Chocolate Peanut Butter Snickers Pie


General Comments:
This pie combines my favorite candy bar with chocolate ganache and peanut butter mousse. What do you think my reaction was upon stumbling across this recipe? If you guessed something along the lines of “Holy crap, I must make this, and I must make it soon,” then you’d be absolutely correct. So, I made it and it was AWESOME.
While it does require making a few different components and assembling them, the overall difficulty level of the pie is pretty reasonable and the ingredients are easily obtained. One thing that immediately comes to mind when I think back on making this particular pie was the discovery that I will likely never buy a store-bought graham cracker crust ever again. Making the crust was super easy (assuming you have a food processor) and in my opinion the flavor and texture was way better than anything you could buy pre-made. Chalk up one excellent discovery.
In terms of the overall taste experience, the chocolate ganache bottom layer and the peanut butter mousse topping fit together rather well. However, I think I personally would have like the peanut butter flavor of the mousse to be a bit stronger. Of course, when you’re also chewing on chunks of snickers that have been sprinkled on top, you don’t necessarily mind the mildness of the mousse.
In terms of storing and serving the pie, the original recipe said that while it was intended to be stored in the refrigerator, putting it the freezer turns it into a sort of ice-cream-like pie, which can give the consumer a different experience if you choose to go that route. Keep in mind, though, that if you decide freeze it, you’ll want to let it sit on the counter for 10-15 minutes to soften up a bit before you try to serve it. I tried eating it both ways and didn’t have a strong preference either way.
Baker’s notes:
Spreading the graham cracker crust evenly over the pie pan was probably the trickiest part about this recipe. The trick is to just be patient and work it around the pan until you manage to get pretty even coverage. Don’t fret too much though, it’s unlikely that anyone will notice that the crust is a little thin in some places when they are distracted by the chocolate-peanut-butter-snickery goodness.
Recipe:
Crust Ingredients:
7 graham crackers, coarsely broken (I used Honey Grahams)
4 tablespoons (1/2 stick) unsalted butter, melted
2 tablespoons sugar
Chocolate Ganache Ingredients:
1 and 1/3 cups semisweet chocolate chips
2/3 cup chilled whipping cream
2 tablespoons light corn syrup
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Peanut Butter Mousse Ingredients:
1 and 3/4 cups chilled whipping cream, divided
1 cup peanut butter chips
2 tablespoons creamy peanut butter
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 tablespoons sugar
Topping Ingredients:
1 11.5 ounce bag of mini Snickers candy bars, coarsely chopped (this is likely WAY TOO MANY, I only used ~2/3 of the bag)
Leftover ganache topping
Crust Directions:
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.
- Spray a 9-inch glass pie pan with cooking spray.
- Using your food processor, pulse the graham crackers until coarse crumbs form.
- Add the melted butter and 2 tablespoons of the sugar, and pulse until the mixture resembles moist sand.
- Using your fingers, press the crumb mixture into the pie pan.
- Bake until lightly browned, about 12-15 minutes. Set aside to cool.
Chocolate Ganache Directions:
- In a large microwave-safe bowl, combine the chocolate chips, 2/3 cup whipping cream, corn syrup, and 1 teaspoon of vanilla for about 3 minutes, whisking occasionally to smooth out the chocolate.
- Spread the chocolate (don’t use all of it, keep some extra for the leftover chocolate ganache drizzle) over the bottom of the crust and smooth with a rubber spatula. Freeze the pie crust for about 10 minutes to harden the chocolate.
Peanut Butter Mousse Directions:
- In a separate microwave-safe bowl, microwave the peanut butter chips and 3/4 cup whipping cream at 15-second intervals, stirring occasionally until the chips soften.
- Once the chips have melted, whisk in the peanut butter and 1 teaspoon vanilla extract. Set aside to let cool, about 10-15 minutes.
- In a separate bowl, beat the remaining 1 cup of whipping cream and 2 tablespoons of sugar until thickened “but not yet holding peaks”
- Gently fold in the peanut butter mixture into the whipped cream.
- Pour and spread the peanut butter mousse over the prepared crust, spreading gently with a rubber spatula. You may end up with some left over.
- Freeze or chill the mousse until firmed, about 10 minutes.
Topping Directions:
- Once firm, top with the chopped Snickers pieces and drizzle with re-heated leftover chocolate ganache.
Credit: Original recipe can be found here.
Chocolate Chip Cookie Pie
Before:
After:

