That's all for the best, really. Chess pie isn't supposed to be trendy. It's supposed to remind us of grandmother's house, taking us back to a simpler world with a simple dessert. I know that every time I have a slice, a pure satisfaction comes over me as I slowly eat my way through the buttery custard and crust,while remembering wonderful childhood memories.
But we all know those times have changed. And even our palettes have changed. So, below I offer a makeover of this southern classic. This recipe has long been a family favorite. And with its rich, gooey filling, this pie is a choco-holic's dream!

Chocolate Chess Pie
Ingredients:
Butter Pie Crust (see below)
~ Or pastry for a single-crust pie
2 cups sugar
¼ cup unsweetened cocoa powder
1 tablespoon cornmeal
1 tablespoon all-purpose flour
½ teaspoon salt
4 eggs, lightly beaten
½ cup milk
½ cup butter, melted
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup chopped pecans
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Prepare Butter Pie Crust; set aside.
For filling, in a large bowl, combine sugar, cocoa powder, cornmeal, flour, and salt. In a medium mixing bowl, whisk together eggs, milk, butter, and vanilla. Stir egg mixture into sugar mixture until smooth. Stir in pecans.
Pour filling into pastry-lined pie plate. Bake about 1 hour or until filling is set and crust is golden. If crust begins to brown too fast, reduce oven temperature to 325 degrees F and cover edge of crust with foil. Cool pie on a wire rack. (Filling will fall slightly during cooling.) Chill within 2 hours. If desired, serve with whipped cream.
Serves 8 to 10
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Butter Pie Crust
Ingredients:
½ cup salted butter
1 heaping tablespoon sugar
1 cup flour (unsifted)
Mix the butter and sugar together in a bowl with a spoon. Do not cream! Place the butter and sugar combination on a flat surface and add half a cup of the flour and lightly mix to combine the ingredients. Add the other half of the flour and knead just until a dough begins to form. Do not roll out the dough.
Press the dough into a glass pie dish (you can use metal, but glass performs so much better and cooks more evenly) using your knuckles, so the dough doesn't stick as much. Place in the refrigerator until ready to pour in your pie filling and bake.
Makes one single crust
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George’s notes:
- No one is really sure where the name comes from, but there are some neat theories about it. But here in "The History of Chess Pie" many ideas have been outlined.
- The pie seems to have no relation to the game of chess, which has led to much speculation as to the origin of this term. Some theorize that the name of the pie traces back to its ancestral England, where the dessert perhaps evolved from a similar cheese tart, in which the archaic "cheese" was used to describe pies of the same consistency even without that particular ingredient present in the recipe.
- There is also a theory that the word "chess" pie comes from the piece of furniture that was common in the early South called a pie chest or pie safe. Chess pie may have been called chest pie at first because it held up well in the pie chest.
I want to thank everyone for your thoughtful comments & prayers for my mother. Her surgery was very successful and she is doing extremely well. Mom is a fighter and a difficult individual to keep down, so she will be back on her feet in no time.
I've been seeing alot of recipes lately for different chess pies lately. I've never tried one, and don't remember anyone in my family ever making one, even though we're all from the south. I will have to give your version a try. That is a mouth watering photo.
ReplyDeleteWe are so glad your mother is doing better. Just wondering if you're still in Florida or back home? Either way, glad your back to post your beautiful recipes.
I remember chess pie. I have not enjoyed a good chess pie in years. I recall the sugary custard texture and how qucikly you could go into a delicious sugar shock while eating.
ReplyDeleteI was thinking about you. I am glad to know that your mother is doing well. I am also glad to see you blogging.
I am so happy to hear the good news about your mom! Thank God!!!
ReplyDeleteI have never had chess pie. Can you believe it? Yours will be the first recipe I try. Thanks for sharing your family recipe. I think those always are the best!
We call this by another name but it is a family favorite! And yes, it is in the chess family, I suppose. Love those chess pies!
ReplyDeleteGlad to hear things are going well with your mom.
ReplyDeleteGlad to see a post from you George, and the good news. I've never heard of this pie! Looks sinefully delicious.
ReplyDeleteGeorge, thanks for the sweet recipe and the good news. This week in Florida will be delightful, weather-wise. Enjoy it and being with your parents. Glad mom is on the mend. Chess pie....I have heard of it but have never eaten it. Just might, one of these days. Thanks. Missed you this week.
ReplyDeleteIm so glad your Mom is OK and better, take care her, you know how they are, My mom is similar yours.
ReplyDeleteI love this recipe,look delicious! gloria
I've never had a chess pie but have been meaning to make one for some time now. This chocolate version sounds dreamy.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad to hear your mom is doing okay. Will be thinking of her and keeping her in my prayers.
Oh George....I am sorry. I have been far too busy and not checking in on blogs. By now your mom has had her surgery and I am pleased to know all went well. You have been surrounded in prayers by many friends and family...what a blessing n'est pas? I trust she will have a speedy recovery.
