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Chocolate cream pie recipe for two, made in a mini 6โณ pie pan. Scroll down for a chance to win a mini pie pan! Donโt miss the how to video to the right!

I donโt get to say THANK YOU enough around here.
And before you write this off as some blanket โthanks for visiting my siteโ letter, please, sit and stay awhile.
While I am grateful you are here, there were a lot of people here before you.
Mainly, my grandma. She small-batch baked. She was forever cutting recipes in half because it was just her & my grandpa. Even when my Mom was in the house, she made small batch recipes because 3 people donโt need 3 dozen cookies.
This small batch dessert thing is in my blood.
This mini 6โ pie plate pictured in these photos belonged to my grandma. My mom grew up in the 1950s; I want you to know that someone else was small-batch baking and buying mini pie plates even back then.
So, while it seems like a mini pie plate is something kitchsy found in a hobby store, Iโm here to tell you that itโs been around for a while.
I was a single grad student when I created this site. I started it because I was scaling down my momโs dessert recipes while living far away from home in California.
The first recipe I ever scaled down was her Texas Chocolate Sheet Cake into 2 oversized ramekins. Theyโre 10-ounce ramekins, and I donโt even know how they found their way into my kitchen. I certainly didnโt purchase them with the intent of โbloggingโ about it and taking pictures. They just appeared in my kitchen.
It took me 3 tries to scale the recipe down. I ate the first successful attempt while reading The Pioneer Womanโs blog on my green IKEA couch, and thought, โHey, I wanna share recipes too! Maybe someone else out there wants a small cake instead of a big oneโ.
It was very humble in the beginning. It was honest, pure, and from the heart.
And, I donโt exactly know what happened, but this site here brings me a lot of heartache.ย Whether itโs the nature of owning your own business or the comparison trap, this site floods and haunts my brain all at once.
Sometimes I need a big glass of wine and a benedryl to get some relief. Sleep is the only relief because spending time doing something else besides working is ineffective because of guilt. I can take my kid to the playground but if mentally, I feel like I need to be working, itโs not the same.
I do want to be working. I want to be here.
Iโm good at scaling down recipes and it is a true source of joy for me. When I make a giant recipe for cookies or a big 3-layer cake, it makes me angry. I hate having to scoop the cookie dough so much, in and out of the fridge, washing the baking sheet between batches (because a hot pan makes cookies spread too much while baking, you know). And while I do like making big cakes on occasion, the amount of ingredients astound me. Three cups of flour is a mountain to me. It doesnโt feel right in my hands. I canโt even count that high when Iโm baking; I have to count out loud and even then, I mess up frequently.
Anyway, Iโm here to say thank you to my grandma for instilling in me the love of small-batch baking. Though I donโt remember her doing it much as a kid, I know sheโs the source of all things.
I donโt talk about it much (and I have no idea why), but my grandma and her sister ran a very famous restaurant in Dallas. When my mom was little, Roseโs Bluebonnet Sandwich shop was the place where all downtown Dallas workers stopped by for a plate lunch. Rose got up early and flipped the barbecue in the smokers; her arms and hands were black from the smoke. When Bonnie & Clyde was being filmed in Dallas, she was tasked to feed the crew during filming. Rose fed people well. And my grandma helped her during her entire life.
My grandma helped her fend off the celebrities and press that wanted to sing her praises of the best hamburgers ever, because the two of them really couldnโt handle any more business. I remember my grandma counting tickets at the end of each day, and I think 75-120 burgers was the usual amount. When D Magazine would write about her, the two of them would groan and complain as the line formed out the door. When Don Henley (Dallas resident!) dedicated a song to her burgers at a concert my parents attended, we laughed because we knew Rose was gonna be pissed.
We called her restaurant Rosieโs, never Bluebonnet, and none of us has ever had aย better burger anywhere.
Rose passed when I was in college. I didnโt quite know that the the summers I spent working in her restaurant would mean anything to me later in life. I only knew that all of the adults around me talked frequently about how she should retire and take a break from feeding and serving people. Sheโd been doing it โtoo long,โ in their opinion.
But she didnโt. When she called for an ambulance on a Friday afternoon (after lunch service and cleaning up the kitchen), she knew if she went to the hospital, she wouldnโt be coming home. She was right.
The thing is, 2018 isnโt shaping up to be the year I wanted it to be, so Iโm here to deal with it. To face where I come from, why I do what I do, and what I want out of it.
But really, we canโt ask for the things we want so directly in life:ย We can ask for a job, but we cannot ask for the amount of money we want with it. We can ask for a certain type of life partner, but we cannot ask for the way they will change us and force us to face the bad parts of ourselves. We can ask for a baby, but we cannot ask for the skills to raise that baby perfectly.
I canโt ask for anything. All I can do is what I want to doโฆwhat makes my blood pump in the morning, even though there are ugly sides to it.
This is the very first recipe I posted on my site in 2010. Even though the first recipe I ever scaled down was Texas Chocolate Sheet Cake, I chose to share this recipe first as a way to honor to my grandparents.
