Crack Pie (AKA Milk Bar Pie)

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Copycat Milk Bar Crack Pie — This recipe lives up to its name and everyone should try this pie at least once!! It’s a fairly involved recipe from Christina Tosi’s Momofuku Milk Bar cookbook, but I promise the effort is worth it! 

slice of crack pie on a white plate

Milk Bar Crack Pie Recipe

Yep, you read the title correctly. This is a Christina Tosi recipe, and I surmise this pie and the real thing have a fair amount in common.

The addictive quality, thinking about it when you shouldn’t be, and wondering when you’re going to get it again are likely common themes for both. I can say definitely that all rings true with regard to Crack Pie.

Like all of Christina’s recipes, there are multiple steps and recipes within recipes but the results were worth it.

slice of crack pie on a white plate

There’s a reason that Momofuku Milk Bar sells these pies for $44 each.

They are a PITA to make, the cost of the raw ingredients per pie, even if you go el cheapo and buy store-brand multiple sticks of butter, sugar, nearly a dozen eggs, heavy cream, and milk powder there’s probably at least $15 dollars worth of just raw ingredients in it.

Not to mention few hours worth of time and lots of labor and dishes. I had every sheet pan, mixing bowl, spatula, and measuring cup I own dirtied up for this pie.

Would I make this again? Yes, definitely, and with the changes I noted in the tips section of this blog post. (Use the table of contents at the beginning of this post to click through to the tips section!)

Milk Bar crack pie in a glass pie plate

All in all, this baby is sweet, creamy, and will make you moan and groan. It’s full of texture from the crunchy oat cookie, complemented with the buttery smooth filling.

Each bite is crack-like, indeed.

  • If you are not a fan of sweet desserts, this is not for you.
  • If you are not a fan of fatty, buttery, rich desserts, this is not for you.
  • If you’re not a fan of either of those things, you’re reading the wrong blog anyway.

I can only imagine the Google search hits my site is going to get after this post.

milk bar pie in pie plate. one slice is missing

Copycat Crack Pie Ingredients

To make this Milk Bar pie recipe, you’ll need: 

  • Unsalted butter 
  • Light brown sugar
  • Granulated sugar
  • Egg yolks
  • All-purpose flour
  • Old-fashioned oats
  • Baking powder and baking soda
  • Kosher salt 
  • Corn powder
  • Milk powder
  • Heavy cream
  • Vanilla extract

Note: Scroll down to the recipe card section of the post for the ingredients with amounts included and for more complete directions.

momofuku crack pie in a glass pie plate

How to Make Crack Pie From Scratch

I’ve given very detailed instructions in the recipe card below on how to make this Milk Bar crack pie recipe. Below is just a brief overview of the process: 

  1. Make the oat cookie crust. Make it like you would a normal cookie dough, spread it out onto a baking tray, then bake. 
  2. Let the oat cookie cool completely, then pulse in a food processor with a little butter and salt. 
  3. Press the oat cookie mixture into a pie plate. 
  4. Make the pie filling. Whisk together the filling ingredients. Pour into the prepared pie shell. 
  5. Bake the pie. Bake at 350F for 15 minutes, then open the oven door and reduce the baking temperature to 325F (leave the pie in the oven while you do this). When the oven temperature reads 325°, close the door and finish baking the pies for 5 minutes.
  6. Let the pie cool. Let the crack pie cool completely before slicing (otherwise it’ll be too runny and won’t slice well). 
slice of crack pie on a white plate

Tips for Adjusting the Original Crack Pie Recipe

As I’ve already mentioned, making Momofuku Crack Pie at home requires a lot of ingredients, recipe steps, and equipment. To make your life easier, here are my top tips for adjusting the recipe.

I would halve the entire recipe, not just the filling portion, right off the bat (no one needs two of these laying around, nor do you “need” the extra cookie portion; unless you have the freezer space for it or company or are training for a triathlon, halving is my recommendation)

I would use a 9-inch, not 10-inch, pie plate as she recommends. I felt it was just “barely” enough filling and don’t attribute it to halving the recipe. I also used more than half the cookie for the crust and feel a 9-inch would be better.

I would underbake the cookie crust by about 25-30% of what she recommends (take it from 15 minutes to about 10 minutes) so that it crumbles easier and packs into the pie plate easier; plus it gets baked a second time anyway as part of the pie.

I would consider buying a store-bought graham cracker pie crust and just making Christina’s filling if I wanted to take this recipe from 2 hours of standing on my feet to 15 minutes by just making the filling.

