Joy the Baker

Pumpkin Pie Pop Tarts with maple glaze

October 14, 2010

IMG_8337

I didn’t know Pumpkin Pie Pop Tarts existed before I thought them up and went running to my kitchen.

Turns out they do exist… and they existed all over my kitchen counter before they stopped existing because I ate them all.

Ok.  Not true.  I didn’t eat them aalllll.  I shared… but I really didn’t want to.

IMG_8294

Kinda cool, right!?  Are you gonna make these or what?

IMG_8298

Just so we’re clear, what we’re dealing with here is two squares (ok.. yea.. rectangles) of buttery dough, stuffed with spiced pumpkin pie filling.

IMG_8227

Pumpkin pie used to be on the list of things that I hated… along with the first day of school, boys, eggplant and spiders.

IMG_8230

It would seem that pumpkin pie has grown on me.

… I’ve also developed a fondness for boys.

IMG_8236

But the first day of school, eggplant and spiders call all just suck an egg.

Is that an expression?

IMG_8285

I found this little gentleman on my front porch while I was baking up these pop tarts.

Want.

IMG_8249

I busted out the ruler for this recipe, but I still ended up with slightly wonky tarts.  Precision isn’t my deal.

IMG_8254

Luckily butter and flour still taste good, even when they’re crooked.

IMG_8258

IMG_8307

My Great Aunt Mary stopped by for a visit while I was baking.  She’s approximately 74 times more awesome than you and me.  She’s traveled all over the world.  Literally.  Everywhere.  She likes bus tours.  She loves margaritas and cookies.  She can sew like a stone cold maniac…. and she wears teal trousers.

Man… she’s so cool.

IMG_8334

Of course I gave her one of these tarts to take home.  It was the right thing to do.

Are you totally obsessed with pumpkin?  Yea… me too:

Vegan Pumpkin Walnut Bread

Super Soft Pumpkin Cookies

Pumpkin Pie Bars

Pumpkin and Butternut Squash Soup

Pumpkin Pie Pop Tarts with Maple Glaze

makes 9 tarts

crust recipe from King Arthur Flour

Print this Recipe!

For the Crust:

2 cups all-purpose flour

1 tablespoon granulated sugar

1 teaspoon salt

1 cup (2 sticks or 8 ounces) unsalted butter, cold, cut into cubes

1 large egg

2 tablespoons milk

1 large egg (for brushing the dough)

For the Filling:

3/4 cup pureed pumpkin

1 large egg

1/8 teaspoon ground cloves

1/4 teaspoon ground ginger

1/2 teaspoon cinnamon

1/4 teaspoon salt

1/3 cup granulated sugar

Maple Glaze:

1 cup powdered sugar

2 teaspoons maple syrup

2 tablespoons milk

To prepare the Crust:

In a medium bowl, whisk together flour, sugar and salt.  Add the cold butter and break it up in the flour mixture using your fingers, a pastry cutter or a food processor.  There may seem like there’s a ton of butter in your flour.  There is.   Work it in until only pea sized lumps remain in your mixture.  The mixture should also hold together when squeezed into a ball.

In a small bowl, beat the egg with the milk.  Add the mixture all at once to the dry ingredients and stir to make sure that moisture is introduced to all of the flour mixture.  Lightly dust a clean counter with flour and knead the dough on the floured counter for a few turns until it really starts to come together.  Divide the dough in two, wrap in plastic wrap and refrigerate for about 30 minutes.  I find that the dough is just a bit easier to work with when it’s chilled.

While the dough is chilling, prepare the filling:

In a small sauce pan, heat pumpkin puree and spices over medium heat.  Just heat through until the spices become fragrant.  This helps to bring loads of flavor into the filling.  Remove from heat and place spiced pumpkin in a medium sized bowl.  Whisk in egg, salt and sugar and place in the fridge to rest while you roll out the dough.

On a well floured work surface, press dough into a 3×5-inch rectangle, roll the dough out to about 1/8-inch thickness.  The dough should be slightly larger than 9×12-inches.  Trim dough with a pizza cutter, creating a rectangle that is 9-inches tall and 12-inches long.  Using the pizza cutter, cut each side into thirds, creating 9 squares.  Place dough squares in the fridge while you roll out the second piece of dough in the same way.

Brush one set of 9 squares with beaten egg.  This will act as the glue for the top layer of dough.  Spoon about one tablespoon of pie filling into the center of each brushed dough square.  Top with a piece of dough and use a floured fork to crimp the sides closed.  Use the tines of the fork to create vent holes in each tart.