Hereโs the old photo from 2010! Yikes!
I wrote exactly 46 words about why I chose to make it, including a few lines about why you should make it tooโlike I was so certain anyone was reading and that I could convince people to do things in their kitchens.
(I chose this recipe to share first because it was my grandpaโs favorite pie that his step-sister Stacey made for him. He served in Pearl Harbor. He was a medic in the Army who very much wanted to go to medical school but the stock market crash had something to do with his cotton farmer daddy not having enough money to send his kids to college. His daddy had two families because my grandpaโs mom passed away early in life and he remarried. When my grandpa came home from the war, Stacey made him this chocolate pie. He ate the whole pie in one sitting. He said the food was awful in the Army, as I imagine most farmerโs kids found out when they served).
Much like I canโt understand now why 2018 is going the way itโs going, I couldnโt predict how much this choice of first recipe to share would give me a foundation today. A place to start over in 2018. A place to draw the line and figure out how I feel and how much Iโll let other people affect that.
I took new photos and we made a quick video (itโs at the top of the post)โฆbecause Iโm still in the business of trying to convince you to do things in the kitchen.
I actually updated the recipe too, because the original recipe had a pudding filling that was too much like pudding. It was delicious, but this is 2018 where food photos count, and pies must hold together in one pretty piece, or else! Only sort of joking, we added an egg yolk and an extra tablespoon of cornstarch. Itโs still the best chocolate pie recipe Iโve ever had.
There are still remnants of Rose in Dallas. Iโve just moved back here after 12 years away, and Iโve never felt more comfortable in my own skin in this town. I love Texas. Itโs an identity for me.
Thereโs a restaurant in Dallas called Mesero that has a burger dedicated to her (The Rose Burger). My parents found it by accident while eating there, and listened to the owner describe his love for Rose and her food.
She was a beacon. And she did it all with her sister (my grandma). And neither of them are here anymore to help me out of this mess Iโm in now.
But as strong women, they would tell me that women donโt really need help, we just need time to figure things out.
Iโve been told that I cook like Rose. Iโm a mess in the kitchen. I just throw things together and somehow, it works. I cook with a lot of confidenceโI generally know what Iโm doing in the kitchen and how it will turn out. Iโm not afraid to fail, because Iโm confident that even my failure will be passable. Iโm the person that makes new recipes for company. The stress and anxiety it causes is never worth it, but I do it anyway.
Thank you for being here. Truly.
I hope you enjoy the recipe video with this post. Let me know if you have any questions; Iโm here to help.
Mini Chocolate Cream Pie
Makes 1 small 6" pie.
Ingredients
Crust:
- 4 graham cracker sheets
- 2 1/2 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted
- pinch of cinnamon
- 2 teaspoons sugar
Filling:
- 1/4 cup sugar
- 3 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder
- 2 1/2 tablespoons corn starch
- 1 large egg yolk
- 1 1/2 cups milk (I've used 1% and 2% succesfully)
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1 tablespoon butter
Whipped Cream:
- 4 tablespoons heavy whipping cream
- 2 tablespoons powdered sugar
- 1/4 teaspoon vanilla extract
Instructions
- First, preheat the oven to 350.
- Pulse the graham crackers, melted butter, cinnamon and sugar in a food processor. Alternatively, you can crush them in a plastic storage bag. Make sure the crumbs are very fine. Press the mixture into the pie tin, using the bottom of a glass or small measuring cup to pack the crumbs firmly. Press the crust up the edges of the pie tin.
- Bake on a cookie sheet for 10 minutes. Let cool while you make the chocolate filling.
- Sift the sugar, cocoa powder and corn starch into a small bowl. Add 1/2 cup of the milk and whisk vigorously until the mixture is very smooth and free of lumps. Slowly add the rest of the milk while whisking constantly. Finally, whisk in the egg yolk.
- Pour the mixture into a small pan and bring to a simmer over medium heat. Stir the mixture constantly with a wooden spoon, being sure to scrape the corners of the pan with the spoon. Once the mixture starts to thicken and simmer, turn the heat to low and continue cooking for 1 minute. The mixture should be silky and slightly thickenedโit will firm up in the crust later.
- Remove the pan from the heat and add the butter. Stir to melt, then stir in the vanilla. Pour the pudding into the crust. Press plastic wrap against the surface of the pudding and chill in the fridge for at least 4 hours or overnight.
- When ready to serve, whip the heavy cream, sugar, and vanilla together until a thick whipped cream forms. Spread evenly on top of pie. Slice and serve.
Notes
Nutrition Information:
Yield:
4Serving Size:
1Amount Per Serving: Calories: 392Total Fat: 22gSaturated Fat: 12gTrans Fat: 0gUnsaturated Fat: 8gCholesterol: 144mgSodium: 165mgCarbohydrates: 42gFiber: 1gSugar: 23gProtein: 8g

















Absolutely delicious! Consistency is so silky and smooth! Will be making this again for sure!