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Chocolate Pecan Pie

November 21, 2016 36 Comments

pecanpiesmaller

This is elbow-your-Great-Aunt-Dora-out-of-the-way-to-get-the-last-slice delicious! Chocolate should most certainly be represented at the Thanksgiving table, and pecans are the ideal plus-one to get it into the party. This pie is really rich and caramelly, with all that toasty pecan nuttiness studded throughout. Don’t worry, once you share a bite of your slice with Great Aunt Dora, she will totally understand all that elbowing.


Notes

There are some tips on making your storebought crust look homemade right here!

Ingredients

1 recipe single pastry crust (storebought or homemade)
1⁄2 cup brown sugar
1⁄3 cup granulated sugar
1⁄4 cup agave
3 tablespoons refined coconut oil
1 cup semisweet chocolate chips
6 ounces extra-firm silken tofu (half of a 12-ounce package)
1⁄4 cup unsweetened almond milk (or your favorite nondairy milk), cold
2 tablespoons cornstarch
1⁄2 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
2 cups pecan halves
Your fave whipped topping for garnish

Directions

Preheat the oven to 350°F. Press the pastry crust into a 9-inch pie plate and set aside.

In a 2-quart saucepan, mix the sugars and agave. Heat over medium heat, stirring often with a whisk. Once small bubbles start rapidly forming, stir constantly for about 10 minutes. The mixture should become thick and syrupy, but it shouldn’t be boiling too fiercely. If it starts climbing the walls of the pan in big bubbles, lower the heat a bit.

Add the coconut oil and chocolate chips and stir to melt. Turn off the heat, transfer the mixture to a mixing bowl, and cover it to keep warm. In the meantime, prepare the rest of the filling, working quickly so that the caramel doesn’t completely set.

Crumble the tofu into a blender or food processor, along with the milk, cornstarch, and salt. Puree until completely smooth, scraping down the sides of the blender to make sure you get everything.
Add the tofu mixture and the vanilla to the warm caramel in the mixing bowl and mix well. Fold in the pecans to incorporate.

Transfer the filling to the pie crust and bake for 40 minutes. The pie is going to be somewhat jiggly, but it should appear to be set.

Let cool at room temperature, then chill in the refrigerator to completely set for a few hours or overnight. Slice and serve!

Filed Under: Autumn, Christmas, Desserts, Featured, Holiday, Main Featured, Pie, Recipe, Recipes Featured, Recipes Main Featured, Superbowl, Superfun Times, Thanksgiving, Winter Tagged With: chocolate, pecans

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Natalie

    November 21, 2016 at 7:52 pm

    This looks wonderful! While Canadian Thanksgiving has come and gone, I think I can come up with a valid reason to whip this up! Question: If I double this recipe, do you think I can freeze one for a future chocolate pecan pie emergency?

    Reply
    • Alex

      November 22, 2016 at 8:51 pm

      I would love to know how this freezes once you’ve tried it out!
      I have a feeling it might not freeze too well because of the creamy consistency, but who knows.

      Reply
  2. Casey

    November 21, 2016 at 8:26 pm

    Here’s my question: Is brown rice syrup an acceptable substitute for agave in this recipe? Trying to keep a hold of the size of my shopping list this week but I don’t want to sacrifice the quality of my pie if agave is important!

    Reply
    • Katie

      November 22, 2016 at 4:59 pm

      I swapped out the agave for some maple syrup since that’s what I had on hand and it turned out fine. I think it just needs to be a liquid sugar so the other 2 sugars get a head start on dissolving.

      Reply
      • Casey

        November 22, 2016 at 6:27 pm

        Thank you, that’s helpful! So excited to try this for Thanksgiving.

        Reply
  3. Megan

    November 21, 2016 at 10:11 pm

    Well, I planned on making your Maple Pecsn pie. What to do? What to do?

    Reply
  4. Katie

    November 22, 2016 at 5:25 pm

    I made this the night I got the book and took it to a work potluck the next day. No one knew it was vegan, and no one knew there was tofu in it! I had a problem where the chocolate sort of seized up on me when I added it to the caramel, but I tossed the mixture in the Vitamix and it came back out smooth as can be. The filling is awesome – I hate traditional pecan pie (why did I make this?!) but this pie is like the soft, underbaked center of brownies with a bunch of pecans thrown in – read: delicious. I’m using the rest of the leftover silken tofu to make another pie for my omni family’s Thanksgiving! I love the new book!

    Reply
  5. Agnes Smith

    November 23, 2016 at 7:23 pm

    Katie. I had the same issue with it seizing up. I ended up putting the tofu mixture in with it back in the saucepan and stirring and heating until it finally got mostly smooth. I should have put it all in the blender. I tried using my immersion blender…don’t do that. It is in the oven now and have my fingers crossed. Sounds like it should be fine. Man, licking the bowls clean was a pleasure. So yummy.