Position a rack in the upper third of the oven and preheat to 350 degrees F.  Let tarts rest in the fridge for 30 minutes while the oven preheats.

Remove tarts from the fridge and place in the oven to bake for 25 to 30 minutes, or until golden brown on top.

While the tarts bake, whisk together ingredients for the glaze and set aside.

Let baked tarts rest on a cooling rack to cool completely before glazing.  Best served within 2 days.


261 Comments Add A Comment

  • EVIL….these posts just do NOT help me! I am making some tomorrow. Probably around 4 AM….only…I’m gonna have to make caramel for on top because I have no maple syrup. You have become my new best friend. YUUUUM

  • DDDDAAAAANNNNNGGG!!!!! those sounds fan-flippin’-tastic. aside from really craving pimento cheese, now i want these too! (and no, i’m not preggers, just weird…).

  • I hate pop tarts, but I am sooooo going to try these! They look insanely yummy. And “go suck an egg” is totally an expression. I’ve been saying it since jr. high!

  • you are a genius. end of story.

  • Oh my goodness! These look delicious! I must try them with my fresh new pumpkin puree…

  • you are the cutest thing ever. loved reading your post as much as looking at the pics. i might just make these tomorrow! i think it is the right thing to do…

  • Those look REALLY delicious. I think I will make a vegan version of those soon. *DROOL*
    PUmpkin poptarts are a beautiful thing.

  • I think you deserve to be the most successful and popular baking blogger out there and Joy! your name fits you perfectly. I love your blog!

  • These look so incredible. I’m going home to make them after work – t minus 7 hours.

  • Oh, my stars! These look absolutely, positively incredible! What a great idea!!

  • All I can say is these look AWESOME! I’m gonna break out the flour and butter…..

  • I want to go to there!

  • totally cool and yes, i can’t wait to make these! ps. i’m so inspired by your creativity in the kitchen & i love your humor.

  • I made these today and they came out super delicious. I cheated and used a Jiffy pie crust mix. I got 7 instead of 9 because the Jiffy box makes less dough, but very yummy and worth it!

  • Hey I had an Aunt Mary also. She is gone but she also was cool, and baked a mean cheesecake square cookie for weddings. Love pumpkin also, looks good can’t wait to make them. Paulette

  • These turns out to be the best thing I’ve ever baked. I can’t believe I did it successfully!!! I’m going to have to double or triple up next time. Also, I’m kind of glad to see yours were a little crooked too. I even had out measuring tape. :)

    Thanks!!!

  • Kimberly Weller October 22, 2010 at 7:10 am

    These are very good. I had a Pillsbury roll-out pie crust in the fridge, as well as some puff pastry in the freezer, and I substituded both for the crust. If I had more time, I would have made your crust, but with kids, on a school night, I had to cut corners. The filling was yummy and my kids liked both the piecrust AND puff pastry versions. Instead of a glaze, you could also sprinkle ginger sugar (instead of cinnamon sugar) on top before baking. I will definitely keep this recipe!

  • This looks fantastic! Definitely want to try it. Such a creative use for pumpkin. I made some pumpkin ravioli that were ridiculous. I love this time of year!!

  • I also feel like I need to tell you…I want teal trousers like your Great Aunt’s!

  • Really? You just had to post this little gem didn’t you, and now I’m going to have to make them.
    I seriously can’t wait to show my husband cause he loves pumpkin more than me and will totally flip out!

  • These pop tarts really are amazing…because I think I am the only one seeing that incredible piece of Hardanger embroidery behind them. Wow. I hope that’s an heirloom that you pass on to future grandkids along with your recipes!

  • Just so you know, I read this the first day you posted it and have been thinking about it ever since. I will make them today!!

  • The heading for the recipe on foodgawker.com says Pumpkin Pie Pot Tarts…FYI

  • OOOO—MMMMMMM—GGG! I freaking love your blog and I am so goin to make those! You are a pure genius for all your recipes!

  • so i made these and they are AWESOME!!!!! although, mine didnt turn out as pretty, but they sure are tasty!!!! not sure if i am gonna share them!

  • Joy… I’m wondering if these could be made with puff pastry sheets instead of dough. Any thoughts? It would make my life much easier and you can’t really go wrong with puff pastry…

  • Since those Pumpkin Pie Hand Pies at Mc Donalds are pretty good and we have been craving pumpkin pies around here these sound really good. Must try!

  • My 2 year old is a pumpkin fanatic, and I’m pretty sure she will love me more than her dad for just one day if I make these for her. Thank You! These look yum, oh and the pumpkin bread is on my to do list too!

