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Butterscotch Pie - a classic, old fashioned pie - PLUS, How to Blind Bake a Pie Crust

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Published on 20 Feb 2026 / In Film & Animation

261,046 views Mar 3, 2024 #butterscotch #meringue #pie
Butterscotch Pie

2 cups packed light brown sugar
2/3 cup cornstarch
1 teaspoon salt
4 cups milk
6 egg yolks, well beaten
2 Tablespoons butter
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
pie crust, baked

Combine the brown sugar, cornstarch, salt, and milk. Mix in the egg yolks and whisk thoroughly.

Over medium high heat, cook, stirring constantly, until it thickens.

Remove from the heat and add the butter and vanilla. Continue to stir until the butter is melted and incorporated.

Pour into the baked pie shell. Top with the meringue and bake at 400° for five minutes or until brown.

Meringue
Six egg whites
3/4 cup sugar
1/2 teaspoon cream of tartar

Whip the egg whites with the sugar until soft peaks form. Add cream of tartar and whip until stiff. cover top of pie, being sure to seal the meringue to the edges of the crust.

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url: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=58M2omXKzPY

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Life_N_Times_of_Shane_T_Hanson

To achieve a texture closest to conventional cake flour while keeping carbohydrates near zero, the goal is to balance the moisture of nut flours with the structural "lift" of fibers.

Below is a specific, ratio-based "Keto Cake Flour" blend that mimics the fine, tender crumb of wheat-based cake flour.
DIY "Low-Carb Cake Flour" Blend

This recipe produces approximately 3 cups of flour blend, which can be swapped 1:1 in most low-carb cake recipes.

Ingredient Amount (Volume) Weight (Approx) Purpose

Super-Fine Almond Flour 1 ½ cups 168g Base moisture and tender crumb.

Oat Fiber (or Bamboo Fiber) 1 ½ cups 192g Bulk, fluff, and zero-carb "volume".

Egg White Protein Powder ¾ cup 80g Structure and "lift" (replaces gluten).

Xanthan Gum 1 Tbsp 10g Binding and elasticity.

Psyllium Husk Powder 2 Tbsp 20g Moisture retention and "chew".


Instructions for Best Results

Sift and Shake: Combine all ingredients in a large bowl or a gallon-sized bag. Sift the mixture twice or shake vigorously for 2 minutes to ensure the heavy almond flour is fully aerated and integrated with the lighter fibers.

Storage: Store in an airtight container in a cool, dry place. Because of the almond flour, it is best kept in the fridge or freezer to prevent the natural oils from going rancid over time.

The "Cake Flour" Secret: If a recipe calls for standard cake flour, you can further refine this blend by adding 1 teaspoon of cream of tartar per cup of blend. This increases the acidity, which helps egg whites stabilize and rise, mimicking the bleached nature of traditional cake flour.

Important Baking Adjustments

Hydration: Low-carb fibers (especially oat fiber and psyllium) absorb more liquid than wheat. If your batter looks too thick or "doughy," add

1–2 tablespoons of water or unsweetened almond milk at a time until it reaches a pourable consistency.

The Egg Rule: For the lightest texture, separate your eggs. Beat the whites to stiff peaks and gently fold them into the batter at the very end.

This adds the mechanical aeration that low-carb flours often lack.

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Life_N_Times_of_Shane_T_Hanson

What is a flour type, that has similar baking properties to conventional cake flours, but is very low in carbohydrates? What bulking modifiers can be added to the flour to drop the carbohydrate levels?


For low-carbohydrate baking that mimics the fine, tender crumb of conventional
cake flour, Super-Fine Blanched Almond Flour is widely considered the best base. Unlike coarser almond meals, super-fine almond flour is sifted to a granulation that produces a "grit-free" texture essential for delicate cakes.

Top Flour Options for Cake Baking

Flour Type Key Properties Carbs (per 1/4 cup) Best Use Case

Super-Fine Almond Flour Moist, tender crumb; neutral, nutty flavor. ~2g - 6g Net Most cakes, cookies, and sponges.

Lupin Flour Extremely low carb; provides a yellow "eggy" color and bread-like lift. ~1g - 2g Net Blending with almond flour for structure.

Coconut Flour Highly absorbent; creates a very light, fluffy texture if hydrated correctly. ~6g - 11g Net Sponges and muffins; often used as a 1:4 wheat substitute.

Keto Wheat Flour Modified wheat flour (often with vital wheat gluten) to act like all-purpose flour. ~4g Net Yeasted cakes or those requiring traditional wheat taste.

******Bulking Modifiers to Reduce Carbohydrates

To drop carbohydrate levels while maintaining the necessary "bulk" and structural integrity of a cake, you can add zero- or low-carb modifiers:

Oat Fiber: This is virtually zero-carb (pure insoluble fiber) and is primarily used to add "fluff" and bulk without the weight of nut flours.

Bamboo Fiber (Bamboo Flour): Contains nearly 90% fiber and 0g net carbs. Adding 1–2 tablespoons per cup of other flour significantly improves the lightness and "lift" of baked goods.

