Mini Butterscotch Pie Recipe (2024)

4 from 1 vote

60 comments

November 28, 2011

Jump to Recipe Print Recipe

This post may contain affiliate sales links. Please read my disclosure policy.

Mini Butterscotch Pie Recipe (1)

Happy Monday!

Sweet sassy molassy is this an amazing recipe!

Did you catch the teaser I left you all with on Facebook yesterday? A lot of you had a hard time waiting until today, but HERE is the recipe for these Mini Butterscotch Cream Pies! I had some left over pie crust in my fridge that I just HAD to do something with, so these are the little babies I made!

Cute, huh?

They are not only darling to look at, but really simple to make {only 7 ingredients needed!} and super easy to eat, not to mention delicious. Lets get baking, shall we?

First thing you want to do is preheat your oven to 375 or so and roll out your chilled dough. I used a flower shaped cookie cutter to make some cute edges on my mini pies but a regular round circle is fine.

Mini Butterscotch Pie Recipe (2)

So once you get them all cut, carefully press them into your mini muffin tins. If you don’t have non-stick ones, you might want to lightly spritz the whole thing with a little non-stick. However, if you’re using a pie crust with a whole lotta butter and/or shortening {like this recipe that I used from Paula Deen} then the non-stick spray is really unnecessary.

Mini Butterscotch Pie Recipe (3)

Bake those off for 8 minutes or until lightly golden. Watch them carefully! They burn super easy! Once you pull them out of the oven let them cool! I let them cool about 5-10 minutes in the pan and them pop them our of the hot pan and onto a cooling rack.

Mini Butterscotch Pie Recipe (4)

Now for the butterscotch filling- grab some butterscotch baking chips and toss them into a bowl.

Mini Butterscotch Pie Recipe (5)

Now, melt these down. I have a melt chocolate function on my microwave that I use that works like a charm. If you don’t have that, then use a double boiler or set the microwave at 50% power and stir every 20 seconds or so.

Mini Butterscotch Pie Recipe (6)

To this melted butterscotch, whip in some softened cream cheese until smooth and lump-free.Please oh please use room temperature cream cheese or else you will NEVER get those lumps out!

Mini Butterscotch Pie Recipe (7)

So, next thing you do is add in some vanilla…

Mini Butterscotch Pie Recipe (8)

…and sugar! That’s it!

Mini Butterscotch Pie Recipe (9)

Whip this all together until it’s smooth and creamy!

Mini Butterscotch Pie Recipe (10)

Spoon about a teaspoon into each tart and refrigerate.

Mini Butterscotch Pie Recipe (11)

So while those sit in the fridge, lets make the cream. Most of you know how to do this, so I’ll make it quick. Start out with some cream in a chilled bowl.

Mini Butterscotch Pie Recipe (12)

Add in a splash of vanilla,

Mini Butterscotch Pie Recipe (13)

some sugar,

Mini Butterscotch Pie Recipe (14)

and some cornstarch. This is a totally optional ingredient. I add it to my cream whenever I’m making it in advance…it acts as a stabilizer so it never deflates. A VERY handy trick!

Mini Butterscotch Pie Recipe (15)

So, once I have all this in a bowl, I crack out my OXO beaters and have at it.

Mini Butterscotch Pie Recipe (16)

I whip mine by hand about 1 1/2 minutes until stiff peaks form.

Mini Butterscotch Pie Recipe (17)

Then I crack out my frosting tips. For these I used the Wilton 1M tip with a disposable bag.

Mini Butterscotch Pie Recipe (18)

So, fill up your bag with the whipped cream and pipe some rosettes on top of the filled pies.

Mini Butterscotch Pie Recipe (19)

Then you top each pie with a butterscotch chip to dress them up a little more. Aren’t they irresistible? So fun! LOVE these guys!

Mini Butterscotch Pie Recipe (20)

Store these in the fridge until you’re ready to serve. Your guests will go nuts over these! Guaranteed!

Mini Butterscotch Pie Recipe (21)

Here’s the handy dandy printable!

