My Favorite Key Lime Pie Recipe | Home Movies with Alison Roman

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What? You know what. I don't know what.  Is it the -- is it the sweet condensed,   the sweetened condensed milk over the  backdrop of my careless whisper shirt? I'm Alison Roman and I am going to be making a  Key Lime Pie today except I'm not using key limes   I'm using regular limes. Lime pie just does not  have the same ring to it. If you have access to   key limes, please use them. They are very tiny  and you will be juicing for a very long time.   Key lime pie is sort of my platonic ideal of a  dessert. It is hyper acidic, it's not that sweet,   and it has a very few ingredients. On top  of that, it combines two of my most favorite   textures which are very, very crunchy in a  graham cracker crust and then super silky,   almost custard-y, panna cotta-y, creme brulee-y in  the texture of the custard itself. Everything kind   of happens like really quickly in the oven. It  doesn't need to bake for very long. There's a very   very low risk of messing up this dessert. This is  the appliance-free version of this key lime pie.   A lot of people will say, well couldn't I do it  with a mixer or couldn't I use a food processor?   Of course you can. I always just like to default  to not because I figure if you don't have any of   those tools, or you just don't feel like  grabbing them, or if like the difference   between you making this dessert and not, is being  like am I really gonna take down my stand mixer,   am I really gonna get out my food processor  and clean the bowl and the blade and blah blah   then like now you have no excuse, question  mark? You want to make this key lime pie? Yay.   So we're gonna start with graham cracker. There's  certain iconic desserts that I just feel like   can't be improved upon in terms of  like what makes them iconic or classic   and key lime pie is one of those things for  me, and I I feel like you know, could you do   a different crust with it to like mix it up,  sure. But will that make up -- why are these   really struggling? When I originally published  this recipe in my cookbook, Dining In,   pictured here, I call for 10 graham crackers which  is I said it was about one and a quarter sleeves   and I'm sorry. Please consider this my formal  apology. Every graham cracker brand has a   different amount of crackers in their sleeve and  if you ever opened another sleeve just to get that   one extra cracker, I am so sorry and I would  never ask you to do that ever again. So I call   for ten graham crackers but guess what I'm using  nine and that's enough, that's gonna be fine. And   instead of grinding this in a food processor,  I'm gonna just smash it in this bag like this.   You just wanna make sure that all of the very  large lumps are broken up. The reason I like doing   this by hand as opposed to in a mixer is because I  actually really enjoy the irregularity of crumbs. Oh okay well, in the bowl. This is too large. That's fine. So anything  larger than that break down to this size. I find   that when the graham cracker crust is too sandy it  just kind of like stays sandy and it's like eating   a spoonful of cinnamon or something it's like.  I want the texture of like the crunchy graham   cracker. My oven is preheating uh to 350, which  is what we'll bake the crust and the filling at,   and to this we'll add one tablespoon of sugar, a  pinch of salt (like three quarters of a teaspoon),   and then six tablespoons of fat. You can  do all butter, you can do all coconut oil,   I like a mixture of both um so  that's what I'm gonna use here. Because coconut oil and butter are solid in their  most natural state or their resting state I should   say, it can be tough to measure with like an  actual tablespoon or a measuring cup, so sometimes   what I'll do is I'll use a liquid measuring cup  and I'll guesstimate, and then once it's melted,   I will measure it again. And you can bake  your key lime pie in a number of vessels.   In order for it to be a pie, it should be in a  pie dish, which is a classic nine inch pyrex.   I prefer glass to metal because I like to see the  bottom, this goes for all pies, butter crust pies,   double cross pies, key lime pies. I think that  there is nothing better than a clear classic   9-inch pyrex. This is my go-to, it's not a  deep dish, it's a regular classic pie pan   and they are shockingly hard to find. Most places  will try to sell you a deep dish pie plate or   like with the fluted edges and I just don't like  them, so I special order these because while it   is the most basic classic version of a pie plate,  I think that people are constantly trying to like   upsell you with like a fancier version and I just  don't think it's necessary. I'm melting the butter   and the coconut oil together so I can re-measure  it and make sure that I've got six tablespoons,   but honestly like a tablespoon a teaspoon here or  there in your crust will not make a difference.   