Tosi recommends baking the entire pie, crust and filling together, for 15 minutes at 350F, opening the oven door and allowing the oven to cool to 325F, and then baking for about 5 more minutes after the oven temperature has reached 325F (about 20-25 minutes of total baking time).

I needed to bake mine for about 31-34 minutes of total baking time in order for the center to set (at least one-third longer than she called for which is highly significant and to be noted). Also I was only baking one pie; if I had two in the oven, it would have taken even longer.

slice of crack pie on a white plate

Recipe FAQs

Do I Have to Use Corn Powder in milk bar pie? 

Nope! Because I was halving the Momofuku crack pie recipe, this meant 1/8th cup or 2 tablespoons corn powder and rather than ordering or sourcing it at Whole Paycheck, I simply used 1 1/2 tablespoon King Arthur all-purpose flour and things turned out just fine.

Does milk bar pie need to be refrigerated?

This Momofuku crack pie should be stored in the fridge. It will last up to 5 days.

Can crack pie be frozen?

Yes, you can also wrap it in plastic wrap and freeze it for up to 3 months. To thaw, set in the fridge overnight. 

What’s the new name for “crack Pie?”

When I first made this recipe, the pie was called “Crack Pie.” Now, it’s been re-branded as “Milk Bar Pie.”

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4.41 from 104 votes

Crack Pie

By Averie Sunshine
This recipe lives up to its name and everyone should try this pie at least once!! It’s a fairly involved recipe from Christina Tosi’s Momofuku Milk Bar cookbook, but I promise the effort is worth it! 
Prep Time: 2 hours
Cook Time: 25 minutes
Additional Time: 2 hours 35 minutes
Total Time: 5 hours
Servings: 20
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Ingredients  

Pie

  • ¼ cup unsalted butter, melted
  • 1 recipe Oat Cookie, recipe follows
  • 1 tbsp. light brown sugar, packed
  • ¼ tsp. kosher salt
  • 1 recipe Crack Pie Filling, recipe follows
  • confectioners’ sugar for dusting

Oat Cookie

  • ½ c. unsalted butter, softened
  • c. light brown sugar, packed
  • 3 tbsp. white sugar, granulated
  • 1 large egg yolk
  • ½ c. all-purpose flour
  • 1 c. old-fashioned rolled oats
  • tsp. baking powder
  • pinch baking soda
  • ½ tsp. kosher salt

Crack Pie Filling

  • 1 c. unsalted butter, melted
  • 1 ½ c. white sugar, granulated
  • ¾ c. light brown sugar, packed
  • 1 ½ tsp. kosher salt
  • ¼ c. corn powder, corn powder is defined as freeze-dried corn, ground to a fine powder
  • ¼ c. milk powder
  • ¾ c. heavy cream
  • ½ tsp. vanilla extract
  • 8 large egg yolks

Instructions 

Oat Cookie Crust:

  • preheat the oven to 350°. In a stand mixer with a paddle attachment, cream butter and sugars on medium-high for 2 to 3 minutes until fluffy and pale yellow in color.
  • Scrape down the sides of the mixing bowl with a spatula. On a lower speed, add the egg to incorporate.
  • Increase the speed back up to a medium-high for 1 to 2 minutes until the sugar granules fully dissolve and the mixture is a pale white color.
  • On a lower speed, add the flour, oats, baking powder, baking soda, and salt. Mix 60-75 seconds until your dough comes together and all remnants of dry ingredients have incorporated. Your dough will still be a slightly fluffy, fatty mixture in comparison to your average cookie dough. Scrape down the sides of the mixing bowl with a spatula.
  • Pam spray and line a quarter sheet pan with parchment or a Silpat. Plop the oat cookie dough in the center of the pan and with a spatula, spread it out until it is 1/4″ thick. The dough won’t end up covering the entire pan, this is okay.
  • Bake the oat cookie for 15 minutes. Cool completely before using in the crack pie recipe.

Pie Filling:

  • Mix the dry ingredients for the filling using a stand mixer with a paddle attachment on low speed. Be sure to keep your mixer on low speed during the entire process of preparing the filling; if you try to mix on any higher than a low speed, you will incorporate too much air in the following steps and your pie will not be dense and gooey – the essence of the crack pie.
  • Add the melted butter to the mixer and paddle until all the dry ingredients are moist.
  • Add the heavy cream and vanilla and mix until the white from the cream has completely disappeared into the mixture. Scrape down the sides of the bowl with a spatula.
  • Add the egg yolks to the mixer, paddling them in to the mixture just to combine. Be careful not to aerate the mixture. Use the filling immediately.

