The Perfect Gluten Free Pecan Pie Recipe | Easy and Delish! (2024)

The Perfect Gluten Free Pecan Pie Recipe | Easy and Delish! (1)

5 from 33 votes

Prep Time : 30 minutes minutes

Cook Time : 1 hour hour 15 minutes minutes

Check out this gluten free pecan pie recipe to create the perfect dessert for all occasions. You'll find this flaky and sweet gf pecan pie to be irresistible!

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The Perfect Gluten Free Pecan Pie Recipe | Easy and Delish! (2)

This classic gluten free pecan pie recipe combines the perfect sweet, salty, and nutty tastes, all in an impossibly flaky gf pie crust that browns and never burns. You won't believe how easy the filling is to make—all without corn syrup!

You may have come looking for a gf pecan pie for the holidays, but you'll find yourself making it all year long. Stash some slices in the freezer and defrost at room temperature for a little treat any time!

The Perfect Gluten Free Pecan Pie Recipe | Easy and Delish! (3)

Why this is the best gluten free pecan pie recipe

The star of any gluten free pie, for me, is always an extra flaky gluten free pie crust. And I always start this pie with that perfect recipe for 1 single pie crust—but the simple, mouthwatering filling is what makes this recipe special.

Pecan pie filling is really just a cooked custard made with sugar, butter, and eggs, poured over chopped pecans. But this filling can hold up even without the pecans—and it doesn't call for any corn syrup.

Most of the pecan pie filling recipes out there call for using 1 full cup of Karo corn syrup, 1 cup granulated sugar, 3 eggs, some butter, plenty of vanilla extract—and, of course, pecans. It's even naturally gluten free.

I don't mind using corn syrup, an invert sugar, which is designed to prevent sugar crystals from forming, leading to a smoother result. But it makes a different pie—and many prefer to avoid using a whole cup of it in a pie.

Set this pecan pie filling with a touch of gf flour

Since this gf pecan pie is made without corn syrup, it's best to cook it at a lower temperature than a corn syrup-based filling. The thickness and stability of corn syrup also helps the pie set up.

Since we're avoiding corn syrup, we use a bit of superfine white rice flour in the mixture. That helps the pie set up properly during baking, and keep its shape when it cools.

The Perfect Gluten Free Pecan Pie Recipe | Easy and Delish! (4)

Gluten free pecan pie crusts

I always make my own gluten free pie crust from our extra flaky gluten free pie crust recipe. But if you have a favorite brand of store-bought gluten free pie crust, and you have it on hand, use it!

No one is going to give you a medal for making everything from scratch (trust me; I should know!). Everyone just wants to eat a delicious pie filling with a flaky crust. We don't have to serve even a little slice to anyone who cares how you got there!

You can also make this filling as a no crust pecan pie. It doesn't set up well enough to slice neatly without the crust, but it does bake beautifully in oven-safe single-serve ramekins.

You can also try making the filling in lined wells of a standard 12-cup muffin tin. Watch the time, though, since they'll bake much more quickly.

How to serve gf pecan pie

Pecan pie is rich, and rather sweet. If you'd like to cut the sweetness a bit, try serving it with some very lightly sweetened fresh whipped cream.

It's also often served with a scoop of vanilla ice cream. It certainly doesn't reduce the sweetness, but it does make it taste like you're eating butter pecan ice cream in all the very best ways…

The Perfect Gluten Free Pecan Pie Recipe | Easy and Delish! (5)

Tips for nailing this gluten free pecan pie recipe

Don't reduce the amount of sugar in the recipe

This filling recipe has 3 main ingredients: sugar (light brown and granulated), melted butter, and eggs. You can't make it without any of those 3 ingredients.

If you try reducing the sugar at all, you won't just have the less-sweet pie you're going for. You'll have a filling that never sets up and tastes oily and eggy.

Chill the gluten free pie crust before rolling

All pastry dough must be cold at all times other than when it's in the oven. Pie crust is no exception.

Pie crust and other pastry dough become crispy and flaky in the oven when there are cold pieces of butter, or another solid fat, that expand in the oven heat. If they're warm when they go into the oven, they'll just melt without expanding.

