The next step was to try it on someone else, someone who ate the standard American diet. Someone who's tastes hadn't changed over the course of a year of not eating refined sugar, butter, corn, corn by-products (i.e. over half the things you can buy at the grocery store), or tomatoes. My opportunity came in the form of an allergy-free Thanksgiving.
Though my allergy's take the cake in breadth and scope, there are other people in our families that are allergic to various things. In talking to Rob's mom, we learned that soy and dairy were problems for other family members. After some talking, she and he decided to do an allergy-free Thanksgiving (and may they live long and fruitful lives as a result). The planning alone took--well I don't know how long it took, but it was quite an orchestration, ensuring that no unapproved foods were brought to the family dinner.
Though I knew what was going on, I had to remind myself that I could eat everything there. It was a Christmas miracle (a month early)! Seriously, it was the most amazing experience ever. I was witty, freakin' hilarious, engaged, and completely mentally there. No mental food comas, hangovers. or silently retreating into my shell because I couldn't think straight (all of which have happened too many times to count when I have eaten food I'm allergic to at social gatherings). To top it all off, I made this pumpkin pie. Everyone loved it. EVERYONE LOVED IT!!!!!! Even now, several years later I still have deep feelings of love and appreciation for this pie that allowed me to sit and chat over a familiar (or so they thought....wha ha ha!) dessert.
I did end up spilling the beans (I was never one for keeping an awesome discovery bottled up), after everyone had enjoyed and raved about the pie. Just for those cynics out there, I have made this pie for other social gatherings that weren't made up of family members and they loved it too.
[Side note: As is the case with most recipes, the better the quality of ingredients, the better the recipe is going to be. Not everything needs to be organic, but because of the amount of pesticides in herbs, at least try to buy the fresh thyme organic. It's not the end of the world if you don't, but it does make a difference.]
With no further ado, here it is:
PUMPKIN PIE WITH THYME (an epic gastronomic orgy!)
Crust
2 ½ C. pecans,
soaked overnight & dehydrated @ 118°
for 24 hours
2 Tbsp. Maple syrup
1 Tbsp. coconut oil
1 Tbsp. date paste
(I substitute strawberry jam, b/c I have no idea where to find date paste)
1 pinch of salt
Filling
½ C. cashews, soaked
4-6 hours
½ Tbsp. chopped
fresh thyme
½ C. maple syrup
¼ C. Agave
½ C. coconut oil
½ C. + 2 Tbsp.
carrot juice
½ tsp. vanilla
extract
¼ tsp. salt
¼ vanilla bean,
scraped*
1 ½ tsp. cinnamon
1 ½ tsp. nutmeg
*Having never scrapped a vanilla bean in my life, I had to look into how this was done. By taking a sharp knife, slitting the 1/4 bean from top to bottom, you can pull it open and scrap out the inside of the bean. Easy peesy, beany squeezy (yeah, I don't know. Enjoy!)
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Crust
Place prepared
pecans in food processor. Pulse, or chop, into small crumbs. Mix pecans &
other ingredients well by hand. Press into 9-inch tart pan to desired
thickness. Dehydrate 48 hours (instead of dehydrating, I leave the oven on
warm overnight and it seems to work just fine). Chill crust in freezer for
15-30 minutes before filling.
If not using crust
mixture, store extra in container in the freezer.
Filling
Bend all ingredients
except thyme until very smooth. Stir in thyme. Fill candied tart crust &
chill in freezer overnight. Remove pie from tart pan, cut into slices &
wrap in plastic wrap.
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