chess pie is called that way because Albert Wallawickingham (1856-1912), journalist for a cooking magazine, was coming back home from buying a set of chess pieces when he stumbled upon a lady right outside her house selling chocolate pies, Albert was intrigued by such pies but didn't have any money on him. Yet the pies looked so good he offered the lady to trade his new chess set for a pie. the woman accepted and albert fell in love with the flavor. he then asked the lady for the recipe and published it in his magazine as "chess pie", where it stands as the first historical record of said recipe with this name.
I love when people teaching others something include their mistakes or when they run into something unplanned. You weren’t going to sift the cocoa powder, but there were a lot of hard lumps. So you stopped, shifted gears and sifted it. You whisked and things got a lil messy. You warned us to take it easy on the whisking. So often we see picture perfect/edited/unrealistic demonstrations that can leave a person feeling inadequate when they attempt something themselves. Thanks for keeping it real!
This pie reminded me of Minnie’s pie from the movie The Help 😄 Hilly: what do you put in this that makes it tastes so good? Minnie: that good vanilla from Mexico…and we know the rest 😅
My great grandma called her refrigerator a chest,maybe that’s what it stands for. I have never really thought about it. I made your strawberry pie today for my parents. They loved it. Thanks for sharing.
As an actual southerner, I’ve never made a chess pie that didn’t have at least a couple of tablespoons of flour in the filling. My go-to pie for all occasions is a coconut chess pie; everyone who tries it says it’s the best pie they’ve had in years. The funny thing about the coconut chess pie is that my mother used to make it all the time when I was little, back in the early 1970s. I didn’t think about it for years and years, but about a decade ago I had a memory of it so I asked my mother for the recipe. I made it and it was just as delicious as I remembered. I asked my mother where she had gotten the recipe, and she said she remembered it as having been in an old church group’s cookbook from the 1960s. She had written it down and put it in her notebook of recipes, so she hadn’t looked at the cookbook for probably 50 years. That Thanksgiving, I wanted to see if I could find a clue as to the origin of the recipe. My mother and I dug through a cabinet full of old cookbooks. We finally found the cookbook and we turned to the recipe. It was attributed to my mother! She had no memory of having submitted the recipe; she thought she’d gotten it from the cookbook. Needless to say, we never did figure out where she got the recipe. Now I make that pie for every family gathering, along with making my great-grandmother’s "brown-top" apple pie. I might have to throw a chocolate chess pie into the mix, although I’ll probably go with my whole-milk-plus-flour version rather than using evaporated milk. The flour just gives a chess pie its distinctive texture. It’s not supposed to be a cream/custard pie…
I’m from Alabama, and I’ve always added flour to the filling. Whenever I order a chess pie, I assume it will have that “chess pie” texture that the flour gives it. ❤
Hi thanks for sharing your story. I was wondering how you would make it? Or let's say if I follow his recipe when and how much flour should I add? I've never made this before and never even know about this so I would love to know how you make it! The coconut version sounds super good to by the way!!!
@@Alexie24Alexie the recipe I use has a few differences from John’s here. Mine has only two eggs, uses a cup of milk (instead of the evaporated milk) and has four tablespoons of flour. The rest is, I believe, the same. I whisk the flour and sugar together, then make it the same way John shows here. To do it as a coconut chess pie, simply leave out the cocoa and add one cup of unsweetened flaked coconut to the filling after you’ve mixed the rest of the ingredients. My recipe: 1 1/2 cups sugar 4 Tbsp. flour 2 eggs, slightly beaten 1 cup milk 1/2 cup (1 stick) melted butter 2 tsp. vanilla extract 1 cup unsweetened flaked coconut Pour filling into an unbaked 9" pie crust. Bake at 450° for 10 minutes, then reduce oven temperature to 350° and bake for an additional 30-40 minutes, until center is set but still slightly jiggly and the top has started to lightly brown. A few things I’ve learned after making this a bunch of times - don’t use an electric mixer to make the filling. You don’t want to whisk any air into the filling, so just gently stir everything together until smooth and uniform. Lightly toasting your coconut flakes adds a bit of depth to the coconut flavor. You can add more coconut (I use 1 1/2 cups sometimes) if you want more coconut flavor, but it changes the texture a bit. And don’t forget to turn the oven temperature down after 10 minutes! I’ve burned at least one pie that way…
Very nice recipie John! They looks amazing! I just love the dessert! Pie crust and chocolate! For is dreamy! Thanks John for these amazing recipie! Have a nice day! 👍👏🍫🍫🍫💯💯
I just made this following his recipe - tastes absolutely amazing! My one small difference was, instead of using cocoa, I used cacao powder (because that's what I had available, and I knew the amount of sugar added to it, would make it sweet enough). All in all - my family loves this pie!