Assemble the Pies:

  • Preheat the oven to 350°. Put the oat cookie, brown sugar and salt in the food processor and pulse it on and off until the cookie is broken down into a wet sand. (If you don’t have a food processor, you can fake it till you make it and crumble the oat cookie diligently with your hands.)
  • Transfer the cookie crumbs to a bowl and, with your hands, knead the butter and ground cookie mixture until the contents of the bowl are moist enough to knead into a ball. If it is not moist enough to do so, gently melt an additional 1-1 1/2 tablespoons of butter and knead it into the oat crust mixture.
  • Divide the oat crust evenly over two 10-inch pie tins.
  • Using your fingers and the palm of your hand, press the oat cookie crust firmly into both 10-inch pie shells. Make sure the bottom and the walls of the pie shells are evenly covered. Use the pie shells immediately or, wrapped well in plastic, store the pie shells at room temperature for up to 5 days or in the fridge for up to 2 weeks.
  • Place both pie shells on a sheet pan. Divide the crack pie filling evenly over both crusts (the filling should fill the crusts 3/4 way full) and bake at 350°F for 15 minutes. During this time, the crack pie will still be very jiggly, but should become golden brown on top.
  • At 15 minutes, open the oven door and reduce the baking temperature to 325°F. Depending on your oven this will take 5-10 minutes – keep the pies in the oven during this process. When the oven temperature reads 325°F, close the door and finish baking the pies for 5 minutes.
  • After 5 minutes, the pies should still be jiggly in the bull’s eye centers, but not in the outer center circle. If the pies are still too jiggly, leave them in the oven an additional 5 minutes.
  • Gently remove the baked pies from the oven and transfer to a rack to cool at room temperature. You can speed up the cooling process by transferring the pies to the fridge or freezer if you’re in a hurry. Freeze your pie for as little as 3 hours or up to overnight to condense the filling for a dense final product – the signature of a perfectly executed Crack Pie.
  • Just before serving, finish with a dusting of confectioners’ sugar.
  • Adapted from Momofuku Milk Bar

Notes

Recipe Notes and Items I Would or Did Change:
I would halve the entire recipe, not just the filling portion, right off the bat (no one needs two of these laying around, nor do you “need” the extra cookie portion; unless you have the freezer space for it or company or are training for a triathlon, halving is my recommendation)
I would use a 9-inch, not 10-inch, pie plate as she recommends. I felt it was just “barely” enough filling and don’t attribute it to halving the recipe. I also used more than half the cookie for the crust and feel a 9-inch would be better.
I would underbake the cookie crust by about 25-30% of what she recommends (take it from 15 minutes to about 10 minutes) so that it crumbles easier and packs into the pie plate easier; plus it gets baked a second time anyway as part of the pie.
I would consider buying a store-bought graham cracker pie crust and just making Christina’s filling if I wanted to take this recipe from 2 hours of standing on my feet to 15 minutes by just making the filling.
I didn’t miss the corn powder and would continue to use my 1 1/2 tablespoons of all-purpose flour because I am frugal, didn’t want to source it, and don’t want to store a bag of corn powder in my already maxed out cupboard space for the occasional one tablespoon use of it.
Tosi recommends baking the entire pie, crust and filling together, for 15 minutes at 350F, opening the oven door and allowing the oven to cool to 325F, and then baking for about 5 more minutes after the oven temperature has reached 325F (about 20-25 minutes of total baking time). I needed to bake mine for about 31-34 minutes of total baking time in order for the center to set (at least one-third longer than she called for which is highly significant and to be noted). Also I was only baking one pie; if I had two in the oven, it would have taken even longer.

Nutrition

Serving: 1, Calories: 780kcal, Carbohydrates: 84g, Protein: 10g, Fat: 47g, Saturated Fat: 27g, Polyunsaturated Fat: 17g, Cholesterol: 313mg, Sodium: 663mg, Fiber: 1g, Sugar: 69g

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

More Homemade Pie Recipes: 

Sugar Cream Pie — This sugar cream pie reminds me a bit of crème brûlée. The filling is custard-like, and when topped with a sprinkle of cinnamon it’s irresistable! 

The Best French Silk Pie — This French silk pie is made with an Oreo cookie crust. The filling is a cross between chocolate mousse and chocolate cheesecake, and it’s so addicting!

Easy Coconut Cream Pie — Homemade coconut cream pie that will become a family FAVORITE! There’s a luscious coconut filling, a creamy top, and this EASY from-scratch pie is loaded with coconut flavor because coconut is used four different ways! Use store bought crust to save time!

Coconut Custard Magic Pie — A one-bowl, no-mixer pie with a short ingredients list that is SO easy to make and forms three different LAYERS while it bakes!! Mindlessly easy, goofproof, and coconut lovers will go crazy for this MAGIC pie!!

