There are few foods not improved by a little dip in hot oil, but no one has capitalized on this cooking method with as much gusto as the American South. Chicken, steak, okra, oysters, and hush puppies are just a few of the foods Southerners love to fry. Over the last few years, their Thanksgiving tradition of deep frying a whole turkey has become popular across the country, thanks to its quick cooking time, crisp skin, and moist meat.
If deep frying can work wonders on an otherwise dry, flavorless turkey, we wondered what it could do for some other ho hum Thanksgiving foods. Deep fried green bean casserole? Well, maybe not every side dish was destined for the deep fryer. However, pumpkin pie is one dessert that is definitely improved by the addition of hot oil. These delicate, flaky hand pies are like biting into a cinnamon sugar doughnut with a pumpkin center.
Shopping List
Filling
1 15 oz can of pumpkin puree
2" piece of fresh ginger, peeled and grated
1 tsp cinnamon
1/4 tsp allspice
1/8 tsp nutmeg
3/4 cup brown sugar
Crust
dough for one 9" pie*
8 cups of vegetable oil
1 cup cinnamon sugar (1 cup white sugar mixed with 4 tsp cinnamon)
a deep fry or candy thermometer
cooling rack
cookie sheet
*If you are using store-bought make sure you buy refrigerated dough that you unroll yourself (not already pressed into a pan).
Recipe
1. Make the filling by mixing pumpkin puree, ginger, spices, and brown sugar in a bowl.
2. On a floured surface, roll out half of the pie dough to 1/8" thickness. If you are using store-bought, it will already be rolled into 2 disks that are 1/8" thick. Cut the dough into 4" diameter circles. You can do this with a large cookie cutter or use the top of a bowl, can, or Tupperware lid as a guide or cutter. (We used a metal lid as a makeshift cutter.) Alternatively, cut out a 4" circle out of paper or cardboard and trace around it with a knife. Place dough circles on a floured plate and refrigerate until you are ready to fill them. Repeat with the remaining dough.
3. Place one circle of dough in the center of your work surface. Roll the dough circle until it is about 4.5" to 5" in diameter. Place 1 heaping tablespoon of pumpkin filling in the center. Dip your finger in water and run it around the edge of the dough. Fold dough over and gently press the edges together with the tines of a fork. Make sure you seal the edges well or your filling could leak out and splatter while frying. Gently smooth your finger over the pie to evenly distribute the filling. Carefully place the pie on a cooling rack until ready for frying. (The rack will help keep the pies dry and minimize splattering.) Repeat steps 2 through 4 until you have filled all your pies.
4. Prepare to fry. Line a cookie sheet with paper towels or newspaper and place it underneath your cooling rack. Pour oil into a large pot. Attach thermometer to the side and heat oil to 360 degrees. Fry pies two at a time until golden brown, about 3 minutes. Pies will be delicate, so turn them very gently. If any of the pies fall apart, they will cause the oil to splatter.
5. Using a slotted spoon, remove cooked pies from the pot and place on the rack. Allow oil to drain for a minute, then carefully transfer hot pies to a shallow dish filled with the cinnamon sugar. Spoon sugar over pies then return to rack. Be careful, as pies will be incredibly hot and will crack if handled roughly.
6. If you prefer, you can bake your pies. Place pies on a parchment-lined baking sheet. With a knife or scissors, cut a few slits in the top of the pies to vent. Whisk an egg with a spoonful of water. Brush pies with egg wash and sprinkle liberally with cinnamon sugar. Bake at 375 until golden, about 15 minutes.
Makes about 14 pies.




Wait wait...someone invented portable pie? Hello 400 pounds!
At the risk of dating myself, portable pies have always been brought to us by Table Talk. Mmmm...blueberry...
One suggestion on the recipe: use a beaten egg white to seal the crust, not water, if you really want to glue that puppy together.
Hey right! Gluing puppies together is what makes life worth living!
Colloquial language is the salt and pepper of communication.
It's the Great Deep Fried Pumpkin Pies, Charlie Brown
Properly done turkey is NOT dry and flavorless, thankyouverymuch. Frying a turkey in peanut oil is friggin' deelish, though. Brining is the healthier option to guaranteeing a moist and tasy bird.
Obligatory Alton Brown episode of brining turkey for thanksgiving.
I'm making this: http://superheroesfordemocracy.wordpress.com/2008/11/12/obama-pie/
Yum! I think this may make it to my Thanksgiving dinner table!
Can I throw these puppies into the turkey deep fryer incendiary device with the huge Thanksgiving frankenfowl?
As they say in Dixie: "If it ain't fried, it ain't food."
One other note, make sure you buy pure pumpkin, and not "pumpkin pie mix". For some brands, the label is practically identical.
When I lived in Raleigh, a trip to the NC State Fair was a must.
You could find just about anything (I mean anything) being deep fried. Twinkies was the most popular.
i'm dying to know, NCinDC, how does deep fried coca cola work?
yeah, really. how the eff do you deep fry high fructose corn syrup?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fried_Coke
"Fried Coke is estimated to have 830 calories."
Pfff. Unless it hits the 1000 calorie mark, I'm not impressed.
thanks, aaronsinger. of course, i should have referred to teh internets to answer that question!
I would have wrapped in html tags, but I'm not that fancy with teh internetz!
In the South, diabetes is considered a rite of passage into adulthood.
@AngrySam et al:
I've never understood why people talk about "dry and flavorless" turkey. My mother doesn't fry or brine or anything and the turkey is always fabulous.
I'm tempted to try this with sweet potatoes, but I'm also afraid that if it works too well, my wife may find me on the floor in the fetal position, sucking on my fingers.
I brine and smoke a turkey (that is cook it in my smoker, not in a giant blunt) every Thanksgiving. It always comes out moist and flavorful.