Sweet potato pie explained

Sweet potato pie
Country:United States
Region:Southern United States
Course:Dessert
Type:Pie
Main Ingredient:Pie shell, sweet potatoes, milk, sugar, eggs

Sweet potato pie is a traditional dessert, originating in the Southern United States. It is often served during the American holiday season, especially at Thanksgiving and Christmas in place of pumpkin pie, which is more traditional in other regions of the United States.

It is made in an open pie shell without a top crust. The filling consists of mashed sweet potatoes, evaporated milk, sugar, spices such as cinnamon, nutmeg, and eggs.[1] Other possible ingredients include vanilla or lemon extracts. The baked custard filling may vary from light and silky to dense, depending on the recipe's ratio of sweet potato, milk and eggs.

History

Though creamy vegetable pie recipes date back to Medieval Europe, sweet potato pie appears in the southern United States from the early colonial days.[2] The use of sweet potatoes in Southern and Black-American cuisine traces back to Native American cuisine. Sweet potato pie applies European pie making customs to the preparation of sweet potatoes.[3] Recipes for sweet potato pie first appeared in printed cookbooks in the 18th century, where it was included with savory vegetable dishes. By the 19th century, sweet potato pie was more commonly classified as a dessert.

One variation is the Hawaiian sweet potato haupia pie.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: McKinley . Janie Mae Jones . Back in the Day: Sweet potato – the 'only' pie worth eating . Hendersonville Times-News . October 24, 2021 . April 4, 2022.
  2. Web site: . Lynne . Olver . Lynne Olver . Sweet Potato Pie . 1999 .
  3. Book: Neal, Bill . Biscuits, Spoonbread, and Sweet Potato Pie . New York . . 1996 . 978-0807854747.