Well, thank you for this! I've never seen anyone tuck the crust before fluting before. This makes perfect sense to me. I am looking forward to trying this pie recipe!! Much appreciation. xo
I used to work at a bakery here in NC. It's called a "Chess Pie" because back in the old days, pies were kept in pie safes........chests. And yes, southern accent, Chess Pie. There are several different flavors as well.
"It's Just Pie" is how the name started. That's what I was told growing up in Nashville in the early 70s. There's a long story that goes along with that, but I'll refrain. We have this for every holiday in our home. I just passed my recipe on to my daughter and one of my sons.
This is what I found: Some folklore: One explanation suggests that the word is chest, pronounced with a drawl and used to describe these pies baked with so much sugar they could be stored in a pie chest rather than refrigerated. Another story is about the plantation cook who was asked what she was baking that smelled so great - “Jes pie was her answer.”
I understand the name Chess Pie came from it having the consistency of a soft cheese. But that's as odd as the descriptions you used. Also, whenever I use powdered spices, like cocoa or cinnamon that don't like mixing with fluids, I blend it with the granulated sugar, makes mixing easier.
Now John.,...you know I love Chess Pie?..... Why you want to do that to me?.... Making it Chocolate, I'm a southern girl and am very familiar to the recipe, but you up and threw a monkey wrench in all the tastes I remember..... I LOVE this new recipe..... Thank You John.
Considering the amount of grown adults in the south who think that a chest of drawers is called “Chester drawers”, the southern accent explanation isn’t that far fetched. 😅
Absolutely agree! Other cooks always tell me "oh, you won't taste the coffee in this, it will just make it taste super chocolate-y!" So far, in over 60 years of field trials, I have always been able to taste the coffee, including in many blind or deceptive trials (yes, people will lie to me about whether they included the coffee 'this time'). And it is definitely not an improvement. Start out with good chocolate (I prefer Callebaut or Valrhona) and don't spoil it with coffee.
I seem to remember reading somewhere that it's called 'chess pie' because waaaaaay back when a curd was called a cheese (regardless of how much dairy was in it) and that's what you make with the eggs and butter here. Running the pronunciation together turned it into 'chess' or instead of 'cheese' pie. and so there were many forms of this... lemon chess pie, chocolate chess, etc. Buttermilk pie and pecan pie are also forms of this.
The pie was unnamed, but it was described as a variation of cheesecake. They say you can make a cheesecake without the cheese curd! Since then, the word "cheese" in the name was simplified to "chess," therefore making Chess Pie.
Many years ago when I was baking a pie crust I would poke it all over with a fork. That seemed to prevent the crust from rising. I have never used beans or weights.
Thank you John for another beautiful and delicious recipe! I love your videos! I was wondering, what would happen if you use 2 eggs instead of 4? I’ve seen variations using 2 and was curious to know how that would be different.
chess pie is called that way because Albert Wallawickingham (1856-1912), journalist for a cooking magazine, was coming back home from buying a set of chess pieces when he stumbled upon a lady right outside her house selling chocolate pies, Albert was intrigued by such pies but didn't have any money on him. Yet the pies looked so good he offered the lady to trade his new chess set for a pie. the woman accepted and albert fell in love with the flavor. he then asked the lady for the recipe and published it in his magazine as "chess pie", where it stands as the first historical record of said recipe with this name.
I’m eloping this weekend and I think I might make this for my wedding day!
OMG Congratulations!!!
Congratulations ❤️♥️💕
Good luck!! All the best!🎉
Congratulations!!!
Congratulations!! Let us know how the chess pie comes out!! 🎉🥧💍
I love when people teaching others something include their mistakes or when they run into something unplanned. You weren’t going to sift the cocoa powder, but there were a lot of hard lumps. So you stopped, shifted gears and sifted it. You whisked and things got a lil messy. You warned us to take it easy on the whisking.