  • Robin in Bryan, TX October 25, 2010 at 12:26 pm

    I knew Pop Tart made them, but finding them in my parts has become a problem. So finding this recipe has made my family VERY happy! Buying the ingredients for these today and possibly munching on them tonight! You are a genius, thank you soooo much!

  • so. I love this blog, and tonight we (my friend karissa and I) decided we wanted to make something that tastes all autumn-y. and this, this looked absolutely perfect! well, much to our chagrin, we already had the dough good and going (and chilling) before we realized we had no pumpkin. alas, all was not lost, because we did have pears! so with a little of this and a little of that, sauteed it all, threw it all in a blender, and moved right on along. the only other twist was that we used heart shaped cookie cutters (because, of course we would!) instead of rectangles, but that was mostly because I couldn’t get the dough rolled out into anything resembling a rectangle. hearts are much more forgiving. I am happy to report that the pear filling is plenty autumn-y, and delicious, as I’ve eaten 3 already and they’re not even cooled enough for the glaze to stay on.

  • I featured these on my blog today!! They look soooo tasty!

    Blessings~
    Alisa

  • Have you tried this recipe with other fillings? I was thinking of trying with apple or even some kind of chocolate like a croissant…any tips?

    • I melted some butter, added cinnamon, cloves and ginger along with some brown sugar, threw in some chopped up pears to soften them, then pureed it all in a blender. I added a little flour to thicken, and an egg once it cooled a little to make it custardy- turned our amazing! I’m sure other things would be great as well!

  • Absolutely delicious!! Crust was so easy to roll out.

  • These look great and I can’t wait to make them and maybe try so other fillings as well! YUM! I shared on my blog how to make your own pumpkin butter (which would work beautifully in this dish)…check it out if you get a second. Thanks for sharing!

    Wendy
    Pumpkin Butter at AMFT

  • best recipe of the season yet! Thanks for posting. I’ve made them twice and sent one batch cross country to my bf. Delicious!

  • I made these babies and they are INCREDIBLE!!!! Especially just after cooling from the oven. The pastry dough is insane and the filling is perfect-togther -Seriously-incredible. I’m hosting a Fall-themed baby shower next weekend and I can’t wait to share them with everyone. Thanks Joy!

  • Made these incredible treats today. Double the recipe of course so I could share with friends. I love that they weren’t terribly sweet. The glaze gave it just the right amount of sweet and the crust was AMAZING. I tried to ignore how much butter I used……

  • the frosting looks like jizz. just sayin.

  • Looks like a marathon game of soggy cracker.

  • In the first picture, it look like some guy just Jizz over those crackers.

  • I can’t say I’ve been crazy about pies but making a little handy dandy pie as a pop tart has caught my attention. I don’t know if I ought to rush and see what ingredients I have to start straight away or read more recipes :)

    I am also taken in how you write your recipe. Witty complete with kitty cat picture and Aunt Mary. I wondered if EVERYONE has an Aunt Mary that is the family trailblazer. Thank you for your writing.

    I will now continue reading.

    JNET :)

  • Mmmm….I’m eating these just right now. It’s bliss.

  • We are making these now, and will say we (but I’m greedy, so I really only mean me) will be eating these later.

  • OH MY GOODNESS! I will be making these, I have not reached my squash limit this fall. I just ate butternut raviolis that went with a spicy squash soup, Oh now I have a breakfast item other than pancakes and bread! Thank you thank you!

  • i made these! yum. used earth balance instead of regular butter, and a mix of almond and whole wheat pastry flours.

  • Whoever you are, you are amazing- your Great Aunt Mary, too.
    Now for happy pumpkin times.

  • Michelle Sullivan November 9, 2010 at 1:24 pm

    Ok so im trying to smell my computer screen and it isnt working..dang it..

  • My family and I LOVED these. Tastes like mini-pumpkin pies…but better. The crust was to die for!!! Can’t wait to make them again!

  • YUMM! Can’t wait to try! Also, they have new seasonal gingerbread ones–have you tried yet? ;P

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required field are marked *.


30 trackbacks

    The Book

    Homefries

    French Onion Soup Sandwiches
    Asparagus and Gruyere Tarts
    Blue Cheese, Hazelnut, and Honey Polenta
    Mushroom and Bacon Breakfast Skillet

    Joy, Recently

    French Onion Soup Sandwiches
    Asparagus and Gruyere Tarts
    Hello, New Orleans!
    Rose Water Pistachio Fruit Salad
    Blue Cheese, Hazelnut, and Honey Polenta
    Adaptations, On my Mind.
    Hello, London!
    Mushroom and Bacon Breakfast Skillet
    Candied Pecan Biscotti