Easy Banana Pudding Pie with Cream Cheese Crust — The no-bake filling tastes like a fluffy slice of heaven and the crust is no-roll!! An easy, goofproof pie that anyone can make in minutes!!

Chocolate Chip Cookie Pie — The filling tastes like the center of an underbaked chocolate chip COOKIE!! Gooey perfection! Easy, rich, decadent, extremely CHOCOLATY and you can use a frozen pie crust!!

Comments

  1. I’ve made this a couple times and it is labor and ingredient intensive. My crust shortcut now relies on Hannah Max Cookie Chips (Safeway carries this) or Pepperidge Farm Bordeaux cookies mixed with some yummy crispy oatmeal granola (bulk section Whole foods), as I normally have those on hand. Then I melt the butter, adjust sugar to taste (usually reduce by half) and just prepare it like a traditional graham cracker crust. It’ll save you half a day’s work. Also, you can find Corn flour in the bulk section at WF. Masa can work in a pinch too

    1. Good tips on your crust. As a happy accident, when I made these
      https://www.averiecooks.com/2013/09/salted-caramel-swirled-pumpkin-cheesecake-bars.html
      https://www.averiecooks.com/2013/08/peanut-butter-swirled-cheesecake-bars-with-brown-sugar-graham-cracker-crust.html

      I realized they tasted like something familiar…and the taste lots like Crack Pie crust, and take seconds to mix together. You could work in some of the other flavor elements that Tosi does like oats but honestly, love that crust so much and I bet it would be just fine with the filling and stirs together in about 4 seconds flat. As you said, the pie is labor and ingredient intensive and any thing to ease that up, is welcome, right! :)

      1. Yum!! Just book marked this! It’s 2am in California. I’m glad I’m not the only night owl up. I found you on Pinterest and I’m loving your website.

      2. I’m in San Diego and now it’s 3am and yes, still up. It’s the only time of day I can get anything done without interruptions. Except of course to talk Crack Pie, a welcome diversion! Thanks for finding me!

    1. Order online or omit it; I omitted it. For the very small amount that this recipe was going to call for (I made 1 pie instead of 2 pies; halved her full recipe) – I could not see justifying a special order online and paying for shipping. My pie was just fine without it; your mileage may vary. Just sharing what I did!

  2. I have made this pie many times and am a pastry chef. As far as bake times, in a home oven it does take much longer than if you were to bake it in a professional convection oven. You pictures turn out much lighter and much less dense than mine or Tosi’s. it shouldn’t be creamy. I believe you may have whipped your butter mixture to much. A picture of hers scrolls thru on her page. https://milkbarstore.com/ you can see that it isn’t gooy but thick and dense, you should be able to pick it up with your hands.

    Also there is no replacement for corn powder. Freeze dried corn has a VERY distinctive flavor. Very much like captain crunch. Also in her cook book it states that you should freeze the pie for a few hours before serving and to serve it cold.

  3. I just made this pie last night and I am very dissapointed, your cook times are way off, mine was still liquid when I cut into it this morning. I looked up another recipe today to see what I did wrong and sure enough it says to cook the pie at 350 for 30 minutes then reduce heat to 325 and cook for an additional 20 minutes. Such a waste of money :(

    1. The recipe is the EXACT CUT AND PASTE from the Momofuku Milk Bar Cookbook! And if you read in my notes and in the post, I wrote that I found her baking times off. I am sorry you did not have success with Christina Tosi’s recipe and hope that you don’t blame me; I posted what’s in her cookbook with my own comments interspersed throughout the post and in the recipe notes.

  4. Why is everything nowadays called “crack” this and “crack” that? I understand the inference that it’s addictive, but the use of the word “crack” is getting really dumb and repetitive. I wouldn’t want my child to ask me to make “crack pie”.

    1. I didn’t name the recipe; the cookbook author who owns a couple famous restaurants and bakeries in NYC did. I just made the recipe which was in her book.

  5. This recipe sounds awesome

    Do you think masa could be used for the corn powder? It’s finer than corn meal. I’m thinking it could be used as a thickener

    Also, is milk powder the same as nonfat dried milk? Or is it something else?

    Thanks!

    1. Milk powder and nonfat dried milk, pretty sure they’re the same thing but read the labels on the two and see if there are differences. Masa for corn powder? I am not sure because I have not worked with masa, but you’d probably be fine – but this is a very complex recipe with lots of pieces & parts and if you’re going to the work of making it, I’d make it as close to as written as possible JUST so you know it will turn out after all your hard work!

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