Whey Protein Isolate (Unflavored): Replaces up to one-third of flour to add structure and "brownability" while keeping carbs low. Be careful not to use too much, as it can cause a rubbery texture.

Psyllium Husk Powder: Acts as a binder and bulking agent that mimics the elasticity of gluten. It swells up to 50 times its volume, providing a "viscous" mass that helps cakes rise and retain structure.

Allulose or Erythritol: While primarily sweeteners, these provide the physical bulk usually provided by sugar. Allulose is particularly favored for cakes because it can caramelize and brown similarly to real sugar.

Pro-Tip: The "Ideal" Cake Blend

To achieve a texture closest to real cake flour, many bakers use a 3:1 ratio of almond flour to coconut flour. This combination balances almond flour's moisture with coconut flour's lightness. Adding a tablespoon of oat fiber or bamboo flour further reduces the density, making the cake feel less like a "nut bar" and more like a traditional sponge.

Would you like a specific ratio-based recipe for a low-carb "cake flour" blend using these modifiers?

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Most of the real smarts with this Ai crap is not only to ask questions, but to ask highly specialised questions......

Kind of like very premeditated chess moves.....

Otherwise this shit will take you all over place, and it will supply you with endless off topic and bullshit information.

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Life_N_Times_of_Shane_T_Hanson

I am beginning to think that you like Butter Scotch cookings.

That or your right into pretty fat men, with rolling pins.

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WMHarrison94
WMHarrison94 2 months ago

No. Not really. It's okay. I am thinking of making a Boston Creme Oie but with butterscotch instead of the creme and chocolate glaze topping. So, I needed butterscotch sauce for the top snd pudding gor the midfle replacing the creme. I was looking for ways to cut carbs/sugars, but it looks like switching to keto flour is the o ly reduction but it won't be fine like the cake flour.

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Life_N_Times_of_Shane_T_Hanson

@WMHarrison94: Spewgle Ai: What is a flour type, that has similar baking properties to conventional cake flours, but is very low in carbohydrates? What bulking modifiers can be added to the flour to drop the carbohydrate levels?

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Life_N_Times_of_Shane_T_Hanson

@WMHarrison94: See Above.... reply needs formatting.

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Life_N_Times_of_Shane_T_Hanson

@WMHarrison94: I have 1/2 a sack of Wheat Gluten to get through.... I am setting up a slow boil to make Mock Duck in.... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mock_duck --------- Mock duck is a gluten-based meat substitute. It is made of wheat gluten, oil, sugar, soy sauce, and salt,[1] and is high in protein. Its distinctive flavor and artificial "plucked duck" texture distinguish it from other forms of commercially available gluten products. Mock duck along with other wheat gluten meat substitutes has origins in the Chinese Buddhist cuisine, dating back to the Middle Ages.[2] Mock duck can be found in some Chinese grocery stores or retail outlets providing international selections of food. It is most often sold canned.[3][4] Similar products may be labeled as "Mock Abalone" or "Cha'i Pow Yu" (齋鮑魚; pinyin: zhāibàoyú). Typically, mock duck gains its flavor from the stewing of the gluten product in soy sauce and MSG.[5] ------- Opened can of vegetarian "mock duck", made of fried wheat gluten (alias Seitan) in a brine with soy sauce, sugar, salt, soy bean oil. Product of Taiwan ("Wu Chung" brand). This can was purchased in an Asian supermarket in Germany. https://upload.wikimedia.org/w....ikipedia/commons/f/f

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WMHarrison94
WMHarrison94 2 months ago

@Life_N_Times_of_Shane_T_Hanson: yeah, touchscreens and AI interference... I have been using King Arthur Keto Wheat Flour and Bob Mill's Red Paleolithic flour. I have Psylliuk husk, Coconut flour [ and sugar], Almond flour though not the super fine, I'll look for that, and one maybe oat flour more plus a small amount of soy flour for one recipre, but I had not made it. As you may have noticed, I get called in alot especially when it's cold... King Arthur is out of Vermont, USA... I use other flours from them incluing a low carn pizza crest flour.

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Life_N_Times_of_Shane_T_Hanson

@WMHarrison94: Oat Fibre...... Not Oat Flour..... I guess any bran or husk will do..... Cooking is really good, there are so many ways to make similar things using a wide variety of ingredients.... Probably the ONLY ingredient I sincerely could not use was the hops and dark malt extract, in the Coopers Extra Stout home brew kits..... Perhaps a level small teaspoon in 3 or 4 Kg of really rich chocolate chip cookies.... I was having a try at making beer flavoured cordial - all the ingredients, minus the yeast and no fermentation, making in small batches that would last a day or two in the refrigerator - Naaaaaaaaaaaaaa It needs to be fermented into a proper beer, or it's basically undrinkable..... So much chemistry changes in the fermentation process..... https://www.diybeer.com/media/....catalog/product/cach

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