These mini pecan pies are adapted from my grandmother’s pecan pie recipe. Made with my favorite homemade pie crust and a salted pecan filling, they’re always a welcome salty-sweet addition to any holiday dessert spread.
Pecan pie is a quintessential Thanksgiving pie. Though nothing will ever beat classic apple pie or creamy pumpkin pie in my mind, traditional pecan pie holds a very special place in my heart. My late grandmother made it like no one else. I launched this website 2 weeks after her passing in 2011, and she remains a tremendous inspiration and motivation for my work. I treasure her handwritten recipes, and it’s a true joy to honor her legacy through baking.
Today I’m taking my grandma’s timeless pecan pie recipe and giving it a little twist—and by little, I actually mean little. How cute are these?!
I’ve tested many, many pecan pie recipes, and I can confidently say that this combination of ingredients produces the best-tasting mini pecan pies.
Mix filling ingredients together, then spoon a heaping teaspoon of filling into each pre-baked mini pie crust. Sprinkle the tops with coarse salt before baking.
Important to note: As the mini pies bake, the filling puffs up and may spill onto the sides. That’s OK—it creates an irresistible brown-sugared crust.
Let the mini pies cool completely in the pan before serving.
If the tops of your mini pecan pies take on a frosty appearance after baking, it’s likely because the egg white frothed up when the filling ingredients were whisked together.
When you whisk together the ingredients, stir very gently, not vigorously; then, switch to a spatula to fold in the pecans. (Or stir whole thing with a spoon or spatula instead of a whisk.) Vigorous whisking froths up the egg white and causes the surface to crust over with a white frosted look. They’ll still taste wonderful—it’s just a different aesthetic.
If you want to make larger individual-sized pecan pies, you can make these in a standard 12-count muffin pan. You need a round cookie cutter that’s 3.75–4 inches (9.5–10cm) in diameter. (3.5 inches is too small.) You’ll have enough pie dough to get about 14 crusts this size, but the filling only makes enough to fill 10. So you’ll have some leftover pie dough scraps, which you can use for pie crust designs on another pie, or freeze to use another time. See recipe Note for larger mini pecan pies instructions.
These mini pecan pies are made with homemade pie crust and a delicious salted pecan filling. See recipe Notes for make-ahead instructions, and instructions for using a standard 12-count muffin pan.