It may seem counterintuitive to say that you  need to spray your pie plate if your crust has   so much fat in it, which ours does, but it really  does make a difference. So I'm going to spray   this with non-stick spray. And it's just like  a light spray uh to make sure that it doesn't   stick afterwards. Probably my number one like  must-have ingredient when baking is non-stick   spray, really it makes a huge difference. So  that was four tablespoons and this is two. So I'm just making sure that these crumbs are  really well saturated. You kind of do want to   work it to make sure that it feels like wet  sand. This feels so good in your hands because   it's still warm from the butter, and like  warm hot crumbs is a really special feeling,   that you just have to feel to believe. I can't  describe it. I think the trickiest part of this   whole pie is making the crust itself because it's  not something we're rolling we can't you know make   it a certain thickness it's a crumbly thing and  we're like how is this crumbly mess gonna form a   crust that will stay up but it will and I will  show you how. The most important thing to me   is that we have enough crust around the edges.  I always take the crust and I kind of push it   to the ends just to kind of envision what I'll  need because the bottom layer actually needs to,   doesn't need to be that thick. You need a lot less  crust than you think and that goes for pie crust   pies as well and then you have this weird pile  in the center, and you kind of just delicately.   You can't be too aggressive here because this  crust is hanging on by an absolute thread.   It's thinner than you think it should be  because we need that reinforcement on the pie   walls. We need reinforcement of the pie  walls. Think about when you're slicing a pie,   like that bottom layer should be just thick  enough to like hold the base. You don't want   to have to cut into like a massive thick cookie at  the bottom, that's not what we're here for. This   is a good technique for any type of crumb crust  taking a measuring cup and just kind of pressing,   kind of packs it in without it sticking to  your hands and gives you a really nice flat   even bottom and sort of  further presses in those walls.   I always do this every time I'm making a  crumb crust. And then you can kind of just tap the inside. Once we take it out of the oven  from the second time it's gonna be a lot more   stable, but right now, it's delicate so just be,  be gentle with it. Like delicately pick it up and put it in your oven and set a timer for  12 to 15 minutes. This is called the parbake,   which means we're not taking it to its full bake  we're taking it halfway. Basically because once we   put the filling in it's going to continue to bake  again, so we don't want it too brown now because   then it would become almost burned on that  second bake. And while that's baking we're   gonna make our filling. Great. Essentially the  filling is egg yolks, sweetened condensed milk,   and lime juice. The most annoying thing that  we'll do this whole day is juice a million limes.   And we need one full cup of lime juice, which is  a lot of limes. The amount of limes will really   depend on the size of the lime, how juicy  the limes are, so it could be anywhere from   10 to 20 limes. I'm gonna guess these  limes, they feel hard, this is gonna suck   a lot. If you feel like your limes  are hard you can like press on them   and that will help them be a little bit  juicier. I'm gonna massage each individual lime,   how lucky are these limes? Yeah these limes  suck. I'll massage, you juice. Okay, I like this game. I'm going to zest two limes  now because there's nothing worse   than cutting into all your citrus  and then realizing you need some   zest and then trying to like zest a  half of a lime or lemon, it sucks. Wait, why are you still doing this? It wasn't  good enough. I could feel a little firm. Oh   bone dry! Bone dry! This is bad. This is  a disgrace. It did -- you can just tell   like look at that, it's a it's a dry lime.  Here's a question I know you're gonna ask,   can I use bottled lime juice? No you  can't. I'm sorry. If you won't drink it   then I wouldn't use it for this pie and pre  pre-juiced limes that are sold in a bottle,   the juice is pasteurized, the acidity is not the  same, the flavor is totally different. I don't   trust it. I don't want it in this pie. Please  don't do that. We are taking the crust out now.   