So often we see picture perfect/edited/unrealistic demonstrations that can leave a person feeling inadequate when they attempt something themselves. Thanks for keeping it real!
I love this channel! John and his mannerisms are super adorable.
My thoughts exactly! He’s adorable. Very endearing.
You have no idea how much I appreciate you including metric measurements!
you never fail to make amazing food!!! You are the only person i watch for recipes.. You are a fresh breathe of air and have a beautiful family 😊
Chocolate 🍫 is my love language. ❤😋
Yes!!
Mine too! 😋
This pie reminded me of Minnie’s pie from the movie The Help 😄 Hilly: what do you put in this that makes it tastes so good? Minnie: that good vanilla from Mexico…and we know the rest 😅
Dang man I was coming to say the same thing 😂😂😂 love that movie 🤣💜
@@charityfrazier8639 🤣🫣
In the 1980s, I made several kinds of Chess Pie. Lemon, chocolate, brown sugar, and orange were our favorites!! 🎉
My great grandma called her refrigerator a chest,maybe that’s what it stands for. I have never really thought about it. I made your strawberry pie today for my parents. They loved it. Thanks for sharing.
Sing it-
eatin 2 week old unfefrigerated pie-
dumb ways to die!
It looks so delicious! I’m watching you with my son and he is very enthusiastic 🤩 ❤
Thank you for this womderful chocolate chess pie recipe. Im trying this this weekend
As an actual southerner, I’ve never made a chess pie that didn’t have at least a couple of tablespoons of flour in the filling. My go-to pie for all occasions is a coconut chess pie; everyone who tries it says it’s the best pie they’ve had in years.
The funny thing about the coconut chess pie is that my mother used to make it all the time when I was little, back in the early 1970s. I didn’t think about it for years and years, but about a decade ago I had a memory of it so I asked my mother for the recipe. I made it and it was just as delicious as I remembered. I asked my mother where she had gotten the recipe, and she said she remembered it as having been in an old church group’s cookbook from the 1960s. She had written it down and put it in her notebook of recipes, so she hadn’t looked at the cookbook for probably 50 years.
That Thanksgiving, I wanted to see if I could find a clue as to the origin of the recipe. My mother and I dug through a cabinet full of old cookbooks. We finally found the cookbook and we turned to the recipe. It was attributed to my mother! She had no memory of having submitted the recipe; she thought she’d gotten it from the cookbook. Needless to say, we never did figure out where she got the recipe.
Now I make that pie for every family gathering, along with making my great-grandmother’s "brown-top" apple pie. I might have to throw a chocolate chess pie into the mix, although I’ll probably go with my whole-milk-plus-flour version rather than using evaporated milk. The flour just gives a chess pie its distinctive texture. It’s not supposed to be a cream/custard pie…
Imagine Homer Simpson going coconut chess pie aashhhhggg! Made my pancreas throb
I’m from Alabama, and I’ve always added flour to the filling. Whenever I order a chess pie, I assume it will have that “chess pie” texture that the flour gives it. ❤
Hi thanks for sharing your story. I was wondering how you would make it? Or let's say if I follow his recipe when and how much flour should I add? I've never made this before and never even know about this so I would love to know how you make it! The coconut version sounds super good to by the way!!!
@@Alexie24Alexie the recipe I use has a few differences from John’s here. Mine has only two eggs, uses a cup of milk (instead of the evaporated milk) and has four tablespoons of flour. The rest is, I believe, the same. I whisk the flour and sugar together, then make it the same way John shows here. To do it as a coconut chess pie, simply leave out the cocoa and add one cup of unsweetened flaked coconut to the filling after you’ve mixed the rest of the ingredients.
My recipe:
1 1/2 cups sugar
4 Tbsp. flour
2 eggs, slightly beaten
1 cup milk
1/2 cup (1 stick) melted butter
2 tsp. vanilla extract
1 cup unsweetened flaked coconut
Pour filling into an unbaked 9" pie crust. Bake at 450° for 10 minutes, then reduce oven temperature to 350° and bake for an additional 30-40 minutes, until center is set but still slightly jiggly and the top has started to lightly brown.
