Maple-Honey Pecan Pie
Updated Dec. 29, 2025

- Total Time
- 1½ hours, plus cooling
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- All-purpose flour, for rolling out the dough
- Dough for a 9-inch single crust pie
- ½cup/115 grams unsalted butter
- ¼cup/85 grams maple syrup
- ¼cup/85 grams honey
- ½cup/110 grams light brown sugar
- ½cup/75 grams maple sugar or use more light brown sugar
- 3large eggs, at room temperature
- 1tablespoon bourbon (optional)
- 1teaspoon vanilla extract
- ¾teaspoon kosher salt
- 1½cups/180 grams pecan halves
- Flaky sea salt, such as Maldon (optional)
Preparation
- Step 1
On a lightly floured surface, roll dough into a 12-inch circle, and transfer to a 9-inch metal pie plate. Fold over any excess dough, crimping the edges. Transfer crust to the freezer for 30 minutes or up to 24 hours.
- Step 2
When ready to bake, place a rimmed baking sheet on the middle oven rack and heat oven to 400 degrees.
- Step 3
Heat a small saucepan and melt the butter over medium heat. Cook, swirling occasionally, until the foam subsides, the milk solids turn golden brown and the butter smells nutty and toasty, about 5 minutes. Add maple syrup to the pan and continue to cook, stirring occasionally, until the mixture thickens and reduces slightly, 2 to 3 minutes. Remove from heat, and whisk honey into the warm syrup mixture. Let cool at least 10 minutes.
- Step 4
While the syrup mixture cools, combine sugars, eggs, bourbon (if using), vanilla and salt in a large mixing bowl. Gradually pour syrup mixture into the egg mixture, whisking constantly, then use a rubber spatula to scrape in all the brown bits at the bottom of the pot.
- Step 5
Remove pie crust from freezer and place pecans along the bottom of the crust. Carefully pour the filling over the pecans. Place pie plate on the hot sheet pan and bake for 10 minutes. Reduce heat to 350 degrees and continue to bake for another 35 to 45 minutes, until the center of the pie has puffed up and turned golden brown.
- Step 6
Transfer pie to a wire cooling rack, sprinkle with flaky sea salt, if you like, and allow to cool for at least 2 hours before serving. Serve warm or at room temperature.
- If using a glass pie plate, line chilled crust with foil or parchment paper and fill with pie weights or dried beans. Bake for 15 minutes at 400 degrees; remove foil and weights and bake until pale golden, 5 minutes more. Cool on rack until needed.
Private Notes
Comments
She forgot the part where you wave a spatula over the pie and say to the pecans "wingardium leviosa!"
Note that starting cook temperature for filled pie in video is 400 degrees (not 425 degrees as specified in print version), then dropping to 350 after 10 minutes. For those who mentioned an over browned pie, this may be the culprit. As others have mentioned, watching the video in the story link is very helpful.
Step 5 tells you to put the pecans on the bottom of the crust. They will rise to the top on their own after you pour the filling in over them. No worries.
I baked this pie at my husband's request for Christmas Eve dinner. It was pretty straightforward and came together nicely. I didn't have maple sugar and didn't increase the brown sugar to make up for it. The next time I make it I'll get maple sugar. I don't care much for pecan pie, but this one I enjoyed - with some freshly whipped cream.
This is divine. I made the filling as written except made my crust gluten free. I made and served this FIVE times to different people between Thanksgiving and New Year’s Day. The pie was devoured every time. The filling is so good nobody even noticed it was GF. It completely erased the memories of corn syrup based pecan pies. Yum!
Delicious, as written. I don’t generally love overly sweet desserts but found this to be just right with no reduction in sugar. I overcooked and thus split my butter/syrup mixture, which I remedied by reducing the heat very slightly after the butter had browned and taking the mixture off the heat at 1.5 minutes but continuing to let the heat of the pan cook it for the last 30 seconds before adding the honey. Some commentators recommend more pecans, which one could do, but I do think it’s a good ratio of nut to goo as-is. Wouldn’t change a thing!
