Maple Pecan Bars

When I agreed to join other Chicago cooks and bakers tonight for the Hideout Haiti Benefit & Bake Sale, I knew I needed a recipe that I could make the night before and that would be easy to individually wrap for sale in compact, but rich quantities. While I'm not a big pecan pie fan – (dry pecans, corn syrup) – these maple pecan bars appealed to me with their thick caramel filling, cookie crust and maple syrup. The bars are soft when warm and crisp and brittle when cool. I made two batches last night, yielding two dozen squares. I hope you will come out to the Hideout to join us tonight and sample some of the wonderful contributions. All proceeds will be donated to Partners in Health, an organization that has been working on the ground in Haiti for over 20 years.

Update: The Hideout Benefit raised nearly $8,000! The bake sale contributed $752 of this total.  Thank you everyone!

Maple Pecan Bars

Adapted from Williams-Sonoma Essentials of Baking

Ingredients

For the crust:

1 1/4 C unbleached, all-purpose flour
1/3 C light brown sugar, packed
1/4 tsp salt
8 Tbl butter, at room temperature

For the filling:

6 Tbl butter
1/3 C pure maple syrup
2/3 C light brown sugar, packed
1/3 C heavy cream
2 C pecan halves

Method

Preheat oven to 350F.  Carefully line an 8x8x2 inch glass baking dish with heavy-duty aluminum foil, allowing the foil to extend over the sides of the dish.  Lightly butter the foil.

In a medium bowl, combine all the ingredients for crust.  You will have a dry dough that sticks together when you press it between your fingers.  Press the crust mixture into the prepared baking dish in an even layer. Bake the crust, rotating half way through, until the edges are lightly browned and the top feels firm when gently touched. About 15 minutes.

After the crust is finished baking, begin preparing the filling by combining the butter, maple syrup and brown sugar in a saucepan over medium-high heat. Stir until all the ingredients dissolve. Bring to a boil and boil for one minute.* Remove from the heat and quickly stir in the cream.  Then stir in the pecans. Pour the hot filling over the partially baked crust and spread evenly with a spatula.

Bake until filling is somewhat set when you shake the pan and small bubbles appear over the whole dish. About 25 minutes. Transfer dish to a wire rack and allow to cool for 30 minutes.  Transfer dish to the refrigerator and allow to cool for an hour.

Gently lift the foil liner to remove from the baking dish. Gently peel away the foil and cut into pieces using a sharp knife.  Store in an airtight container for up to three days.

(*A few words of advice for bakers who get nervous about cooking sugars
on the stove top.  This is a pretty simple recipe to ease into the
process. The butter, brown sugar and maple syrup mixture will begin to
simmer along the sides, but wait until you are seeing more vigorous bubbles in the
middle of the mixture before you start timing the minute that the
recipe calls for the boil.)

show hide 18 comments

Sally - WOW! I just ate the pecan bar I bought at the hideout an hour ago and I have never eaten anything so delicious. Really. wow.

Sally - WOW! I just ate the pecan bar I bought at the hideout an hour ago and I have never eaten anything so delicious. Really. wow.

Sally - How many Weight Watchers points do you think they have?

Sally - How many Weight Watchers points do you think they have?

Kalynskitchen - Hi there,
It looks like you won my prize for Menu for Hope, woo hoo! (I always like it when it’s someone I know who wins.) As soon as you get the official e-mail from Pim, send me your address and I’ll get it ordered for you.
Congratulations!
Kalyn

Kalynskitchen - Hi there,
It looks like you won my prize for Menu for Hope, woo hoo! (I always like it when it’s someone I know who wins.) As soon as you get the official e-mail from Pim, send me your address and I’ll get it ordered for you.
Congratulations!
Kalyn

Gemma - That’s so flattering, Sally! I’m thrilled to hear that. I sincerely hope no one sits down to crunch the nutrition data on these…
I just saw that in the wrap-up, Kalyn. I’m so happy! I’ve been trying for that raffle item for a few years now! I’ll be in touch as soon as I hear from Pim. Thank you!

Gemma - That’s so flattering, Sally! I’m thrilled to hear that. I sincerely hope no one sits down to crunch the nutrition data on these…
I just saw that in the wrap-up, Kalyn. I’m so happy! I’ve been trying for that raffle item for a few years now! I’ll be in touch as soon as I hear from Pim. Thank you!

Samantha - Oh my. I wish I had one of these RIGHT now.

Samantha - Oh my. I wish I had one of these RIGHT now.

All Recipes - I’ve got to try this one out :)

All Recipes - I’ve got to try this one out :)

smilinggreenmom - That is awesome – way to go! I would like these but would have to omit the pecans due to nut allergies in our home. I would also love to make them with Kamut Khorasan Wheat flour for all the added nutrients! This looks fantastic – thanks and again “kudos”

smilinggreenmom - That is awesome – way to go! I would like these but would have to omit the pecans due to nut allergies in our home. I would also love to make them with Kamut Khorasan Wheat flour for all the added nutrients! This looks fantastic – thanks and again “kudos”

kickpleat - This is killing me. Looks amazingly rich and sweet. My kind of treat.

kickpleat - This is killing me. Looks amazingly rich and sweet. My kind of treat.

Gemma - Thanks Samantha and All Recipes. Give them a try! Baking with caramel can be slightly tricky at first, but the results are so good.
Glad you like them smilinggreenmom. I bet substitutions would work well here, but I’m not sure what a good pecan replacement would be. Let me know if you try them without the nuts.
Thanks kickpleat! They are so rich and lovely. I might have to make more this weekend.

Gemma - Thanks Samantha and All Recipes. Give them a try! Baking with caramel can be slightly tricky at first, but the results are so good.
Glad you like them smilinggreenmom. I bet substitutions would work well here, but I’m not sure what a good pecan replacement would be. Let me know if you try them without the nuts.
Thanks kickpleat! They are so rich and lovely. I might have to make more this weekend.

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