For a softer gluten free pecan pie, cut cooking time by 10 minutes

I like to bake this gluten free pie until the filling is completely set, so it slices very cleanly. If you'd rather have a pie with filling that melts out of the slice a bit, reduce the cooking time by about 10 minutes.

For completely set pie filling, it will resist being pressed in the center when it's done. For a softer filling that's still fully baked, it's done when the filling still jiggles slowly when shaken gently from side to side.

Let your gluten free pecan pie cool completely before slicing

Whether your pie is set fully, or set softer, you must wait for it to cool completely before serving. Otherwise, the filling will cave in on itself when you try to slice it.

In fact, I prefer to let it cool completely and then chill in the refrigerator for at least 2 hours before slicing. It's easier to slice, even if you've made a softer filling pie.

Storing and freezing your gf pecan pie

You can make this pecan pie long before you're ready to serve it. You can make and bake the whole pie, then let it cool, cover, and freeze it for at least 3 months.

Just defrost it at room temperature, slicing it once it's cool but not cold. Then, serve the slices still cold or at room temperature.

If you have leftover slices, chill them and wrap them each tightly in freezer-safe wrap. Store them in the refrigerator or the freezer and serve whenever you like!

The Perfect Gluten Free Pecan Pie Recipe | Easy and Delish! (6)

Gluten free pecan pie ingredient substitutions

Dairy free gluten free pecan pie

The dairy in the gluten free pie crust can be replaced if you use our recipe for classic gluten free pie crust and follow the instructions for making that without butter.

The butter in the filling can be replaced with vegan butter. My favorite brands are Melt and Miyoko's Kitchen.

For the bit of milk, just use your favorite unsweetened unflavored nondairy milk. Any will really do.

Can you make this gluten free pecan pie without eggs?

There are 3 eggs in this pie crust, and I don't know if it can be made without them. If you have a really trusty egg-replacer that works for custard, then try using it if you're feeling brave!

Can you replace the superfine rice flour with something else?

Yes! Our basic gum-free gluten free flour blend works, too. So does sweet white rice flour (also called glutinous rice flour).

Do not use cornstarch, as it creates a custard that tends to leak liquid as it cools.

Can you make this gluten free pecan pie recipe without sugar?

No, you can't make this recipe entirely without sugar. Sugar is one of the main ingredients that form the custard that is at the heart of the filling.

You may be able to use brown sugar and granulated sugar alternative granulated sweeteners in place of those two ingredients, but I don't have enough experience with sugar-free baking to hazard a guess.

Pecan free gluten free pecan pie

Even though it's called “gluten free pecan pie,” you can make this recipe without pecans. Another semi-soft nut like walnuts works great.

The other nuts that come to mind are: pistachio nuts (although they're so much smaller), skinned hazelnuts, and even boiled and skinned peanuts.

Nut-free gluten free pecan pie

Yes! You can make gluten free pecan pie without pecans—or any other nut.

The filling is a simple brown sugar custard that's poured over chopped pecans and baked. The pecans on the top do help the custard rise and set evenly on the top, but they're definitely not essential.

Try making the filling without any nuts at all, or try sprinkling some chocolate chips on top of the filling before baking. They should sit right on top, but sink a bit during baking—but still hold their shape.

FAQs about gluten free pecan pie

Is pecan pie gluten free?

No! Unless it's made with a gluten free pie crust, no crusted pie is gluten free. But a crustless pie that's made with the classic corn syrup filling should be gluten free as long as it's not contaminated with any gluten-containing ingredients.

Is corn syrup gluten free?

Karo brand corn syrup is gluten free unless it's contaminated by something with gluten in it. But we don't need that here.

Can I make my gluten free pecan pie crust ahead of time?

Yes! You can make the crust recipe weeks ahead of time, and store it in a disk, covered tightly, in the freezer. Defrost and shape before baking.

You can also shape and line your pie pan with the crust, and freeze it as shaped. You won't have to defrost it at all before filling and baking it.

Can I make a gf pecan pie in advance?

