Shoo-Fly Pie

  3.9 – 18 reviews  • Easy Baking
Level: Easy
Total: 2 hr 15 min
Prep: 30 min
Inactive: 45 min
Cook: 1 hr
Yield: 8 to 10 servings

Ingredients

  1. 6 ounces all-purpose flour
  2. 1/2 teaspoon table salt
  3. 3 ounces unsalted butter, chilled
  4. 1-ounce lard, chilled
  5. 4 tablespoons ice water, in spritz bottle
  6. Approximately 32 ounces dried beans, blind baking
  7. 5 1/2 ounces all-purpose flour
  8. 4 ounces dark brown sugar
  9. 2 tablespoons cold, unsalted butter
  10. 1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
  11. 3/4 cup boiling water
  12. 3/4 teaspoon baking soda
  13. 8 ounces molasses, by weight
  14. 1 whole egg, beaten
  15. 1 teaspoon vanilla extract

Instructions

  1. In the bowl of a food processor, combine flour and salt by pulsing 3 to 4 times. Add butter and pulse 5 to 6 times until texture looks mealy. Add lard and pulse another 3 to 4 times. Remove lid of food processor and spritz surface of mixture thoroughly with water. Replace lid and pulse 5 times. Add more water and pulse again until mixture holds together when squeezed. Place mixture in large resealable bag, squeeze together until it forms a ball, and then press into a rounded disk and refrigerate for 30 minutes.
  2. Preheat oven to 425 degrees F.
  3. Place 2 (9-inch) metal pie pans in the refrigerator to chill.
  4. Remove dough from refrigerator and roll out in the bag until it reaches the edges of the bag and is 10 to 11-inches round. Cut along 2 sides of the plastic bag, open bag to expose dough on 1 side and turn a 9-inch pie pan upside down on the exposed side. Invert the entire thing and gently pull the remaining side of the plastic bag off the dough. Press the dough into the edges around the pan and trim any excess dough. Press the edges of the dough over the lip of the pan. Place in refrigerator for 15 minutes.
  5. Poke holes around sides and into the bottom of the dough. Place a large piece of parchment paper on top of dough and fill with dry beans. Press beans into edges of dough, set on a baking sheet, and bake in the oven for 10 minutes. Remove parchment and beans and continue baking until light golden in color, approximately 7 minutes longer. Remove from oven and place on cooling rack. Allow to cool completely while preparing the filling.
  6. Decrease heat of oven to 350 degrees F.
  7. For the crumbs: Place the flour, brown sugar, butter and salt into the bowl of a food processor and process until it forms crumbs. Reserve 1/4 cup and set both aside.
  8. For the filling: Place the baking soda in a medium mixing bowl and pour the boiling water over it. Add the molasses, egg, and vanilla; whisk to combine. Add the larger amount of crumbs to the molasses mixture and whisk just to combine. Pour this mixture into the prepared crust. Sprinkle the remaining 1/4 cup of crumb mixture evenly over the top of the filling. Place pie on the middle rack of the oven and bake for 40 to 45 minutes or until the filling puffs, begins to look dry and starts to crack slightly. Remove from the oven, transfer to a rack, and cool completely before cutting.

Nutrition Facts

Serving Size 1 of 10 servings
Calories 644
Total Fat 14 g
Saturated Fat 7 g
Carbohydrates 108 g
Dietary Fiber 15 g
Sugar 30 g
Protein 25 g
Cholesterol 43 mg
Sodium 293 mg

Reviews

Ricardo Morris
I have made shoo-fly pie a couple of times. I like it not too sweet and it has a kind of cakey texture. this time I’m going to try making it with maple syrup, First I think I will have to cook down the maple so it has the thickness of the molasses.
Joseph Cook
It looked great when it came out, but I could not for the life of me get it to not have a soupy consistency. The top of the pie was burned, but the middle just would not cook anymore. Maybe the recipe needs more dry ingredients?
Ms. Olivia Blankenship
this pie is great, if you weight the ingredients and love the taste of molasses, i’m not that crazy about molasses and the pie isn’t sweet enough for me.
Sarah Lee
I’ve made this pie twice, and plan to make it again soon. It’s an unusual flavor if your not used to the molasses, but I love it!
Steven Steele
This is the easiest pie I’ve ever made. I cant understand why people are having problems. I made my own pie crust, used my 9″ ceramic pie dish, blind baked it like this recipe says, made the dark brown sugar, (search for Alton’s Homemade Dark Brown Sugar like Alton does on the episode, save the rest in a jar for another use, and made the crumb topping in the food processor, since I had it out making the dark brown sugar. After the filling was made, I put the pie in the oven on an aluminum sheet tray like Alton does in the episode. I had to bake mine for a few more minutes than 45 mins. It came out pretty and looked just like his from the show.

I used Grandma’s Original molasses, if that helps.

This recipe is mainly molasses, so if you dont like molasses, this may not be for you.

I served this with Alton’s “The Once and Future Beans” and my own Boston Brown Bread, Alton has a recipe for that I havent tried yet. The Shoo Fly Pie was great with this menu.

Nicholas Howell
So I threw it out, and took out the second one (2 to a pack. This one I did not blind bake, thought I did dock the crust. I made the filling (all my store had was blackstrap molasses poured it into the shell and baked at 350 degrees for 40 mins… When pie came out it had overflowed (even thought it fit the crust when poured in…I knew it would puff, but not THAT much…. After cooled, I tried some, and while parts tasted ok, it tasted kind of burnt. I don’t know if it actually burned (kind of hard to tell…lol. Could be I used the wrong molasses. Alton mentions two types are made in the sugar refining process, “fancy” and “blackstrap”. Has anyone made this using the other type of molasses? Perhaps Blackstrap is too strong for this pie? I’d like to try this again… to see if it comes out any different…
James Cole
I made this today and it is another winner by Alton. The only thing I can figure from the negative reviews is that they did not measure by weight the flour, brown sugar, and molasses. To pfinney the 2nd pie pan could be used in the blind baking of the crust if you don’t have anything to weigh it down with you can set the 2nd pie pan inside the first to keep it from puffing up.
Jessica Miller
I want to meke this pie but am confused as to where the 2nd pie pan fits it?
Corey Bishop
The flavor was ok, but the texture was not good at all. This is my first ever shoo-fly pie, so it may not be the recipe. It could be that I dont like this pie.
Wendy Lee
I have never had Shoo-fly pie before and I wanted to try something different. Everyone in the family loved it! I’ve made this pie twice now (second one is in the oven) and will most deffinitly be making it again. Since I had no idea on how to measure molasses by weight and I didn’t have a scale I just guessed at the difference and used 3/4 of cup. It’s worked so far and I can’t wait to eat this one.

 

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