A few things I’ve learned after making this a bunch of times - don’t use an electric mixer to make the filling. You don’t want to whisk any air into the filling, so just gently stir everything together until smooth and uniform. Lightly toasting your coconut flakes adds a bit of depth to the coconut flavor. You can add more coconut (I use 1 1/2 cups sometimes) if you want more coconut flavor, but it changes the texture a bit. And don’t forget to turn the oven temperature down after 10 minutes! I’ve burned at least one pie that way…
@@DaveTexas thank you!
Very nice recipie John! They looks amazing! I just love the dessert! Pie crust and chocolate! For is dreamy! Thanks John for these amazing recipie! Have a nice day! 👍👏🍫🍫🍫💯💯
I just made this following his recipe - tastes absolutely amazing! My one small difference was, instead of using cocoa, I used cacao powder (because that's what I had available, and I knew the amount of sugar added to it, would make it sweet enough). All in all - my family loves this pie!
Well, thank you for this! I've never seen anyone tuck the crust before fluting before. This makes perfect sense to me. I am looking forward to trying this pie recipe!! Much appreciation. xo
You are so funny you just make my day I just love watching you thank you so much
This looks like my sort of dessert! Could you do a video on Black Bottom Pie? I understand it is a USA speciality! Thank you for the video!
Looks absolutely scrumptious!
I followed your chocolate ganache recipe.. it was perfect.. I make miniature cakes and ganache working perfectly on my tiny cakes🥰🥰
I don't bake but your videos are so calming...I don't miss an upload. Lol❤❤❤❤
Odd to see a recipe I'm already very familiar with. A true southern classic at all my family gatherings
Oooooooh I have homemade pie dough in the freezer from making quiche last week, I am totally making this for my kids this week. Thank you John :)
It looks DELICIOUS!!!!!!!!!!! How cannot give it a try???
Wow! How delicious is that! Amazing pie and not too difficult to make!
I used to work at a bakery here in NC. It's called a "Chess Pie" because back in the old days, pies were kept in pie safes........chests. And yes, southern accent, Chess Pie. There are several different flavors as well.
I LOVE to see unedited( mistakes) ooops!! Makes your videos even better!! We aren’t perfect ❤
I am caffeine-sensitive and have been wondering why there is no such thing as decaffeinated espresso powder. You can find decaffeinated espresso.
"It's Just Pie" is how the name started. That's what I was told growing up in Nashville in the early 70s. There's a long story that goes along with that, but I'll refrain. We have this for every holiday in our home. I just passed my recipe on to my daughter and one of my sons.
Amazing❤ you're my favorite english youtuber!🎉 I see you from Argentina 🇦🇷
Sweet move transferring the dough to the rolling pin!!!
adding chocolate chips or chunks is really yum in a Chess pie.
Try lemon chess pie one of these times. It’s delicious! Thanks for this recipe, looks yummy ! 😊
Your recipes never a flop.
That crust is beatiful
"You did an excellent job! I love how you taught us to do the crust better the homemade kind! It sure looks delicious!"
This is what I found: Some folklore:
One explanation suggests that the word is chest, pronounced with a drawl and used to describe these pies baked with so much sugar they could be stored in a pie chest rather than refrigerated.
Another story is about the plantation cook who was asked what she was baking that smelled so great - “Jes pie was her answer.”
I love your stove.
Love that southern accent - thanks for another great recipe 😂😂 😂
EXCELLENT John thank you so much bless to you nd your family much appreciated
I just made a gluten free version of this for dessert tonight and oh my god amazing! Thanks for Canada 🇨🇦
Your pie looks delicious! I always enjoy your recipes. You are so smart and entertaining!
Your southern accent was charming.🤣 My grandmother made a coconut chess pie. I have to try this.
Yes! Thanks so much!
This is the third year I’ve made this for my boyfriend for his birthday.. we love your recipe ❤️
It looks great, but how did you keep the crust from burning up on the second bake? Did you use a crust guard?
I wondered that too.
I understand the name Chess Pie came from it having the consistency of a soft cheese. But that's as odd as the descriptions you used. Also, whenever I use powdered spices, like cocoa or cinnamon that don't like mixing with fluids, I blend it with the granulated sugar, makes mixing easier.
