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Okay...I'm seriously drooling here. Out of curiosity, how much time did the pie need to set? Or was it pretty much done by the time it came out of the oven?

Hi Cath - we took the pie out of the oven at shortly before 1pm and it hadn't cooled until about 4 or even 5 pm. I think this kind of custardy pie really needs to cool off before it's good to eat. When you first take it out the middle jiggles, and the cooling process firms it up so that the middle is gorgeously silky but no longer a puddle (so to speak). Hope this helps!

And it is bee-oo-tiful too. Some pie.

This one is on my list for the fall.The butternut squash is a fine, fine food indeed.

I made this pie about 7 years ago and it ws one of the best pies that I have ever tasted. Thanks for the recipe, your site is great.

Hi, Luisa: Thanks so much for posting this. I made the pie for a party, and it was obscenely good; everything you promised and more. Everyone wanted the recipe. When it's -7 degrees out (as it is here in Iowa), delicious pie is a very good thing indeed. Thanks again!

Just a guess, but it could be that the original squash roasting temperature was taken from a European source, i.e. is 200 degrees C, which is just a tad under 400 degrees F. I live in Austria and when I cook my butternut squash (from our garden) I use a glass pan and a 200 degree C oven - works like a charm. I have not yet tried out this pie recipe - hopefully tomorrow - but I still have several squash from last year and they are getting a bit long in the tooth.

What did you do with the bulb parts of the squash?

This looks so good - but your images are gone! Any way we can convince you to update with where the photos are?

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