Once you make the simple raw filling, it should be baked within a reasonable period of time. But you can bake, cool, and freeze or refrigerate the whole baked pie quite a few days (in the refrigerator) or weeks (in the freezer) in advance.

What's the best pan for baking a pecan pie that's gluten free?

I bake pies in a porcelain pie dish or an aluminum pie pan. For best results, avoid a glass pie pan, which retains heat too well and is prone to burning your pie.

Why is my gluten free pecan pie not setting?

Don't take your pie out of the oven when the filling is loose in the pan. It should, at most, jiggle in a very controlled, slow way, when you move the pan from side to side.

Make sure your oven isn't running hot, or cold. Most ovens are off calibration, so I bake using a simple, inexpensive analog oven thermometer—and replace it often.

Did you replace or eliminate any filling ingredients? Cut back on the sugar or eggs? Your filling won't set.

The Perfect Gluten Free Pecan Pie Recipe | Easy and Delish! (7)

The best gluten free pecan pie recipe, step by step

The Perfect Gluten Free Pecan Pie Recipe | Easy and Delish! (8)

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Gluten Free Pecan Pie

Check out this gluten free pecan pie recipe to create the perfect dessert for all occasions. You'll find this flaky and sweet gf pecan pie to be irresistible!

Course: Dessert

Cuisine: American

Prep Time: 30 minutes minutes

Cook Time: 1 hour hour 15 minutes minutes

Chilling time: 3 hours hours

Yield: 8 people

Author: Nicole Hunn

Ingredients

For the gf pie crust

  • 1 gluten free pie crust (homemade (linked) or store-bought)

For the filling

  • 1 ½ cups (327 g) packed light brown sugar
  • 6 tablespoons (75 g) granulated sugar
  • 2 tablespoons (1 fluid ounce) milk at room temperature
  • 4 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
  • 12 tablespoons (168 g) unsalted butter melted and cooled slightly
  • 3 (150 g (weighed out of shell)) eggs at room temperature, beaten
  • ½ teaspoon kosher salt
  • 3 tablespoons (30 g) superfine white rice flour
  • 2 cups (180 g) shelled pecan halves very roughly chopped

For finishing

  • ½ cup (60 g) shelled pecan halves for decorating the top
  • Coarse salt for sprinkling

Instructions

  • Prepare the pie crust according to the recipe instructions but without par-baking the crust. Arrange the crust as instructed in a 9-inch deep dish pie crust.

  • Place the shaped crust in the pan in the refrigerator to chill for at least 30 minutes, and up to 3 days (if covered).

  • When you’re nearly ready to bake the pie, preheat the oven to 325°F.

  • In a large bowl, place the brown sugar and granulated sugar, and whisk to combine. Break up any lumps in the brown sugar.

  • Add the milk, vanilla, and melted butter, and whisk vigorously until the mixture is very smooth.

  • Add the eggs, then the salt and rice flour, and whisk until just combined after each of the two additions.

  • Place the chopped pecans in the bottom of the raw, chilled pie crust. Pour the mixture over the pecans in the crust.

  • The pecan pieces will rise toward the top on their own.

  • Arrange the remaining pecan halves, flat side down, placing them gently on top in concentric circles. Start along the perimeter and work your way in.

  • Sprinkle the top of the filling lightly with coarsely salt.

  • Place the pie dish pan on a rimmed aluminum baking sheet and in the center of the preheated oven. Bake at 325°F for 20 minutes.

  • Lower the oven temperature to 300°F, and bake for another 45 minutes to 1 hour, or until set as you like.

  • For a fully set pie, bake it for about 1 hour, or until you can feel that it’s set just below the top pecans when you press the filling gently toward the center.

  • For a softer filling that’s still fully baked, bake until the filling still jiggles slowly when shaken gently from side to side, in a controlled way (about another 45 minutes).

  • The crust should not burn, as the pie is being baked at such a low oven temperature.

  • Let the pie cool to room temperature. For the cleanest slices, place the pie in the refrigerator and chill until firm, at least 3 hours. Slice and serve chilled.

