Hot Fudge Pie - Lady's universe
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Hot Fudge Pie

This hot fudge pie is barely more effort than a box of brownies and a hundred times more impressive. One bowl, 25 minutes, and the center stays gooey.
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My grandmother made this every Thanksgiving without calling it anything impressive “The chocolate pie,” she’d say or sometimes just “the easy one.” i’ve made it probably twenty times since I got her recipe and I still second guess the baking time every single time 25 minutes always looks too soon but it isn’t, you pull it early on purpose because the molten center is the whole point , and if you wait until it looks done in the oven , it’s already past that.

What it actually is : a brownie baked in a pie dish very little flour, a lot of butter and cocoa, two eggs, not much else. The top goes papery and crispy like a brownie top. The edges set. The center, if you’ve timed it right, is still thick and gooey when you cut in . There’s maybe a 20-minute window between “just right” and “it’s a dense chocolate pie now” and that window opens the moment it comes out of the oven, Have the ice cream ready before you pull it out.

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I’ve brought this to dinner parties, made it on weeknights, made it twice in one week once because the first one disappeared faster than expected. One bowl, ten minutes of work.


Why It Works

There’s a quarter cup of flour in the whole thing, which is almost nothing. The structure comes from the eggs instead — they set just enough to hold the edges while the center stays soft and dense, which is why the texture lands closer to a brownie than to a custard or cream pie. Pull it at the right time and the center is molten. Wait too long and the eggs fully set and you’ve lost what makes it interesting it’s still a chocolate pie, just a different kind.

I use cocoa powder rather than melted chocolate mostly out of habit, but I’ve tried it both ways and cocoa does give a sharper, more direct chocolate flavor. Melted chocolate is rounder and richer. Some people prefer that and I understand why. My honest reasoning for sticking with cocoa is partly the flavor and partly that I always have it in the cupboard and it skips the melting step.

A full cup of sugar is a lot for this size of pie and I won’t pretend it isn’t. But cutting it back too far changes the texture — the gooey center partly depends on it. Three-quarters of a cup is as low as I’d go. And the ice cream on top balances it out anyway, if sweetness is the concern.

This hot fudge pie is barely more effort than a box of brownies and a hundred times more impressive. One bowl, 25 minutes, and the center stays gooey.


Ingredients

Ingredient Amount Notes
Unsalted butter 115g / ½ cup Melted and slightly cooled before using
Granulated sugar 200g / 1 cup See note above if you want to reduce
Unsweetened cocoa powder 30g / ⅓ cup Dutch-process or natural — both work fine
Large eggs 2 Room temp if you can be bothered
All-purpose flour 30g / ¼ cup Not a typo — it really is this little
Vanilla extract 1 tsp  
Salt ¼ tsp  
Pecans, roughly chopped 60g / ½ cup Optional, but good

Let’s Make It

Preheat your oven to 165°C / 325°F. Grease a 9-inch pie dish.

Melt the butter and give it a few minutes to cool down before adding anything else. Hot butter scrambles eggs. Room-temperature butter is fine too if it’s soft enough to stir.

Mix everything in one bowl butter, sugar, cocoa, eggs, flour, vanilla, salt. Stir by hand until it’s smooth and glossy. About a minute of actual stirring. Fold in the pecans now if you’re using them.

Kitchen chatter: The batter is thick. Thicker than brownie batter, almost. Don’t add liquid to loosen it it’s supposed to be that way.

Pour into the greased pie dish and spread it level. It won’t fill the dish very high. That’s normal.

Bake for 25 to 28 minutes. The edges should look set and the top should have that thin papery crust. The center will still look underdone and will jiggle slightly when you move the dish. Pull it then. Don’t wait for the center to look done it won’t firm up until it rests outside the oven.

Kitchen chatter: A toothpick in the center should come out with wet, fudgy crumbs not batter, but not clean either . If it comes out clean you’ve gone a few minutes too far.

Rest for 10 minutes before cutting. It needs to settle or the slices won’t hold together.

Serve warm with vanilla ice cream. The cold against the warm fudge is the point. Don’t skip the ice cream.


Tips , Swaps , and Storage

Pecans are traditional in Southern versions of this and they add a good crunch. Walnuts work too. If you’re a no-nuts-in-chocolate-desserts person, just skip them the pie doesn’t need them.

If you want to use melted chocolate instead of cocoa : 85g of dark chocolate melted with the butter, cooled, then proceed as normal. The texture comes out slightly softer and the chocolate flavor is rounder. Not better, just different.

Espresso powder a pinch, stirred into the batter deepens the chocolate flavor without making it taste like coffee . Worth trying if you have it.

Don’t refrigerate leftovers. The texture goes wrong when it gets cold dense and dry. Keep it at room temperature, loosely covered, for up to 2 days. To reheat, 15 seconds in the microwave is enough. Or the whole dish in a 150°C / 300°F oven for 10 minutes if you’re bringing it back for a second round.


Nutrition (Per Serving, Serves 8)

  Per Serving
Calories ~310 kcal
Protein 4g
Carbohydrates 38g
Fat 17g
Saturated Fat 9g
Fibre 2g
Sodium ~95mg
Sugar 26g

Estimates without pecans. Values will vary by brand.

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