ReplyDeleteBTW...you saved my life with this post. Well....nearly. See...I cannot make a pie .. and of course, next week is pie day at work..you know, 3.14....etc. So now I have one to make and with a butter crust too. Please tell me I can manage this crust..please? I am simply NO good at crusts...I have a phobia by now methinks. grin. Okay...George...let us know how your mom is doing when you have time. Ta for now.
Great news! Happy to hear your mom is on the mend.
ReplyDeleteI'm sure the chess pie is helping all feel better!
Hugs to you!
George, what great news on your mom, and we'll do our best to help her continue to come along. As for the chess pie... looks and sounds delicious.
ReplyDeleteSo good to hear that you mom is doing well! Good for her:D
ReplyDeleteThis chess pie looks amazing! Can you air mail me a piece? I can imagine biting into it right now:D
Glad to know your mom is doing fine. Your blog is always informative for me. Thanks for introducing yet another recipe and trendy or not I am sure this one is good if its on your blog :)
ReplyDeleteYummy dand mouthwatering...
ReplyDeleteThis is really a nice looking pie, and I'm wondering if Chess pie is a relation to the Sugar Cream pie we made at the pie shop I worked at...
ReplyDeleteSo happy to hear you Mother is on the mend! Will keep you both in my prayers.
Glad for the good news George. Enjoy the good weather in Florida this week. The chess pie looks so decandently good.
ReplyDeleteWe have been enjoying chocolate chess pie (sans nuts) since I was a little girl and my parents took me on a tour of the south. My mom bought a southern cookbook and our yankee culinary lives were never the same again.
ReplyDeleteGlad to hear your mother is doing well, George. I don't know where you are in Florida, but here in South Florida we are finally have some nice weather.
ReplyDeleteHave never made a chess pie! Why, I can't imagine! Copying your recipe now.
Another dish this Northern girl has no history with. Is it different than pecan pie or just another name for it.
ReplyDeleteDear George, so glad to hear about your mom! Wonderful news.
ReplyDeleteANd, so glad to hear about this choc. chess pie. I have had plain chess pie before on my many, many trips to KY (where my hubby is from) but I think chocolate chess pie sounds even better. I'll have to give it a try myself.
Glad that I stopped by and found that you did post again on your blog. What a delicious pie. I'm so glad your mom is doing well. Good news!!!
ReplyDeleteGlad to see that you are still up and running the blog. Hope all is ok with you...
ReplyDeleteI have never baked a chess pie... This looks interesting!
So glad that your mom is doing better George, and that the surgery went well. Will still keep her in my thoughts and prayers.
ReplyDeleteYour chess pie looks delicious. I have not ever tried a chess pie, but have seen several recipes on different blogs. This is the first chocolate one I've seen and it will be the one I try- I can't resist chocolate!
I'm glad to hear your mom's surgery went well!
ReplyDeleteThis pie sounds interesting, cocoa and pecans yumm! I love foods that are handed down with history attached.. and I loved my grandmothers kitchen! I think I'm going to have to get me a southern cookbook! My sister recently moved to Florida and she says when I go to visit her we're going to have to have "croc on the barbi"!
I hope she was kidding! :)
so relieved to hear that your mother is bouncing back so well!!
ReplyDeletenow, come on. chess pie is such a decadent treat, it hardly seems fair to make it even more so by adding chocolate. ah, sweet sin. :)
Welcome back to bloggie land, George. I'm very happy that your mother is doing well and is on the road to recovery.
ReplyDeleteI've never made a chess pie, but this is too tempting to resist.
I'm glad you posted, I was wondering how she was doing.
ReplyDelete"It's supposed to remind us of grandmother's house" You nailed that one George, because that is EXACTLY what I thought of the moment I read the title.
I really have been thinking about you George. I remember how my boys worried so much about me when I had to go through 2 difficult surgeries. We are tough! So happy it all turned out good for her.
ReplyDeleteI have never made Chess pie; now I am tempted to try that when I get back home.
Rita
I have always wondered what a chess pie was. Yum!
ReplyDeleteGlad all is going well for your family.
Never had chess pie, sounds and looks delicious. I am glad that you mom is doing well :-)
ReplyDeleteHi there George. So sorry to hear about your mum having to undergo major surgery, but happy to hear she is on the road to recovery and I wish her a speedy one (having you there with her will help of course :-).
ReplyDeleteWe are back this side of the pond now and there were many, many tears at the airport. But now that I am back and have completed all the post vacation/family visit chores I am looking forward to trying out ALL of your delicious recipes that I have been drooling over these last few weeks, starting off with This yummy chess pie. Take care George and very best wishes to your mum, hugs, Kathy.
Great news, George. Great post, too. I've bookmarked a chess pie months ago, and have been humming and hawing about trying it. I like your version.
ReplyDeleteI made a lemon chess pie a little while back, and it is a wonderful thing! I am still pie crust-phobic, but we all have our issues to overcome, right? I know my kids would like this, and it would be fine for my diet, because I only eat chocolate as candy!
ReplyDelete