Thanksgiving Tradition Made Modern

My earliest Thanksgiving memories involve food, not eating it but making it. As the oldest child, I was recruited early to assist the kitchen. I’d help peel potatoes and carrots, dice onions and whip cream. But every year I would look forward to making the pie. It was and is my favorite part of Thanksgiving.

Mom would make a butterscotch pie from the Talk About Good! Junior League of Layfayette cookbook every year. Each recipe in this large volume had the contributing author printed underneath. I always thought it was fascinating that all these women submitted their recipes and actually got printed. It seemed glamorous to me.

It’s not a difficult pie to make but it does take constant attention while cooking. At first I was just asked to be the stirrer, likely because it’s a tedious task when you’re managing multiple sides, the turkey and children underfoot. But each year I’d get to do a little bit more until one year I was told, “make the butterscotch pie”. What?! I remember being so nervous and excited. I measured oh, so carefully. I read the instructions over and over again. I obsessed over every lump and bubble. I stirred diligently like my very essence depended on it. It was a success. The filling was smooth and delicious, and I took so much pride in that first “all my own” butterscotch pie that I volunteered to do it the next year and every year after. It was my mom’s pie. And it became my pie.

Over the years I would make mistakes, usually getting distracted as I was sometimes cooking the entire meal myself and didn’t have a young apprentice yet to hand off the stirring to. Now, I make them in bulk most years to deliver to those who have become fans of this not-typical-Thanksgiving pie. And I have modified the recipe significantly from the original. My mother had always turned up her nose at the margarine in the recipe, using butter instead. And if she ever used the butter flavoring it was long before I was assisting. Today it’s in a gluten-free pie crust and I use gluten free flour to make the roux. I still haven’t tried to make it dairy-free or vegan yet, but I want to someday.

Thank you Mary Wright of Layfayette for submitting your Butterscotch Pie recipe. It wouldn’t be Thanksgiving in my family without it.

gluten-free thanksgiving pie recipe

Gluten-free Butterscotch Pie

Gluten-Free Butterscotch Pie

adapted from Talk About Good! Cookbook of the Junior League of Layfayette, original submission by Mary Wright

5 Tbsp. unsalted butter

1/3 cup gluten-free one-to-one blend (I use Bob’s Red Mill 1-1 baking flour)

3/4 cup brown sugar

1/4 cup sugar

2 cups milk

3 egg yolks, beaten

1/4 tsp. salt

1 tsp. vanilla

1 prebaked gluten-free pastry shell

Tips:

Stirring constantly is key to smooth pie filling. Make sure to pre-measure and ready ingredients ahead of cooking time.

Feel free to make your own gluten-free pie crust, but I often use a frozen crust for convenience and time saving!

Don’t skip adding a little of the butterscotch batter to the egg yolks to acclimate temperature. I’ve rushed this step before and ended up with bits of scrambled egg yolk in my batter. It’s worth the extra step.

Instructions:

Prepare pastry shell and cool. Melt margarine and stir in gluten-free flour. Blend until a smooth paste is formed. Add sugars and stir slowly until they melt completely. Add milk, 1/2 cup at a time, bring to a bubble after each addition. Cook until slightly thickened. Add 1-2 spoonfuls of butterscotch batter to beaten egg yolks to acclimate the egg yolks to higher temperature. Blend well. Add egg yolk mixture to butterscotch batter and cook to desired thickness. Remove from heat, add vanilla and salt. Cool. Top with whipped cream or Blue Bell Homemade Vanilla Ice Cream.

gluten-free pie recipe adaptation

The original Mary Wright submitted recipe.

Rodelle vanilla extract for gluten free pie

If there’s one bougie ingredient I feel I can’t do without anymore, it’s Rodelle Vanilla Extract. I promise it’s worth sourcing it.

gluten free thanksgiving pie butterscotch

My family’s tradition made modern. Gluten-free Butterscotch Pie

I hope your family enjoys butterscotch pie as much as mine. Happy Thanksgiving!

Thanksgiving in Lockdown, Finding the Gratitude

This year has been hard. It’s been harder for many others. Often it’s been hard to find the gratitude. But I have so much to be thankful for.

We celebrate far apart this year. But in so many ways we celebrate together. I was reflecting today on how today there was no busy airports and packed roadways. For the first time since maybe the very first Thanksgivings, we are all simply sitting down to a meal today. Some of us are doing so on Zoom from an apartment in Brooklyn. Some of us are having turkey sandwiches with just our housemates. And some of us are still roasting a turkey with our immediate family. But without the hustle and bustle of usual holiday travel, we are all gathering around a table of sorts and figuring out what to be grateful about.

I’m grateful for my home. It’s provided me and my family with space to be together and apart this last year. I’m grateful for our oak-filled spacious yard that has allowed some socially-distanced neighbor visits. I’m grateful for our church that has worked so hard to keep our church family connected when congregating isn’t possible. I’m grateful for employment that can be done in remote settings. I’m grateful for teachers that continue to give even though their own families are dealing with the same stresses we all are. I’m grateful for a community that despite our many differences always comes together to support each other.

I have so much to be grateful for. Period. Tomorrow will bring more worries and concerns. But I’m putting this out there so I can look back and remember the gratitude.

Socially Distant Thanksgiving Austin

We had phenomenol weather. So we were able to dine outside. It felt very 2020.

We sourced our Thanksgiving this year from many of our favorite local restaurants in an effort to support all we were able.

The menu:

Biscuits by Olamaie

Turkey by Backspace

Sides by Picnik

More Sides by me!

Canned Cocktails To-Go by Little Brother

Homemade Cocktails with Milam & Greene

Wine Bookbinder by Scout and Cellar

Cold Brew Days

Guys. I've got a serious cold brew addiction. Before I had kids I didn't drink any caffeine at all. I would have the occasional cola in a cocktail and that was it. Fast forward nearly 6 years - years full of sleepless nights, late night feedings, all-night-fever-a-thons, early mornings and endless running around - and I'm a full on addict.

I started by gulping down Frappuccino's and mochas and lattes like it was my job. All. That. Sugar. When I think back, it makes me ill. I'm now a reformed sugar addict, but I've kept the caffeine. And that brings me back to cold brew. It's the best stuff on earth, nectar of the gods. I typically drink it either black or with a little pecan Malk. Austin coffee shops are pretty much all doing their own brew these days so there's always a new one to try. And many restaurants are serving Chameleon or Cuvee on tap. So thankfully, at least in Austin, I'm never without an option. Plus it's a seriously nice beverage to enjoy in this heat. My current local favorites are:

  1. Friends and Neighbors
  2. Cuvee
  3. Summer Moon

And my favorite store bought are:

  1. Stumptown
  2. Grady's
  3. Chameleon

I do make my own as well, but I really enjoy the ritual of sitting down in a local coffee shop, enjoying my beverage and reading or writing or just taking in the scenery. It's become my favorite day-date with my husband too. 

Paperboy Cold Brew

Flyrite serves Cuvee nitro cold brew

Fair Bean Coffee on South First is pretty delicious and there's a great up and coming food trailer park just across the parking lot.