe for cherry pie or store-bought pie crust
1 Pie crust per my recipe for cherry pie or store-bought pie crust
3/4 cup Chai Black Tea
3/4 cup sugar
2 eggs
1/4 cup flour
Make the pie crust and set aside in the fridge to chill.
Peel the pumpkin and remove the seeds. Cut into 1-inch chunks. Microwave for 10 minutes until softened. Or bake per my recipe for Baked Kabocha (Japanese Pumpkin) with Brown Sugar and Butter.
Puree the cooked pumpkin with 3/4 cup chai black tea and 3/4 cups sugar. Taste and add more sugar if needed.
Bake at 350 degrees for about 45 minutes to 1 hour until crust turns golden and pumpkin pie filling is set.
My "Traditional Thanksgiving Dinner with an Asian Fusion Twist" recipes:
Apple Crumble Pie
Ca Ri Ga (Vietnamese Curry Chicken) Pot Pie
Chai Black Tea
Cranberry Sauce
Cranberry/Plum/Hoisin Sauce
Mashed Okinawan Purple Sweet Potatoes
Peking Duck-Style Roast Turkey with Flour Wrappers, Scallions, Cucumbers and Cranberry/Plum/Hoisin Sauce
Pumpkin Pie with Chai Spices
Sichuan Green Beans
Taro Dinner Rolls
And the leftover turkey recipes:
Shichimenchou (Japanese Turkey Bone) Ramen
Turkey and Cranberry Grilled Cheese Sandwich
Turkey Vegetable Soup
*****
1 year ago today, my geraniums give me Christmas colors year-round.
2 years ago today, I finally got around to writing an "About this blog" post.
Thanks for posting this recipe... adopting it would take our family's pumpkin pie standards up several notches!
ReplyDeleteJust discovered your blog for the first time today and am having a blast reading your archives.
Also, I suspect the reason the store-bought fillings are darker in color has to do with the color additives they use. So typical.
Dan
Casual Kitchen
hey, I know you're the viet food expert.. I am gonna be in LA this weekend and I want to know what your TOP TOP FAVE Vietnamese place is..pho, spring rolls, summer rolls.. And fave for Banh mi too.. I am trying to edit my list!! There are too many!! Thanks so much!!
ReplyDeleteOH GOODNESS! I love pumpkin pie! But I don't like to eat pumpkins alone, is that weird? Thank you for the recipe.
ReplyDeleteThis is very interesting! I like how you can easily see the puffiness and the layers of the puff pastry in the last photo.
ReplyDeleteUsing chai tea is a good idea! Looks and sounds yummy!
ReplyDeleteDaniel,
ReplyDeleteWelcome! I hope you enjoy trolling through the archives. I bet preservatives have a lot to do with it too. Although, I have to admit, I do like the canned stuff too.
Cake Wardrobe,
Pho Thanh Lich for filet mignon pho, Brodard for nem nuong. I don't have any favorites for goi cuon or cha gio. If you look in my restaurants index, go to OC and you can pick out the Little Saigon entries. Or click on the Little Saigon post for just the VNese restaurant posts.
HoustonWok,
I don't know if anyone eats pumpkins alone either. Isn't it always just added to things, or made into things?
ETE,
I can't take credit for that. The pie crust is store-bought. :P I had way too many other dishes to worry about that night.
Pigpig,
Thanks.
My daughter won't eat the pointy end first, she says it's bad luck.
ReplyDeletePam,
ReplyDeleteI've never heard that superstition before. How interesting!
ETE,
Pillsbury pie crust. :)
Thanks for the awards.
How interesting - you posted this ages ago but it only just popped up onto my RSS feed.
ReplyDeleteI eat pizzas crust first :-D Although I think I eat "pies" (my cakes" pointy end first.
Oanh,
ReplyDeleteNope, just me lagging behind in blogging as usual. :)
Ha.
ReplyDeleteI can't make pie.
But I love pumpkin pie.
LOL.
You're weird if you eat pie from the crust.
It's the tips first.
You're so weird.
MacyIntGirl,
ReplyDeletePerhaps it's superstitious? Like a knife with the pointy end?
I just made this pie for my family and they loved its light texture! Thanks so much for posting it...I love the idea of an Asian-themed Thanksgiving.
ReplyDeleteKatherine
Kat,
ReplyDeleteGlad you liked it!