Silky Sweet Potato Pie Recipe (2024)

Why It Works

  • Simmering tenderizes the sweet potatoes, condenses the dairy, and extracts a deeper aroma of cinnamon, nutmeg, and vanilla.
  • DIY "condensed" milk has a lighter, fresher flavor than canned, with a subtle toffee taste.
  • Plain white sugar balances the pH of the dairy, which would instantly curdle if boiled with brown sugar.
  • A digital thermometer eliminates guesswork; the pie is done when it reaches an internal temperature of 195°F.

Having grown up down South, I can't imagine Thanksgiving or Christmas without a sweet potato pie. If that's not a familiar tradition for you, I can understand the temptation to see it as a mere replacement for pumpkin. But resist that urge, and trust me when I say that sweet potato pie is a thing unto itself.

Why a Sweet Potato Pie Is Better Than Pumpkin

Here's the deal. Pumpkin doesn't have much in the way of flavor, so it needs to be spiced seven ways to Sunday to taste like anything at all, and perhaps that's why "pumpkin spice" blends don't even bother to include the eponymous ingredient. Cooked pumpkin is also watery and bland, so, whether your purée is homemade or store-bought, it perks up only with the addition of lots of sugar and fat, giving the pie a dense, custardy texture.

But sweet potatoes? Once roasted, sweet potatoes are so deliciously rich, creamy, and flavorful, they can be served with nothing more than a pinch of salt. That simplicity is reflected in traditional recipes, which involve little else beyond milk, eggs, cinnamon, and nutmeg. Brown sugar is a purely modern twist: Nineteenth-century recipes called for plain sugar if they called for any at all, but the sweet potatoes most often spoke for themselves.

Silky Sweet Potato Pie Recipe (1)

That idea runs contrary to the perspective of today's food world, which is obsessed with layering ingredients to add complexity and depth, but when one ingredient is piled on top of the next in endless succession, you don't always build flavor. Sometimes you bury it. In the case of sweet potato pie, there's something to be said for simplicity—letting a few thoughtfully chosen ingredients work together in concert, without any stray chords to distract from their harmony.

Keeping It Simple

When made with ginger, cloves, brown sugar, and an excess of fat, sweet potato pie tastes like a knockoff version of pumpkin, equally heavy and dark. But when made according to those bare-bones 19th-century recipes, sweet potato pie comes together in one perfect note, bright and clean. That very lightness makes it the perfect match for a big meal, when our palates have been overwhelmed by a multitude of dishes and our pants are a little snug.

Of course, my appreciation for time-honored recipes doesn't mean I take a strictly old-fashioned approach. In accordance with recipes from the 1800s, I boil my sweet potatoes until they're tender and sweet, but instead of water, I use a blend of milk and cream.

Now, prolonged boiling would normally cause milk to curdle, as its acidity is concentrated over time. But,as with my homemadecajeta, curdling can be avoided with the addition of alkaline ingredients. With cajeta, that's a spoonful of baking soda, but for sweet potato pie, I reach for a slightly alkaline spice: cinnamon.

Not only does this method infuse sweet potatoes with flavor from the inside out, it also cooks off more than a pound of water, essentially condensing the milk. In turn, that coaxes out the mellow toffee notes we associate with canned milk, but not to the same degree, keeping the custard's flavor comparatively fresh.

Animmersion blendertransforms the chunky mixture into a silky purée, and the custard itself can be made straight in the pan. Just whisk in the remaining ingredients, and you're done.

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Making a Sweet Potato Pie Ahead of Time

The thick custard can be held for a week in the fridge, then brought to room temperature—or it can be poured straight into a fully baked pie crust, because it won't be in the oven long enough for the crust to crisp up on its own. Follow myblind-baking tutorial, and you'll be good to go.

The pie bakes for just 45 minutes at 350°F (177°C), or until the custard is gently set—about 195°F (91°C) in the very center. This temperature is a bit higher than what you see recommended for most custard pies, but that's due to its unusually low moisture content. That fact makes the custard especially silky, while ensuring the crust itself stays flaky and crisp, particularly if you're using myold-fashioned flaky pie dough(whose relatively high moisture content makes it disinclined to absorb other liquids).