General Comments:
This one is just about as amazing as it sounds -- a pie-cookie hybrid resulting in high levels of deliciosity. This was even easier than the chocolate espresso pecan pie (I used a store-bought crust again, but I didn’t have a choice, they came in a two pack!). I’d estimate total preparation time to be ~15 minutes if you’re not making the crust, ignoring the time necessary to warm the butter to room temperature.
Baker’s Notes:
1) At one point I considered omitting the nuts and either substituting in more chocolate chips or some other sort of ingredient because I’m generally anti-nut when it comes to cookies. However, I think the pecans actual play a key roll in the structural integrity of the pie and, in the context of a pie, the nuts fit right in.
2) If you decide to use a store-bought crust, make sure you end up with a volumetric capacity of 4 cups or you risk a situation in which your pie runneth over. Also, I put foil on the crust for the first half of the cooking time to prevent burning.
Recipe:
Ingredients:
1 9-inch pie crust (4-cup volume)
2 large eggs
1/2 cup all-purpose flour
1/2 cup granulated sugar
1/2 cup packed brown sugar
3/4 cup (1 1/2 sticks) butter, softened to room temperature
1 cup (6 ounces) semi-sweet or 60% cacao chocolate chips
1 cup chopped pecans
Directions:
- Preheat oven 325 degrees F.
- Beat eggs in large mixer bowl on high until foamy.
- Beat in flour, granulated sugar and brown sugar. Beat in butter.
- Stir in chips and nuts and spoon into pie shell.
- Bake for 55-60 minutes. Cool on wire rack. Serve warm.
Credit: Used the recipe located here, which supposedly first came from Nestle.
Chocolate Espresso Pecan Pie

General Comments:
So, I’m going to try and keep this post short and sweet (though I’m not sure I’m capable of such a thing) because I am back-logged on posting my baking conquests. Hopefully if I slam out a couple few posts, I can get back on track.
This pie was one of my earliest baking adventures. I stumbled across it while scanning through the recipes on use real butter -- which, by the way, produced by a Colorado local seeking to perfect high altitude baking. The title alone was enough to grab my attention: chocolate. espresso. pecan pie. Didn’t really have to think twice about this one. At any rate, this pie turned out great. For those of you who might normally shy away from pecan pie because its just “too sugary," I think you should give this one a shot -- assuming you like chocolate and espresso. To me, the bitterness of the chocolate and the espresso serves to balance out the standard sweetness of a traditional pecan pie. This is one of my creations that never made it into the office, but can you blame me? Pies are clearly too small to share with more than a handful of people -- maybe next time I’ll make two.
Baker’s Notes:
Not much to note here, the recipe was rather straightforward. However, because I was lazy and wanted to save time (and I wasn’t yet confident in my baking abilities), I used a store-bought crust by Pillsbury. It did the trick, but the crust was definitely the weakest part of the pie. Oh also, I was somewhat shocked by it, but you really do put the pecans in before the filling and they float to the top all on their own -- crazy!
Recipe:
Filling Ingredients:
3 oz (85g) unsweetened chocolate, coarsely chopped
2 oz (60g) unsalted butter
4 large eggs
1 cup (330g) light corn syrup
1 cup (225g) sugar
1/4 tsp (2g) kosher salt
2 tbsps (6g) instant espresso powder
1 tbsp hot water
2 tbsps (30g) coffee liqueur
2 cups (230g) pecans, lightly toasted, coarsely chopped
1/2 (60g) cup perfect pecan halves
Directions:
- Prepare your pre-brought pie crust (you’re so lazy) by following the instructions on the box.
- Melt chocolate and butter over gentle heat, stirring until smooth. Remove from heat and let cool.
- In a medium bowl, whisk together the eggs, corn syrup, sugar, and salt.
- Dissolve the instant espresso in 1 tbsp of hot water.
- Add the chocolate, espresso, and coffee liqueur to the egg mixture and whisk to blend.
- Sprinkle the chopped pecans into the pie shell and arrange the pecan halves along the edge of the pie, but on top of the pieces.
- Pour the filling over the center of the pie. If the pecan halves begin to bandy about, just position them where you want them by hand.
- Bake the pie until the filling puffs, about 45 to 55 minutes (I think it took mine somewhere around 50 minutes). Also, after about 25 minutes, I took the pie out and put a foil ring over the crust so as to prevent the crust from over cooking.
- Transfer to a rack and allow to cool completely.
- You can refrigerate the pie for several hours making it easier to serve.
Credit: Pretty much directly followed this recipe, but skipped the crust making part.