3000 readers a day
Mangiamaccheroni FXcuisine.com  

French Corn Pumpkin Pie Millhassou

 Home >> Recipes
Keywords ¦ ¦ ¦
Feedback14 comments - leave yours!
ZOOMLow-resPrint
Print
Gorgeous traditional French pie that would please any crowd in the Midwest too!

Image loading...

 

Pumpkin Cornflour Pie
Millhassou / Millassou
500gr/1 lbs pumpkin flesh
80gr butter
200gr corn flour
150gr sugar
5 eggs
5dl milk
5cl rhum
1 vanilla pod
Salt

Image loading...   Image loading...
Image loading...

At my local farmers' market I could not find any nice small pumpkin and a lady farmer kindly cut me a pumpkin down to size.

Image loading...

To make a fine pie fine ingredients are needed - organic corn kernels and a Tahitian vanilla pod.

Image loading...   Image loading...
Image loading...
Image loading...

Using my Austrian flour mill, I turned the corn kernels into fine corn flour, then sift the flour to remove the bran.

Image loading...   Image loading...

Cook the peeled and cubed pumpkin with a tablespoon of water in a covered pot until soft, them mash.

Image loading...

Combine the pumpkin purée with the cornflour.

Image loading...

Mix and beat in the eggs.

Image loading...

Slice open and scrape the vanilla pot. Heat the milk and throw the sugar and vanilla pod into the milk, turn off the heat and cover. Let it rest for a night if you can. Then combine with the pumpkin-cornflour mixture until you get a smooth batter. Add a glass of rhum and a pinch of salt.

Image loading... Image loading... Image loading...

Butter the inside of a cake pan and put in the fridge for a couple minutes for the butter to firm. Add a tbsp flour inside the cake pan and rub all over the butter by moving the pan to make sure the batter will not stick. Then carefully pour in the pumpkin batter and bake in a medium hot oven for about 1 hour or as long as it takes for a knife blade to come out clean.

Image loading...

Let the cake rest for 10 minutes and unmold it.

Image loading...

Serve warm or cold.

Image loading...

I servied this with the caramel-vanilla sauce that Pierre Hermé makes for his roasted pineapples.


66879 views


Did you like this article? Leave me a comment or see my most popular articles.

Copyright FXcuisine 2024 - all rights reserved.
If you do this recipe at home please let me know how it worked for you by submitting a comment or send me a picture if you can. Thanks!



14 Comments

  • #1
  • Comment by Bruce F
It looks like a great recipe and I'm looking forward to trying it.Can you spell out exactly where you add the eggs?Thanks
  • #2
  • Comment by Cynthia
Oh my gosh, I so have to try this. This week I made what we call a conkie using very similar ingredients. It is a dish that is traditionally eaten when Barbados celebrates its independence which is this Friday.
  • #3
  • Comment by Denis Johnston
I noticed that there was no leavening except the eggs..Would this not have been a little lighter with some baking powder or soda bicarbonate?When I have done this simple formula I oven roasted the pumpkin to intensify the flavours.Thanks for reminding me about this terrific winter treat...
  • #4
  • Comment by will
Yea, where do the eggs go?
  • #5
  • Answered by fx
You add the eggs right before the vanilla milk.
  • #6
  • Answered by fx
This is really more like a flan than a pie, with a very wet and unaerated texture. It is still rather light because of the large quantity of water rather than fat-soaked flour like in a regular cake.
  • #7
  • Answered by fx
The eggs are added right before the milk Bruce.
  • #8
  • Comment by Hazel Stone
Where have you been all my life?! Everything I've read at this site has been utterly brilliant!
  • #9
  • Answered by fx
Hazel Stone, thank you for your kind appreciation! I hope my recipes will work for you.
  • #10
  • Comment by Rosemary Ricchio
Dear FX,

Please disregard my last question.  Upon further research, I've discovered that "5dl" = half a liter (or 2 cups).

My mistake!  (Sorry, but I've never seen that measurement before.)

Thanks again,
Rosemary
  • FX's answer→ Rosemary I will endeavor to publish my recipes in several units in the future to make it clearer for all  - sorry about that and I hope the recipe worked for you!

  • #12
  • Comment by Kobi
Hi François, how are you. We miss you! I still checking out your old recipes. Can you please tell me where can I buy the same Grain Mill as you have, the Austrian one.
Thank you and you to get you email when you post any thing new.
Kobi, Los Angeles
  • FX's answer→ Thanks Kobi for your patience! You can find many flour mills on Amazon, including several that look every bit like mine.

  • #14
  • Comment by ben
How hot should the oven me?

 Tell me what you think!

Write a comment below to let me know what you think about my article or ask any question you may have.

 (required)

 E-Mail (required, will not be displayed)

 (optional)



Please follow me on Instagram for lots of new content every week!
Francois

Subscribe and you'll never miss an article:
or RSS.







Sponsored links: DHTML Menu By Milonic JavaScript