Chef John's Best Thanksgiving Dessert Recipes

Chef John's Best Thanksgiving Dessert Recipes

Another Thanksgiving classic, this rich, nutty pie combines a sugary crust, a gooey-sweet filling, and a healthy splash of bourbon. And that's only half the good news. Because one of the most delicious pies ever is also one of the easiest to prepare.

Spooned into individual ramekins and baked in the oven in a water bath (which helps them cook evenly), these simple but spectacular seasonal desserts make perfect holiday treats. All you need to make them are egg yolks, brown sugar, cream, canned pumpkin puree, and classic pumpkin pie spices. You can also make this with butternut squash puree. Watch the video, to see Chef John work his magic with a kitchen blowtorch, turning the sugary tops into thin, hard-as-rock-candy layers above the sweet and creamy pumpkin goodness.

Chef John's creamy, custardy pumpkin cheesecake features a ginger snap crust. It's the perfect hybrid between a pumpkin pie and a traditional cheesecake—and the ideal dessert for Thanksgiving dinner. The cream cheese and pure pumpkin puree are spiced with cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, allspice, vanilla extract, and the secret ingredient is a splash of bourbon. Serve completely chilled with a dollop of whipped cream if you like.

Here's Chef John's essential crust recipe for pie season. "This pie crust is my personal favorite and is made using a food processor, which makes cutting the butter into the flour very simple," says Chef John. "By the way, you can make a double batch of this, and freeze the individually wrapped dough for future pie-related adventures."

"If you like banana cream pie, you'll absolutely love baked banana pudding," says Chef John. "Not only is there no pie crust to mess with, but I think the vanilla wafer cookies pair even more perfectly with the fruit and custardy pudding."

Here's a great seasonal cake to serve alongside the pumpkin and pecan pies. This one uses a couple cups of finely grated carrots, crushed pineapple, and coconut oil. For a moister cake, Chef John recommends using more carrots. "You can substitute vegetable oil for the coconut oil," says Chef John. "If you do go with the coconut oil, you can use a 'virgin' coconut oil, which will have a fairly strong coconut aroma, and identifiable flavor, or you can go with a more refined coconut oil, which is virtually odorless and flavorless."

This intensely flavorful apple pie recipe features a quick caramel sauce made with sugar, brown sugar, cinnamon, butter, and salt. "The interesting thing about this recipe is the way the caramel sauce is poured over the apples and the lattice crust," says Chef John. "You know how with a traditional apple pie some of the apple juices will caramelize as it bakes and bubble out of the pie and bake into and onto the flaky crust? That's how this whole pie is."

"This is sort of like a vanilla custard meets lemon meringue pie meets a very light cheesecake — except better," says Chef John. "Not only is this buttermilk pie easy to make and beautiful to look at, it's also bursting with the kind of bright, tangy flavor that no other custard-style pie can touch."

Fresh store-bought croissants are the secret to these simple individual pecan pies. You'll fill muffin cups with the croissants and then spoon in the sweet pecan-pie filling. "The croissants bake up into a crisp, flaky, buttery crust with a baklava-like texture," says Chef John. "Serve topped with a scoop of vanilla ice cream or just pick them up and eat them like muffins."

"After Poutine, Canadian butter tarts are Canada's second greatest culinary invention." Chef John puts an apple-infused twist on a traditional butter tart. "These have a wonderful texture and flavor and are a perfect small dessert."

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