Other recipes you might like:

Mini Coconut Cream Pies from Lauren’s Latest
Chocolate Truffle S’more Tarts from Lauren’s Latest
Brandy Apple Mini Pies with Cornmeal Crust from A Spicy Perspective
Tiny Pies from Not Martha
Single Serving Pie in a Jar from Our Best Bites
Mini Cherry Cutie Pies from Bakerella
Blueberry Apple Mini Pies from Barbara Bakes
Mini Berry Pies from Yummy Mummy

Mini Butterscotch Pie Recipe (22)

PrintPrint Pin ItPin It

4 from 1 vote

This bite-sized Butterscotch Pie recipe is adorable, delicious, and really simple to make. Perfect for Thanksgiving or Christmas gatherings!

servings 24 mini pies

Prep Time 20 minutes mins

Cook Time 8 minutes mins

Total Time 28 minutes mins

Ingredients

  • 1 whole Pie Crust Recipe Enough For 1 9-inch Shell
  • 24 whole Butterscotch Chips For Optional Garnish

FOR THE FILLING:

FOR THE CREAM:

  • 1/2 cups Heavy Whipping Cream
  • 1/2 Tablespoons Granulated Sugar
  • 1/4 teaspoons Vanilla Extract
  • 1/2 teaspoons Cornstarch Optional
  • 24 whole Butterscotch Chips For Garnish

US Customary - Metric

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 375 degrees F. Roll out chilled pie crust and using a small round cookie cutter, cut out 24 – 2 1/2-3 inch circles. I used a flower shaped cookie cutter so I’d have fluted edges. Press the dough circles into mini muffin tins and bake in the preheated oven for about 8 minutes or until edges are lightly golden. Set aside to cool.

  • Place butterscotch chips into a heat-proof bowl and microwave using the melt chocolate function until melted (or if you don’t have this function, just heat for 30 second intervals, stirring in between each interval and stopping once it’s smooth).

  • Using a hand mixer, blend cream cheese into the melted butterscotch chips until smooth. Scrape sides of bowl and mix again so there are no lumps. Stir in vanilla and sugar. Spoon about 1 teaspoon of filling into each shell and refrigerate.

  • Whip together all ingredients for the cream until stiff peaks form. Spoon cream into a piping bag with a Wilton 1M tip. Swirl the cream over top of the filling and place a butterscotch chip on top for garnish. Refrigerate until ready to serve.

Nutrition

Calories: 116kcal | Carbohydrates: 16g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 5g | Saturated Fat: 3g | Cholesterol: 12mg | Sodium: 93mg | Potassium: 15mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 11g | Vitamin A: 134IU | Calcium: 8mg | Iron: 1mg

Course: Dessert

Cuisine: American

Keyword: butterscotch pie

Mini Butterscotch Pie Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Why is my butterscotch not thickening? ›

Why won't my butterscotch sauce thicken? Once your sauce comes to a bubbling simmer let it cook for 3 full minutes without touching it. If you don't cook the sauce enough it won't thicken.

What is the difference between a pie and a galette? ›

Whereas pies are baked in a sloped pie pan, often with a top crust or open with crimped edges, galettes are freeform, and baked right on a baking sheet. The edges of the galette are folded over the center filling, leaving a wide opening from which the filling can be seen.

Does canned pie filling need to be baked? ›

The pie filling is already cooked, so your focus should be on the crust. For a single-crust pie, place dough in pie plate. Blind-bake a homemade or premade crust (filling first with pie weights) at 425 degrees for 15 minutes.

What is Butterscotch Pie made of? ›

Butterscotch Pie is made with an easy spiced Biscoff cookie crust, a homemade butterscotch pudding filling, all topped with fresh whipped cream. Perfect fall treat!

How do you thicken butterscotch? ›

If the sauce cools down and you still find it to be too thin, then it's undercooked. You can place it back on the heat for a bit to let it thicken up even more. If it's too thick, gradually add a bit more cream until it reaches the desired consistency.

Why does my butterscotch taste like caramel? ›

Similar to caramel, butterscotch is made by heating sugar. The main difference between the two is that butterscotch uses brown sugar instead of white. The ingredients are also combined in a slightly different order for butterscotch: your start out by melting butter with brown sugar.