Those unique factors mean that my sweet potato pie can be held overnight at room temperature without any detriment to the crust, so it's a great make-ahead recipe for the holidays.

Also make-ahead? My brown sugar whipped cream, which stays fluffy and light even after a few days in the fridge. Diluted in cream, brown sugar provides just a hint of butterscotch to complement, rather than compete with, the sweet potatoes. Or, if you'd prefer to match the understated simplicity of the pie, a dollop of plain whipped cream would be swell.

Regardless of how it's served, I hope this sweet potato pie finds its way to your Thanksgiving table. Whether you're craving a change of pace, or just a change of technique, its sweet simplicity is a beautiful conclusion to any meal.

Recipe Details

Silky Sweet Potato Pie Recipe

Active60 mins

Total2 hrs

Serves12 servings

Ingredients

  • 16 ounces sweet potatoes (3 1/3 cups; 455g) from 2 medium sweet potatoes, peeled, roughly diced (see notes)

  • 1 vanilla bean, split and scraped, seeds reserved for whipped cream topping

  • 2 or 3 cinnamon sticks (about 6 inches total)

  • 1 whole nutmeg (see notes)

  • 26 ounces milk (3 1/4 cups; 740g), any percentage will do

  • 6 ounces heavy cream(3/4 cup; 170g)

  • 7 ounces white orlightly toasted sugar(1 cup; 195g)

  • 1 tablespoon ground cinnamon

  • 1 teaspoon freshly gratednutmeg

  • 1/2 teaspoon Diamond Crystal kosher salt; use half as much if iodized table salt

  • 1/2 ounce vanilla extract(1 tablespoon; 14g)

  • 3 large eggs

  • Old-fashioned flaky pie crust, prepared as for a blind-baked pie

  • Brown sugar whipped cream (optional)

Directions

  1. In a 3-quart stainless steel saucier, combine sweet potatoes, empty vanilla pod, cinnamon sticks, whole nutmeg, milk, cream, and sugar. If you have a scale, write down the weight of the saucier and combined ingredients so you can precisely measure the reduction.

    Silky Sweet Potato Pie Recipe (3)

  2. Bring to a boil over high heat, then adjust to medium-low and maintain a gentle simmer (higher heat may cause the milk to curdle). Scrape frequently with a flexible spatula to prevent milk solids from building up around the side, and simmer until sweet potatoes are fall-apart tender and dairy has condensed into a thick sauce, about 55 minutes. The saucier should weigh 19 ounces (535g) less than when you started. (Alternatively, total volume, including cooked sweet potato, should be 3 2/3 cups when finished.)

  3. Adjust oven rack to lower-middle position and preheat to 350°F (177°C). Remove vanilla bean and spices from saucier and purée sweet potato and dairy mixture with an immersion blender until smooth. (If needed, transfer to a smaller container to avoid splashing.) Whisk in ground cinnamon, grated nutmeg, salt, and vanilla, followed by eggs. If you like, strain through a fine-mesh strainer before pouring into prepared pie crust.

    Silky Sweet Potato Pie Recipe (4)

  4. Bake pie until gently set in the middle with an internal temperature of 195°F (91°C), about 40 minutes. Cool at least 20 minutes before slicing with a chef's knife, pausing to wipe the blade clean as needed. If desired, serve with dollops of brown sugar whipped cream. Wrapped in plastic, sweet potato pie will keep for up to 3 days at cool room temperature.

    Silky Sweet Potato Pie Recipe (5)

Special Equipment

3-quart stainless steel saucier, immersion blender, large fine-mesh strainer (optional), digital thermometer

Notes

I love the bright color of garnet yams in this recipe—don't worry, despite the name, they're actually sweet potatoes—but any true sweet potato will do. This recipe will not work with butternut squash or pumpkin, both of which develop an unpalatable vegetal quality with boiling.

Even if you're not a big fan of nutmeg, you'll be surprised at how well it pairs with the sweet potato custard, coaxing out a sense of brightness and cutting through the dairy fat. In the quantities used here, it has a fresh, almost herbaceous flavor, owing to its high levels of myristicin, an essential oil common to parsley and dill.

