This delectable Sweet Potato Pie is a welcome fall tradition. It has a tender, flaky crust, a rich, creamy texture, and a perfect balance of autumn spices. I like to serve it with fresh whipped cream and a light dusting of cinnamon.
This sweet, flavorful Southern pie is a friend and family favorite and is always a hot commodity at holidays, family gatherings, and potlucks. If you like pumpkin pie, you will love sweet potato pie, which has a similar taste and texture. If you like sweet potatoes, try sweet potato casserole, salad, and fries.
This pie is made with an easy four-ingredient buttery, flaky crust and filled with sweet potatoes, butter, cream, brown sugar, and a few pantry spices. It is then baked to golden perfection. Get your forks ready for a tasty treat—it is not just for Thanksgiving.
INGREDIENTS NEEDED
- Butter: unsalted if using salted, reduce the added salt to 1/4 teaspoon salt
- All-purpose flour
- Salt: take note if using salted butter
- Sweet potatoes: choose ones that are free of soft spots, cracks, and sprouts
- Brown sugar: for sweetness
- Eggs: large ones, please
- Whipping cream: you can also use heavy cream. In many grocery stores, they are the same.
- Vanilla extract: the pure stuff, please
- Spices: ground cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, and cloves
HOW TO MAKE SWEET POTATO PIE
This is just the summary version of the recipe. See the recipe card below for ingredients and complete instructions.
Prepare the pie crust dough and pat it out into a disk. Then, wrap it in plastic wrap and chill it in the fridge for a couple of hours.
While the pie dough is chilling, boil the sweet potatoes until soft and gently peel them with your fingers. Mix the sweet potatoes with the remaining pie-filling ingredients in a large bowl using a handheld electric mixer at medium speed.
Gently roll out the pie crust, tuck it into the pie pan, trim the edge about an inch over the side, tuck it in along the edge, and flute it.
Pour the sweet potato mixture into the prepared pie crust. Beat the egg and water together and brush the edges of the crust with the egg wash. Bake for about 1 hour or until set. Finally, cool for a couple of hours on a wire rack before slicing.
PREPARATION TIPS
- The pie dough can be made up to 3 days in advance. Store disk-shaped mounds in the fridge covered thoroughly with plastic wrap.
- There is no need to peel the sweet potatoes before boiling. Once boiled, the skins will easily peel right off.
- Always in a hurry? Use a frozen, ready-made pie crust or even a graham cracker crust.
- Just like pumpkin pie, this pie needs to chill for several hours to cut well.
- Top with homemade whipped cream and a very light dusting of cinnamon.
PERFECT PIE CRUST
- Add just enough water until you form a dough ball that doesn’t crumble when pulled apart. Too much water will make the dough sticky, resulting in a tough, chewy crust, while too little water will make the dough fall apart and crack while you are working with it.
- Form it into a disk and wrap it with plastic wrap. Chill for at least 1 hour, but even longer is better.
- Be gentle when rolling out the crust, working from the middle out and turning the dough as you go.
- When moving the piecrust, gently fold or roll it around the rolling pin. Stretching it could cause it to contract when baked, resulting in shrinking and sinking edges.
- After rolling out your pie dough, let it rest in the refrigerator for about 20-25 minutes.
- STORE AND FREEZE
Store leftovers covered with wrap or in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 4 days.
To freeze, first, cool the pie completely. Then, double-wrap it in plastic wrap and then in a single layer of aluminum foil. You can also use a large freezer-safe airtight container. Freeze for up to 1 month. Thaw in the fridge overnight.