Today I'm an expert on pink lemonade pies. That's because I made seven of them this morning to get a head start on tomorrow's Pink Lemonade Day at The Prepared Pantry. We'll hand out samples to folks coming into the store.
Kitchen tools, gourmet foods, baking mixes, and hard-to-find baking ingredients mentioned in this article are available at The Prepared Pantry.
by Dennis Weaver
Now I'm writing this the lazy way, lounging in the shade at home under the aspens and maples in the corner of the yard. It's a hot day, at least by Idaho standards, but there's a persistent breeze that rattles the aspen leaves and makes the shadows dance and makes it a very pleasant day in the shade. Days like this are made for pink lemonade pie.
We've been making pink lemonade pies and their cousins for years now. We've tweaked the recipe along the way but basically, it's the same. We now make it in a springform pan instead of a pie pan but you can use either. With a graham cracker crust, it's easier to cut nice, neat slices using a springform pan.
And it's morphed from a recipe to a type of dessert. We don't stick strictly to lemonade. Several years ago, we made a limeade pie and tinted it green for St. Patrick's Day. We called it a leprechaun pie.
In your grocer's freezer case there is an amazing array of frozen fruit juice concentrates - like cherry cranberry and strawberry guava. They're all game for a pie.
These pies are absolutely scrumptious. They are frozen, almost ice cream pies, and don't require baking (unless you choose to bake the crust for eight to ten minutes) so they are perfect for summer.
We'll give you the latest version of our pink lemonade pie recipe and then instructions to make their cousins using other juices.
Pink Lemonade Pie
This pie can be made in a deep dish pie pan or a springform pan. We nearly always use a springform pan, either a ten-inch or a nine-inch. (The one in the picture was made with a ten-inch pan.) With a nine-inch springform pan instead of a ten-inch or a deep dish pie pan, you will have a tall, mounded dessert.
This pie is made in three parts: a graham cracker crust, a lemonade and cream cheese filling, and a whipped cream topping. If you prefer, you can use a commercial whipped topping or whipped cream from an aerosol can for the topping.
For the Crust
For the Filling
For the Topping
How to Make the Cousins
You make the cousins just as you do the original but substituting another juice. Taste your filling before adding the two tablespoons lemon juice but you will probably want to use them to balance the fruit flavor against the cream cheese. We just made pink raspberry lemonade pie but to balance the raspberry and the lemon, we added a 1/2 teaspoon lemon flavor. For strawberry guava pie, use the two tablespoons of lemon juice and 1/2 teaspoon strawberry flavor. Here is the recipe for the limeade pie (leprechaun pie).
Limeade Pie
The mixture of lime and cream cheese is delightful, almost like a key lime pie.
For the Crust
For the Filling
For the Topping
What You'll Need
You can buy the ingredients at your grocery store with the exception of some of the flavors which you can get at The Prepared Pantry. We also carry a better selection and better colors, professional color gels. If you choose, you can purchase your graham cracker crumbs from us.
We sell hard-to-find deep dish pie pans in a dark metal, what you would want to bake fruit or pumpkin pies in to get the crust crisp and not soggy. It's not necessary for a graham cracker crust but will work if you want to multi-purpose your pans.
We really love our Candy Apple Red Silicone Springform Pans and use them exclusively for these pies.
Dennis Weaver is the founder of The Prepared Pantry, a full line kitchen store in Rigby, Idaho. The Prepared Pantry sells kitchen tools, gourmet foods, and baking ingredients including hundreds of hard-to-find ingredients.