Silky Sweet Potato Pie Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Why is my sweet potato pie not smooth? ›

Sweet potato pie boasts the same creamy texture of other custard pies. While that does begin with ingredients, how you bake that pie really affects that final product. If you over-bake it, it becomes dense and loses its satiny mouthfeel; if you under-bake it, it will never set up to slice.

Is heavy cream or evaporated milk better for sweet potato pie? ›

Evaporated milk makes this pie super rich and creamy. That said, if you can't get your hands on a can of evaporated milk, heavy cream will work as a substitute.

Why add eggs to sweet potato casserole? ›

A really good sweet potato casserole filling should be light and moist, not dense. If it's dense, then you may not have added an often overlooked ingredient—an egg. An egg adds lift, structure and volume and makes the filling more custard-like.

How do you keep pie crust from getting soft? ›

The most common way to ward off a soggy pie crust is by a process called blind baking. Blind baking means you pre-bake the crust (sometimes covered with parchment or foil and weighed down with pie weights to prevent the crust from bubbling up) so that it sets and crisps up before you add any wet filling.

What happens if you put too much evaporated milk in pumpkin pie? ›

Pies with too much evaporated milk formed blisters on top.

Though the interior of the filling had a great, creamy texture. The flavor was ever-so-slightly muted and had a hint of milkiness to it.

Is pumpkin pie better with sweetened condensed milk or evaporated milk? ›

As the name suggests, sweetened condensed milk makes the pie sweeter and gives it a denser, creamier texture. Evaporated milk, on the other hand, yields a lighter, airier result. Evaporated milk isn't sweetened either, which is why you can't simply swap one thickener for the other.

Why is my sweet potato pie watery? ›

Boiling also runs the risk of leaving you with watery mash, which can make a pie that doesn't firm up.

Why does pumpkin pie taste like sweet potato pie? ›

If you were to take a bite of both sweet potato and pumpkin pies, you'll notice that there are more similarities than differences. They're both made with eggs, vanilla, and milk (either whole or condensed), and they're both seasoned with warm spices including cinnamon and nutmeg.

Who makes sweet potato pies for Walmart? ›

She leads a team of professionals to bring quality bakery products to over 4,500 store locations. A notable accomplishment is that Kinna is the person responsible for creating the Patti Labelle Sweet Potato Pie.

Who eats sweet potato pie? ›

Particularly beloved in Black and Southern households, this traditional delicacy has a rich history that travels from the forests of Peru to kitchens of the antebellum era. This dish is so rife with nostalgia that the popularity of sweet potato pie rivals even that of its autumnal rival, pumpkin pie!

Why did my sweet potato pie turn green? ›

AVA said that sweet potatoes contain flavonoids (a type of anti-oxidant), and water-soluble pigments which may cause colour changes. "The greenish colour can be due to a natural occurrence, when the water soluble pigments in the cooked sweet potatoes are exposed to air," AVA said.

Can you leave sweet potato pie out all night? ›

Note: Sweet potato pie can be left at room temperature up to two days without refrigeration. Can be refrigerated up to one week and remain fresh.

Should homemade sweet potato pie be refrigerated? ›

Sweet potato pies usually contain milk and eggs, so they are essentially baked custard pies and should be stored in the refrigerator. Rule of thumb: If a pie contains milk, cream and/or eggs, refrigerate it. You'll also want to refrigerate pies containing evaporated or condensed milk products.

Why are my sweet potatoes gritty? ›

Sweet potatoes grow in the ground, and skipping the cleaning step means dirt or grit can end up in your sweet potato casserole.

Why is my pie gritty? ›

This suggests the grittiness is lactose crystals (from the milk or from cooking at too high a temperature).

Why does my pumpkin pie have a weird texture? ›

You have to get it right: If it's underdone, you have raw crust and gooey filling; if it's overdone, you have a cracked top and rubbery texture. And too much poking and prodding can make your lovely creation resemble the dark side of the moon by serving time.

Why is my pumpkin pie not smooth on top? ›

The egg proteins in pumpkin pie filling form a loose net that traps moisture. As the egg proteins are heated, they begin to contract. Cook them hot enough, and they'll contract so much that they separate from each other into curds, giving your pie filling that grainy, wet texture.

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