It can be tough to tell when these crusts are  done, because the graham cracker is already brown. But it's done. In a perfect world this filling  would have been done. We were presented with a   beautiful challenge, which is going to make  us stronger both literally and figuratively.   Sometimes using a fork can help if you don't  have a reamer, you don't want to use your reamer,   and just kind of like break up the little pulps  inside, but a bad lime is a bad lime, and like an   unjuicy lime is unjuicy lime. A fork or a tool  will only help so much. One, two, three, four,   five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, eleven, twelve  limes. We have a perfect one cup of lime juice.   I'm not gonna strain it. The pulp does not  bother me at all and I don't think it'll   bother you either. So for this you need a whisk  and a bowl. Four egg yolks go into your bowl.   I'm using a bowl that is deeper than it is wide,  which I find easier to whisk. If you want to save   the whites for something you can, I don't, so  I'm not going to. And those just get broken up. And then we're gonna add our sweetened condensed  milk. And this is just a can of sweetened   condensed milk. They almost always come in 14  ounces. If it's an ounce or two more or less,   that's okay. If you must know,  Careless Whisper is one of my top   top three karaoke songs. Normally I duet it with  my friend Drew and on my, on the occasion of my   34th birthday, we like really went in hard on  the karaoke and him and I were doing Careless   Whisper and the whole room was like, the  energy was was electric. It was palpable.   People were screaming. We were, we were singing  there were tears and I take the microphone   and I like yanked it out from the machine, it went  crashing to the floor, the karaoke machine broke,   the party was over, I ruined my birthday.  But we went out on top with this song. We're whisking the egg yolk and the sweetened  condensed milk together until it's like paler,   lighter, and fluffier. This will happen a  lot faster and a lot more efficiently in   a stand mixer. That said, even  if this didn't become pale and   fluffy at all and you just added the  juice now and put it in the crust,   it would still be delicious. I just like to  try to beat as much air into it as possible,   because it makes the final result a little  bit airier, a little bit more delicate. So   you can see what it looks like right now. It just  kind of looks like yellow sweetened kind of milk. And then I switch not for camera  purposes but because my wrist gets tired.   It hasn't quite doubled in volume, but  you can tell it's lighter, it's airier,   it's paler in color, and it looks a  little thicker. I'm gonna add the zest and the zest is just to like reinforce  the lime flavor, it's not necessary.   Top three karaoke songs: Careless Whisper, I'm  The Only One by Melissa Etheridge -- I almost   always open with that because it's like not  too dancey but it like shows the vocal range,   I do any Alanis, I always kind of like end the  night with Criminal -- Fiona Apple. So we have   our crust (graham crackers, sugar, salt, butter,  coconut oil) and then we have our filling (which   is egg yolks, sweetened condensed milk, lime  juice, lime zest). I'm going to add a small   pinch of salt and then you pour it right in. I  like to do it like this in a circular motion.   You don't want to pour the liquid directly in  one spot because it can like sink into the crust.   Okay and just as gingerly as we put it in the oven  the first time, we're gonna put it back in the   second time. We're gonna set a timer for 20 to 25  minutes. Our pie is in the oven. It's the second   time the crust has been in the oven, but the first  time for the filling. It's baking for 20 to 25   minutes and during that time the eggs are setting,  it's like when you bake a custard, a creme brulee,   something like that. But when we take it out  it'll still be way too jiggly, way too soft   for it to be sliced, so then we're gonna chill it,  and that will sort of continue cooking the eggs   and setting that custard because the acidity from  the limes is also what cooks the eggs. You may   have even read some key lime pie recipes where you  don't bake the custard at all because the acidity   from the limes is actually going to cook the yolks  but I like to do both just because people you know   can be weird about raw eggs, but I also just think  that the final texture is a lot silkier that way,   and less puddingy, more custardy. Our pie is  coming out of the oven. It's still a little jiggly   and that's fine. I'm gonna let it hang here before  I put it in the fridge. I'm not going to put it   directly into the fridge because that temperature  change can sometimes cause the top to crack.   