    Reply
  6. Kat

    November 24, 2016 at 2:27 am

    Agnes, how did yours turn out? I had the same issue but I don’t have a blender (only an immersion), so I did the same and put it all in the pot to melt down. it’s in the oven now. the suspense is killing me!

    Reply
  7. Jenni

    November 24, 2016 at 3:37 am

    I’m having the same issue with the sugars seizing up. It tossed three pan full and don’t know if i should go for round 4 or just give up on having pie for tomorrow. I’ve tried lowering the heat to where it barely bubbles and reducing the cook time on it. The last round I actually added the chocolate and oil anyway and the mixture was like a super thick brownie mix. Any tips??

    Reply
    • Kat

      November 24, 2016 at 3:44 am

      After the chocolate seized up, mine looked like brownie batter in a pool of oil. Not good. I added the tofu mixture to it in a bowl but it solidifies the chocolate, making things worse. So, I put it back on the stove to melt it alllllll down. Once it was completely smooth, I stirred in the pecans and poured it into my pie shell. Baked 40 min as instructed, and it looks perfect. If I could share a photo in this comment I would.

      Reply
      • Jenni

        November 24, 2016 at 5:10 am

        Thank you for sharing your similar struggle! I hope *fingers crossed* the end result after cooling works out. Before I let the sugars seize up again I added the oil and chocolate and it became super thick again, but at that point I had ran out of ingredients so I threw in the tofu mix into the pan anyway and it miraculously turned super smooth ( and exceedingly delicious)! Just pulled it out of the oven and I think it’s going to be fine.

        Reply
  8. Kristin

    November 24, 2016 at 6:03 pm

    I substituted maple syrup for agave, and instead of turning to syrup, it turned into a pot of sugar! So I threw a little bit of water in to melt it back down. Then left the whole thing on med-low while I added the oil and chips. It firmed up a bit, but didn’t totally seize, maybe because it was still on the heat? Anyway. It just finished cooking and looks beautiful, and the taste I sneaked before was fab!

    Reply
  9. Lauren

    November 24, 2016 at 11:28 pm

    I had the same issue with the chocolate seizing up. It was a giant glob of hard chocolate in bit of an oil bath. We put the mixture in our Vitamix and it turned out perfect! Put it back in a bowl then added the tofu mix and it was super smooth. Thank you Vitamix! And the pie was delicious!!!

    Reply
  10. Catherine

    November 25, 2016 at 1:17 am

    I also had the seizing problem! When I added the chocolate and oil the chocolate melted quickly but there was also a liquid that wouldn’t incorporate. I pulled it off the stove and added the tofu mixture but the chocolate/sugar combo started clumping into hard balls. After a short panic, I poured everything back in the saucepan, stuck it on low, melted the chocolate balls, added the pecans, and poured that into the pie crust. Baked it and hoped for the best… And it came out great!! Sooo rich and delicious.

    Reply
  11. Agnes Smith

    November 25, 2016 at 4:44 am

    Kat. Mine turned out great! Thankfully. Have to figure the seizing thing out, because it was a hassle.

    Reply
  12. vegematic

    November 25, 2016 at 5:46 pm

    Mine seized as well when I added the chocolate chips, although I did not get the pools of oil that others have mentioned. I turned off the heat, added the tofu mixture, and hand-whisked the hell out of it until I had a smooth, liquid mixture. Added the pecans, tossed it in the oven, and a delicious, perfect pie came out!

    I should note that I subbed maple syrup in for the agave, in case that matters.

    Reply
  13. Agnes Smith

    November 25, 2016 at 10:01 pm

    I didn’t have the pools of oil either. Just relatively firm globs of chocolate. The pie was delicious and was exactly the right texture and firmness when it was done. I’m going to try it again at some point and maybe just heat the sugars for a while until they get hot enough to melt the chocolate and coconut oil, throw in the pecans, put in the pan and hope that the baking thickens it? I wonder if that would work.

    Reply
  14. Akshay

    November 26, 2016 at 5:06 am

    This looks wonderful! While Canadian Thanksgiving has come and gone, I think I can come up with a valid reason to whip this up!

    Reply
  15. laurelatlast

    November 27, 2016 at 4:35 pm

    I tried it with a cup of carob chips instead of chocolate and it turned out perfectly! I blended it all with the tofu after it had lightly boiled then added the pecan halves. Perfect! Also did it with a GF crust. Perfect for Thanksgiving. Thanks!

    Reply
  16. Casey

    November 30, 2016 at 6:17 pm

    This pie was so simple and delicious! I took it as my Thanksgiving dessert to my (omnivore) family’s gathering and everybody loved it. I managed to bring a couple pieces home, but my frozen pie crust was a two-pack, so I’m thinking of just making it again for my household to enjoy. Seriously excellent pie, pretty rich but not to the point of being unable to enjoy a whole slice!