The Perfect Gluten Free Pecan Pie Recipe | Easy and Delish! (9)

Print Pin Save

Gluten Free Pecan Pie

Check out this gluten free pecan pie recipe to create the perfect dessert for all occasions. You'll find this flaky and sweet gf pecan pie to be irresistible!

Course: Dessert

Cuisine: American

Prep Time: 30 minutes minutes

Cook Time: 1 hour hour 15 minutes minutes

Chilling time: 3 hours hours

Yield: 8 people

Author: Nicole Hunn

Ingredients

For the gf pie crust

  • 1 gluten free pie crust (homemade (linked) or store-bought)

For the filling

  • 1 ½ cups (327 g) packed light brown sugar
  • 6 tablespoons (75 g) granulated sugar
  • 2 tablespoons (1 fluid ounce) milk at room temperature
  • 4 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
  • 12 tablespoons (168 g) unsalted butter melted and cooled slightly
  • 3 (150 g (weighed out of shell)) eggs at room temperature, beaten
  • ½ teaspoon kosher salt
  • 3 tablespoons (30 g) superfine white rice flour
  • 2 cups (180 g) shelled pecan halves very roughly chopped

For finishing

  • ½ cup (60 g) shelled pecan halves for decorating the top
  • Coarse salt for sprinkling

Instructions

  • Prepare the pie crust according to the recipe instructions but without par-baking the crust. Arrange the crust as instructed in a 9-inch deep dish pie crust.

  • Place the shaped crust in the pan in the refrigerator to chill for at least 30 minutes, and up to 3 days (if covered).

  • When you’re nearly ready to bake the pie, preheat the oven to 325°F.

  • In a large bowl, place the brown sugar and granulated sugar, and whisk to combine. Break up any lumps in the brown sugar.

  • Add the milk, vanilla, and melted butter, and whisk vigorously until the mixture is very smooth.

  • Add the eggs, then the salt and rice flour, and whisk until just combined after each of the two additions.

  • Place the chopped pecans in the bottom of the raw, chilled pie crust. Pour the mixture over the pecans in the crust.

  • The pecan pieces will rise toward the top on their own.

  • Arrange the remaining pecan halves, flat side down, placing them gently on top in concentric circles. Start along the perimeter and work your way in.

  • Sprinkle the top of the filling lightly with coarsely salt.

  • Place the pie dish pan on a rimmed aluminum baking sheet and in the center of the preheated oven. Bake at 325°F for 20 minutes.

  • Lower the oven temperature to 300°F, and bake for another 45 minutes to 1 hour, or until set as you like.

  • For a fully set pie, bake it for about 1 hour, or until you can feel that it’s set just below the top pecans when you press the filling gently toward the center.

  • For a softer filling that’s still fully baked, bake until the filling still jiggles slowly when shaken gently from side to side, in a controlled way (about another 45 minutes).

  • The crust should not burn, as the pie is being baked at such a low oven temperature.

  • Let the pie cool to room temperature. For the cleanest slices, place the pie in the refrigerator and chill until firm, at least 3 hours. Slice and serve chilled.

The Perfect Gluten Free Pecan Pie Recipe | Easy and Delish! (2024)

FAQs

Is light or dark Karo syrup better for pecan pie? ›

Light and dark corn syrup can be used interchangeably in almost every instance, with slight flavor variances. In a pecan pie, for example, light corn syrup will contribute sweetness and a hint of vanilla, but that's about it. Dark corn syrup, in addition to sweetness, will add color and a more robust, toasty flavor.

Why is my gluten-free pie crust so hard? ›

Too much water makes pie crusts tough, ESPECIALLY gluten-free crusts. An extra tablespoon or two can make your crust rock hard. Try to use the least amount of water listed.

How do you keep a gluten-free pie crust from falling apart? ›

To successfully make a gluten-free pie crust that won't fall apart, add one egg to your dry ingredients before adding any water. Fully combine the egg and then add only the amount of water you need to form the dough.

What makes a pecan pie not set up? ›

Here's the thing to remember: If you're filling hasn't set, it means the bottom of the pie crust isn't fully cooked, either. You can prevent the outer crust from further darkening (or even burning) by covering it with aluminum foil or -- more attractively -- with what's known as a pie ring or shield.