How do you keep the bottom of galette from getting soggy? ›

Preventing Soggy Bottoms

Because you can't par-bake a galette crust to prevent the fruit's juices from making the crust soggy, many folks brush their galette crust with egg white or make a layer of crushed cookies or cake crumbs, either of which work fine.

How to prevent a soggy bottom crust? ›

Brush the Bottom with Corn Syrup or Egg White

Coating the inside surface of the bottom crust will create a barrier to prevent sogginess.

Why do French people eat galette? ›

The galette des rois is a cake traditionally shared at Epiphany, on 6 January. It celebrates the arrival of the Three Wise Men in Bethlehem. Composed of a puff pastry cake, with a small charm, the fève, hidden inside, it is usually filled with frangipane, a cream made from sweet almonds, butter, eggs and sugar.

Should you bake a graham cracker crust before filling? ›

Conventional wisdom holds that you need to prebake a pie crust that will have a no-bake filling added later. But with graham cracker and other cookie crusts, you really don't need to, as the unbaked crust holds together well after simply chilling or freezing.

Why put butter in pie filling? ›

Some say that scattering small bits of butter over a fruit filling keeps the juices from bubbling over in the same way that adding a bit of fat to simmering jam keeps it from foaming up in the preserving pan. The theory is that the fat disrupts the formation of bubbles on the surface of the viscous fruit mixture.

Should you prebake the bottom crust of a cherry pie? ›

If you struggle with a pale, pasty bottom crust in your fruit pie, then yes, you can prebake it — with a couple of caveats: Choose a single-crust fruit pie, one with a crumb or streusel topping.

Is butterscotch just butter and scotch? ›

Alas, it turns out that butterscotch, traditionally a mixture of brown sugar and butter, never did contain Scotch. While there is no definitive etymology of the word, theories range from scotch being a corruption of the word “scorch,” to the possibility that the candy came from Scotland (this one is dubious).

Why is butterscotch called butterscotch? ›

The term “butterscotch” is thought to originate from the confection's primary ingredients – butter and the process of “scotching,” which in this context means to cut or score. The “butter” part of the name straightforwardly refers to one of the key components of the sweet.

Why do they put scotch in butterscotch? ›

One explanation is the meaning "to cut or score" for the word "scotch", as the confection must be cut into pieces, or "scotched", before hardening. The "scotch" part of its name possibly was derived from the word "scorch".

What to do if caramel isn t thickening? ›

To thicken a caramel sauce, use one tablespoon of cornstarch or tapioca starch (sometimes known as tapioca flour) and one tablespoon of water per cup of caramel. Then simmer the caramel, stirring it constantly with a wooden spoon until it becomes thick.

Why is my caramel not thickening? ›

Keep in mind that when your caramel sauce cools, it will naturally thicken anyway. However, if it's really thin when hot, let it simmer for about 10 minutes in the pan while stirring it constantly. This will evaporate some of the water and make the sauce thicker.

How do you fix sauce that is not thickening? ›

The most readily available sauce-thickener is flour. For a too-thin sauce, try adding a slurry (equal parts flour and water, whisked together) or beurre manie (equal parts softened butter and flour, kneaded together to form a paste)—both are ideal thickeners for rich and creamy sauces, such as steak sauce recipes.

Why is my caramel not hardening? ›

If caramels are too soft, that means the temperature didn't get high enough. Again place the caramel back into a sauce pan with a couple of tablespoons of water and heat to 244°F. If you don't have a candy thermometer, you can test with a cold water test.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Mr. See Jast

Last Updated:

Views: 5928

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (55 voted)

Reviews: 86% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Mr. See Jast

Birthday: 1999-07-30

Address: 8409 Megan Mountain, New Mathew, MT 44997-8193

Phone: +5023589614038

Job: Chief Executive

Hobby: Leather crafting, Flag Football, Candle making, Flying, Poi, Gunsmithing, Swimming

Introduction: My name is Mr. See Jast, I am a open, jolly, gorgeous, courageous, inexpensive, friendly, homely person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.