Gracias por la receta
I am going to try this, thank you ❤
Now John.,...you know I love Chess Pie?..... Why you want to do that to me?.... Making it Chocolate, I'm a southern girl and am very familiar to the recipe, but you up and threw a monkey wrench in all the tastes I remember..... I LOVE this new recipe..... Thank You John.
OH I 💚LOVE 💚THIS GUY 💚
😀
Considering the amount of grown adults in the south who think that a chest of drawers is called “Chester drawers”, the southern accent explanation isn’t that far fetched. 😅
😂😂 or desk is called dest.. 😂
Q rico un beso desde Barcelona ❤
No one in the south thinks that. Gmab. Yu people are nuts.
Can you use sweetened evaporated milk? If so, what modifications to the recipe are needed?
Chocolate playlist? I’m there!
Looks delicious! I’ll have to add it to my list of desserts to make
My favorite pie, had to stop and check it out
Every time I see a chocolate pie I think of the move “the help” great movie highly recommend
For the record, people who don't drink coffee will taste the espresso powder and they won't like it
Absolutely agree! Other cooks always tell me "oh, you won't taste the coffee in this, it will just make it taste super chocolate-y!"
So far, in over 60 years of field trials, I have always been able to taste the coffee, including in many blind or deceptive trials (yes, people will lie to me about whether they included the coffee 'this time'). And it is definitely not an improvement. Start out with good chocolate (I prefer Callebaut or Valrhona) and don't spoil it with coffee.
@@GrainneDhubaloney you will never taste it
It looks so good , i m from Belgium and i love the Belgium chocolat , for me the best , i will try bake your pie 😊
I seem to remember reading somewhere that it's called 'chess pie' because waaaaaay back when a curd was called a cheese (regardless of how much dairy was in it) and that's what you make with the eggs and butter here. Running the pronunciation together turned it into 'chess' or instead of 'cheese' pie. and so there were many forms of this... lemon chess pie, chocolate chess, etc. Buttermilk pie and pecan pie are also forms of this.
This looks so delicious
oh god that's so delicious😋🤤🍫💕💕
Yuuuuuummmmmmm 🤗😉
Thank you so much Karina!!!
I made one yesterday aha that's crazy
Yum looks so delicious I love a pie ❤you’re a happy chef John😂
Will be making this
Really amazing, delicious n yummy. 😋😋.
The pie was unnamed, but it was described as a variation of cheesecake. They say you can make a cheesecake without the cheese curd! Since then, the word "cheese" in the name was simplified to "chess," therefore making Chess Pie.
Nice recipe
Perfect ❤
Perfect for a chocolate lover like me 😋 I plan to make you banana cream pie soon too!
This looks so good and delicious! Thank you for the recipe!
He is whipping the heck out of that pie filling. 😂
Yummy.......❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Love this pie and you are amazing
I will be making this ASAP!
Many years ago when I was baking a pie crust I would poke it all over with a fork. That seemed to prevent the crust from rising. I have never used beans or weights.
As a Virginian by birth, lemon chess and chocolate chess pies were a staple on holidays and pot lucks
Wow supperb ❤❤❤
Hey really need to know what flour have you used to make the crust?
This looks incredible!
What American butter can explode? like eggs in the microwave?
Very nice 🎉 and looks so yummy.
Great video John😊😊
DECADENT! Looks too delicious!
"I love you your simply incredible!"
U r a box of surprises... good ones though!!!!!!!OMG!!!!!!!!!❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
4:52 🤯 what a tip
Yum! I assume if I buy pastry from the store I need to blind bake it?
John said yes to that question.
@@shirleycovey7309 tell John thanks! ❤️
The first time I ordered chess pie I was so sad it wasn’t cross hatched like a chess board. But it was delicious 😊
Perfection 👍🏻👍🏻
Hello John
Hi Claudia!!!!
Looks delicious! Can't wait to try.😋
I Love to watch your videos.. Perfect one❤
Waoo amazing recipe...
Ur recipes are awesome 👍👍👍
Truely
Omg that looks DELICIOUS.
Thank you John for another beautiful and delicious recipe! I love your videos! I was wondering, what would happen if you use 2 eggs instead of 4? I’ve seen variations using 2 and was curious to know how that would be different.
This looks amazing
What do you do with your pie crust edges you trim off?