Home Home Home Home Home Home Home
CakeSpy

Featured: 

My adventure at Ben & Jerry's in Vermont!

 

Unicorn Love: the Eating Disorder Recovery Blog

 

 Buy my brilliant books!

Buy my new book!

Buy my first book, too! 

CakeSpy Online Retail!

 

Archives
Gallery

Fantastic appliance for cake making on DHgate.com

everyrecipe.co.nz

Craftsy Writer
« Shake it: Leftover Thanksgiving Pie Milkshake Recipe for Serious Eats | Main | CakeSpy Undercover: Sugar Bakery, West Roxbury, MA »
Monday
Nov282011

Friendsgiving: Chocolate Baileys Ice Cream Pudding Pie Recipe

Pudding pie is far more delicious when you make it with melted ice cream. But it's even TASTIER when you add Baileys to the mix, as I did for their Friendsgiving campaign.

Pairing decadent, creamy Baileys with chocolate ice cream and pudding will yield possibly the most luxuriant chocolate cream pie filling you've ever tasted. The thick, velvety chocolate mixture falls somewhere between pudding pop and mousse in texture, which is so deeply, darkly, completely chocolaty in flavor that you won't want the slice to stop.

Note: As for the pie crust, the style used is up to you. I used a chocolate wafer cookie crust, but you could easily swap it out for a graham cracker or cookie crust if desired. 

Baileys Ice Cream Pudding Pie

  • Pre-baked 9-inch pie crust 
  • 1 large package (5.9 oz) instant chocolate pudding 
  • 1 1/2 cups melted chocolate ice cream (yield after melting), with a nice pour of Baileys mixed in
  • 1/2 cup Baileyswhipped cream for topping (suggested)

Procedure

1. In a large bowl, beat pudding mix and Baileys and melted ice cream with a whisk until fully combined (about 2 minutes). 

2. Spoon mixture into your prepared pie crust (it will be rather thick). Using an offset spatula, smooth the filling so that it is evenly distributed. 

3. Refrigerate for 2-3 hours to let set before eating. If desired, top with a dollop of whipped cream before serving. 

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

Reader Comments (2)

Oh that looks so good!
Does the darker layer on top just naturally happen naturally as it separates after refrigerating it, or do you have to do something to get it to have that smooth layer?

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
All HTML will be escaped. Hyperlinks will be created for URLs automatically.
© Cakespy, all rights reserved. Powered by Squarespace.