What can I use instead of molasses in pecan pie? ›

Swaps and Substitutions
  1. Out of molasses? You can substitute honey or maple syrup. ...
  2. Use dark corn syrup instead of light.
  3. You can also replace the corn syrup with maple syrup, honey, agave, or golden syrup. However, you'll want to add a couple of tablespoons of flour to the filling to maintain that thicker texture.

Why is my Karo pecan pie runny? ›

A pecan pie is essentially a custard pie, and a liquid center is almost always the result of underbaking. The Karo Classic Pecan Pie recipe calls for baking the pie for 60 to 70 minutes at 350 degrees. In some ovens, however, the pie can take 75 minutes or more.

Why is gluten free baking so difficult? ›

Gluten-free flours often contain fine starches, so they absorb more liquid than conventional flour. To address this, gluten-free recipes usually call for more liquid and produce looser batters. They may also call for a larger quantity of leavening, like baking powder, to help add volume and lighten the texture.

How do you make gluten free baking less dense? ›

Gluten-free baked goods often benefit from extra liquid to hydrate the flour blends, eliminate grittiness, and achieve a less dense or dry texture. However, it's very important to drive off this extra moisture during baking, or you'll wind up with a gummy texture. The best way to do this? Longer baking times.

Does adding vinegar to pie crust stop gluten? ›

Vinegar, buttermilk, lemon juice, and vodka all change the interaction of the liquid and gluten in the dough. But the difference between a dough with acid in it and one without (when made with the same technique) is infinitesimal. In other words, no ingredient can cure poor execution.

Is Cool Whip gluten-free? ›

It is free from gluten-containing ingredients, and it is also free from cross-contamination with gluten ingredients during manufacturing. All sizes and types of Cool Whip (Original, Lite, Sugar Free, Extra Creamy, and Fat Free) are gluten-free and safe to eat if you have celiac disease.

Is graham cracker gluten-free? ›

Most of today's graham crackers are made from refined wheat flour. If you are on a gluten-free diet, this is a problem. However, gluten-free grahams are easy to make at home. And even if you aren't gluten-free, making homemade graham crackers is a fun—and tasty—way to experience classic graham crackers in a new way.

Is cream cheese gluten-free? ›

Cream cheese is gluten-free. Feta cheese is gluten-free. Goat cheese is gluten-free. Mozzarella cheese is gluten-free.

How do I keep my pecan pie from being runny? ›

As such, you have to cook the pecan pie long enough for this liquid to develop a custard-like consistency. If your pecan pie is runny, simply bake it a bit longer, even up to 20 minutes.

Why did my pecan pie come out hard? ›

Pecan pie can become hard if it is left in the oven for too long or at a higher temperature than necessary. This could happen due to an inaccurate cooking time, temperature or failing to cover with aluminum foil for part of the baking time.

Why is pecan pie too hard? ›

Why is my pecan pie hard? A hard pecan pie means it was cooked too long.

Which is better light or dark Karo syrup? ›

Go with your own taste preferences for when to substitute. Karo® Light Corn Syrup is used when a delicately sweet flavor and color are desired, such as in fruit sauces, jams and baked goods. Karo® Dark Corn Syrup, with its rich brown color and more robust flavor color, is ideal for many baked goods.

Is there a difference between light Karo syrup and dark Karo syrup? ›

Typically, light corn syrup is used when a delicately sweet flavor is desired, such as in fruit sauces and jams. Karo light corn syrup is made with real vanilla. Dark corn syrup is made with refiners' syrup, a type of molasses. With its more robust flavor and color, it is ideal for many baked goods.

Which is better light or dark corn syrup? ›

If you use dark corn syrup instead of light corn syrup, the taste will be deeper and richer, and the color will be very clear like caramel. It's important to remember that you can usually use either light or dark corn syrup, but the baked goods may not taste or look exactly the way you wanted them to.

Is light or dark brown sugar better for pie? ›

You can use them interchangeably in any recipe that calls for brown sugar, per your preference. I always bake with dark brown sugar as I like the additional punch of flavor.

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