It can also cause condensation in your fridge and  steam and we don't want that. The other thing that   I did also do is I sprinkled the top with flaky  salt when it came out of the oven. You'll notice   that when you take it right out of the oven just  like a cheesecake or anything else that has eggs   and like a custardy kind of way it souffles  slightly, but as it cools down it is gonna   kind of settle and deflate a little bit. Which  I'll show you in our swap, which is this one.   So this is the pie that I just pulled out, it's  gonna sit here for like another hour before I put   it in the fridge. This is my pie that I made last  night, um it's the same recipe, just yesterday. It's the same recipe from the past. This is the same recipe from the future. When  I took this pie out yesterday it was jiggly   just like that one and now no jiggle. It's  totally and completely set. You could touch it,   that's why we're gonna cover it with whipped cream  anyway. Anyway which brings me to my next point   which is whipped cream. So the topping, powdered  sugar, heavy cream, yogurt. If you had something   like labneh or sour cream, that would also work in  yogurt's place. I wouldn't ever use 100% yogurt,   or 100% labneh, 100% whipped cream because those  don't whip the same as yogurt. So I kind of use   the whipped cream for height volume fluffiness and  then I use the additional fat for like creaminess,   richness, flavor. All right this is seven ounces  of yogurt. I'm asking you to use eight ounces.   I'm not gonna miss the ounce. It's fine we'll  compensate with whipped cream. But you want to   start with the whipped cream but basically the  idea is is one to one heavy cream to yogurt. And you basically want to take this  almost all the way to whipped cream   before adding your yogurt. This is a very special  kitchen task to me. I find it like very magical   that you can just take a bowl of cream and have a  whisk and turn it into something else that is like   markedly different and it happens  pretty quickly. It's already happening.   See how it's like almost there? It's just, but it  looks kind of like not that stable. The reason I   use powdered sugar instead of regular granulated  sugar is because the corn starch in the powdered   sugar is going to help stabilize the whole  mixture. So I'm adding about a quarter cup here. The other reason I like powdered sugar  is because it dissolves immediately.   So there you have like a pretty basic  whipped cream. It's like holding a peak. If I were to keep beating it just  like as is, it might turn to butter.   And then I'm gonna add the yogurt again.  You could use sour cream. I would not use   regular yogurt, it's too thin here  and it would dilute the topping. This takes forever. This recipe is a real workout.  Between the limes and this? My god, it's like a   Barry's Boot Camp, a thing that I did a few times  and then stopped. This isn't like a billowy, like   mile high type of topping. This is more like a  luxurious silky, it's soft, it's creamy. This   texture of the inside of the pie is going to  be very set, so the top by contrast should feel   very silky and like just held together. There  doesn't have to be like a decorative pattern   on the top. This isn't a meringue pie where  you want to like pipe a star and like hold   a shape. To me this is about like the textural  differences between this like soft creamy topping,   the like more firm custardy filling, and  the very very crunchy, almost salty crust. Eat on camera? I'd be honored. It tastes  really good to me. And so sour but also like   extremely balanced and doesn't feel heavy, it  feels like light. That's sort of why I always   order it at the end of the night. There's just  like always room for key lime pie. I feel like   it's light enough and tart enough where it kind  of just like wakes up your whole mouth and like   your whole situation at the end of a meal.  I don't know it's like always appropriate.   This is gonna suck so hard. I  can just tell, like look at this, it's not one drop.
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Channel: Alison Roman
Views: 297,299
Rating: 4.9194541 out of 5
Keywords: key lime pie, key lime pie recipe, how to make key lime pie, easy key lime pie, homemade key lime pie, how to bake key lime pie, best key lime pie, pie recipe, dessert recipe, key lime, key lime pie (dish), key lime pie alison roman, alison roman, home movies with alison roman, a newsletter, nothing fancy, dining in, baking cooking, cooks, recipes, recipe, how-to, how to, kitchen, food, chef, home cooking
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Length: 18min 51sec (1131 seconds)
Published: Tue Apr 20 2021
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