    As far as texture issues, I didn’t have any trouble with the chocolate mixture. I did use brown rice syrup and a little bit of water since the syrup was thicker than agave. I used my usual unrefined coconut oil and it mixed just fine. When I went to mix everything together later I did have a few crystallized pieces, but they were easy to crush back into the mix just with the back of a spoon. I didn’t plan ahead well either so I thought I might be leaving it to cool too long, but everything worked perfectly!

    Reply
  17. laura

    December 10, 2016 at 8:28 pm

    guess i was early on being excited. i only see the brownie recipe and no others.

    Reply
  18. Katie

    December 25, 2016 at 5:28 am

    One more voice, one more solution to the chocolate problem: My chocolate also clumped up with the sugar, so I threw it in my food processor as recommended here. Unfortunately that only turned it to sandy chocolatey sugar, so I threw the sand back in the pan, added the tofu mixture which I had made beforehand, and was able to successfully melt it all down. The batter was delicious and the pie smells and looks perfect–tomorrow will be the taste test but I’m confident it will pass.

    Reply
  19. Charles

    March 19, 2017 at 6:14 am

    Are we supposed to toast the pecan before using them?

    Reply
  20. Linda Scherer

    November 15, 2017 at 4:54 pm

    I have made this many times and mine also seized up so I put the caramel mixture into the food processor with the tofu mixture and blend away. Turns out great. Oh, also I only cooked it about 5 minutes which is about 250 deg on candy thermometer

    Reply
  21. Debbie Voelpel

    November 23, 2017 at 1:23 am

    Isa you are amazing! This pie is absolutely fabulous. I had no issues making it and I certainly have no issues eating it.

    Reply
  22. Cathy

    October 3, 2018 at 3:21 pm

    Do I use extra firm tofu (the same that you would use for tofu scramble) or silken tofu the kind that is so soft that resembles jello?

    Reply
  23. Lauren

    November 22, 2018 at 2:23 am

    Wish I had come here to read these comments before wasting my time and expensive ingredients. I usually make the maple pecan pie, which I really love and find easy. Thought I switch it up to this recipe. First chocolate caramel seized when adding the chocolate. Threw it out. Second batch seized when adding tofu mixture. Threw that out, now have one bowl and one pan full of HARD chocolate candy soaking so I can scrub them. Oh yes and no dessert! This recipe ought to give temperatures to read with a candy thermometer since it seems to be such a delicate and temperamental recipe. I’m glad to see some people had luck with it, but I’m totally frustrated and giving up on it. I’ll stick with the maple pecan from now on.

    Reply
  24. Sara

    November 23, 2018 at 8:03 pm

    Agree with many this was such a frustrating recipe. I had to throw out my first batch as the sugar seized completely upon addition of the chocolate. I was moving quickly and had followed the recipe to a T. It was impossible to try and cook down as others had mentioned (to try and salvage it). When I tried it a 2nd time, I made sure to not have the sugar go above 250 (used candy thermometer) and tried to add the chocolate a little bit more gradually. Again, it started to seize . I was devastated. Fortunately, it wasn’t as rock-solid as time #1, so I threw it in the food processor with the tofu mixture. It almost killed my blade but it was able to get to good texture. Fortunately, the final produce was really tasty. But I will never make this again. The risk is too big, and costly. To have the panic the night before Thanksgiving — no thanks.

    Reply
  25. Jeri Swinton

    January 4, 2019 at 10:26 pm

    Add a little bourbon and you have the perfect vegan pie for Derby weekend! Which might give away I’m from Kentucky. Did it, and it was great.

    Reply
  26. amanda adaireelin

    December 10, 2019 at 6:27 am

    Add a little bourbon and you have the perfect vegan pie for Derby weekend!

    Reply
  27. Techinshorts

    June 8, 2020 at 10:35 am

    I made this and add some chocolate syrup and it tastes delicious.

    Reply
  28. Jessie

    November 28, 2020 at 9:52 am

    I just made this for thanksgiving and it’s yummy. However, I used a store-bought pie crust and it got overcooked. Is there anyway to avoid this next time? Thank you!

    Reply
  29. home shopping

    December 17, 2020 at 11:50 am

    I just made this for thanksgiving and it’s yummy. However, I used a store-bought pie crust and it got overcooked. Is there anyway to avoid this next time? Thank you!

    Reply
  30. Carol

    October 6, 2021 at 7:06 pm

    yup, mine seized up too. I believe melting the coconut oil first and melting the chips first and then adding both to the caramel will help. It seems that the cold chips and oil when added to the caramel, acted just the same way that you “crack” candy by dropping the syrup in cold water. MIght try it again.

    Reply

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