Candy Bar Pie
- 1 recipe Salty Caramel (recipe follows), melted
- 1 recipe Chocolate Crust (page 92), refrigerated
- 8 mini pretzels
- 1 recipe Peanut Butter Nougat (recipe follows)
- 45 g 55% chocolate (1 1/2 ounces)
- 45 g white chocolate (1 1/2 ounces)
- 20 g grapeseed oil (2 tablespoons)
- Pour the salty caramel into the crust.
- Return it to the fridge to set for at least 4 hours, or overnight.
- Heat the oven to 300F.
- Spread the pretzels out on a sheet pan and toast for 20 minutes, or until they have slightly darkened in color and the kitchen smells pretzely.
- Set aside to cool.
- Fetch the pie from the fridge and cover the face of the hardened caramel with the nougat.
- Use the palms of your hands to press down and smooth the nougat into an even layer.
- Return the pie to the fridge and let the nougat firm up for 1 hour.
- Make a chocolate glaze by combining the chocolates and the oil in a microwave-safe bowl and gently melting them on medium in 30-second increments, stirring between blasts.
- Once the chocolate is melted, whisk the mixture until smooth and shiny.
- Use the glaze the same day, or store in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 3 weeks.
- Finish that pie: Remove it from the refrigerator and, using a pastry brush, paint a thin layer of the chocolate glaze over the nougat, covering it completely.
- (If the glaze has firmed up, gently warm it so it is easy to paint on the pie.)
- Arrange the pretzels evenly around the edges of the pie.
- Use the pastry brush to paint the remaining chocolate glaze in a thin layer over the pretzels, sealing their freshness and flavor.
- Put the pie in the fridge for at least 15 minutes to set the chocolate.
- Wrapped in plastic, the pie will keep fresh in the fridge for 3 weeks or in the freezer for up to 2 months; defrost before serving.
- Cut the pie into 8 slices, using the pretzels as your guide: each slice should have a whole pretzel on it.
- In this recipe, we make a chocolate glaze for the top of the pie using dark chocolate, white chocolate, and oil.
- I like to refer to it as cleverly avoiding tempering chocolate, which is a fussy, somewhat temperamental way of structuring chocolate so that it sets with a shiny, crisp coat.
- But stirring oil into melted chocolate allows us to glaze the top of the pie with a brush and set it in the refrigerator.
- The chocolate still has a nice, thin crispness while maintaining a certain malleability, ensuring a clean cut down through the many layers of the pie.
- Toasting pretzels deepens their flavor significantly.
- Note that the nougat must be made within 5 or 10 minutes of when you want to press it into the pie.
caramel, chocolate crust, pretzels, nougat, chocolate, white chocolate, grapeseed oil
Taken from www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/candy-bar-pie-382384 (may not work)