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    Everyday Pie » Recipes » Chocolate

    Chocolate French Silk Pie (No Raw Eggs!)

    Published: Jan 24, 2024 · Modified: Feb 19, 2024 by Kelli Avila · This post may contain affiliate links · This blog generates income via ads · 18 Comments

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    Jump to Recipe·5 from 3 reviews
    French Silk Pie

    Smooth, rich, and absolutely elegant, this Chocolate French Silk Pie is a must-make for all the chocolate lovers. Made without any raw eggs, this pie features a homemade shortbread cookie crust with a chocolate mousse filling and an indulgent tangy whipped cream top.

    A slice of chocolate french silk pie on a plate piled high with whipped cream.

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    One bite of this luxurious deep chocolate pie and you'll understand where the name comes from. Whether you call it French Silk or Chocolate Silk Pie, it's clear that the ethereal chocolate mousse filling is the reason for its silky namesake.

    This pie and I have a special relationship. It was one of the very first pies I ever made while working in a restaurant kitchen (this and a version of Bourbon Pecan Pie) and it helped spark my love of making pies all those years ago. I remember being tasked with making it and how foreign it sounded to me. I had never eaten a Chocolate Silk Pie, and in fact, I had never even seen one.

    Traditionally, the pie is made by combining melting chocolate with whipped sugar, butter, and raw eggs. It's finished off with some folded-in whipped cream.

    I recall reading through the instructions and being confused about the raw eggs. Was a step missing? Shouldn't they be cooked?

    To be sure, the pie was delicious. But I didn't feel right about adding raw eggs in then, and all these years later I still don't. I guess you could say that was my first instinct to tinker with recipes to make them my own. However, it was many, many years until I felt brave enough to start to "develop" recipes (this Chocolate Pudding was one of the firsts).

    Fast forward over a decade, and here is my own version of that classic Chocolate Silk Pie. Still true to the traditional taste, but made my way, with cooked eggs, a perfect shortbread crust, and the most amazing tangy whipped cream.

    So, let's get to making it, shall we? The article below details all the information you need to know to make these successfully, concluding with the recipe at the end. You can jump around using the menu below, or skip to the end of the article for the full recipe.

    Jump to:
    • Ingredients Needed
    • Let's Talk Chocolate
    • Why Mise en Place Matters for this Recipe
    • Making the Shortbread Pie Crust
    • How to Make the Chocolate Filling
    • Visual Overview of Steps to Make French Silk Filling
    • The Special Whipped Cream that Brings it All Together
    • How to Serve It
    • More Chocolate Recipes
    • Full Recipe
    A sliced chocolate french silk pie with whipped cream in a glass pie plate.

    Ingredients Needed

    Here is an overview of the ingredients needed for this recipe. The full recipe is listed below in greater detail.

    • all-purpose flour
    • powdered sugar + granulated sugar
    • kosher salt (I use Diamond Crystal kosher salt in my house, which is coarse... if you use table salt or fine salt, you may need to adjust the salt amount)
    • unsalted butter
    • eggs
    • bittersweet chocolate (see more on this below)
    • heavy cream
    • cream fraiche or sour cream
    • vanilla extract
    A slice of French silk pie with a bite taken out of it.

    Let's Talk Chocolate

    This recipe calls for bittersweet chocolate, which means it contains about 70% cacao. The amount of sugar added to the recipe is balanced with the bittersweet chocolate. It results in a deeply chocolatey flavor.

    It is possible to use semisweet chocolate if that is all that is available. The pie will be a little sweeter, but still good.

    The recipe calls for chopped chocolate, as opposed to chocolate chips. Bar chocolate is far superior to use in baking recipes because it has no additives like chocolate chips.

    Can you use chocolate chips for this in a pinch? Possibly. I haven't tried. But I really recommend sticking with baking chocolate if possible.

    A pile of chopped chocolate.

    Why Mise en Place Matters for this Recipe

    The recipes on this site vary greatly in difficulty. Some are very simple (like this No Bake Oreo Pie), and others have multiple steps that are more difficult (like this Mascarpone Roasted Plum Pie). This French Silk Pie falls somewhere in between and takes some skill and finesse to make it. However, it's totally doable, and my best advice for making it is to read the recipe thoroughly before beginning and have everything ready to go before making it. AKA get your mise en place ready! Once you start making the chocolate filling you can't stop, so please follow this advice.

    Making the Shortbread Pie Crust

    An elegant pie deserves an equally elegant pie crust. Enter the buttery shortbread crust that bakes up both pretty and delicious.

    It also comes together quickly in a food processor following the usual way to make a "short" pie crust:

    1. Add the dry ingredients
    2. Pulse in the butter
    3. Add the wet ingredients--in this case, egg--and pulse until it just comes together around the blade, and then stop!
    A sweet cookie pie pastry inside of a food processor.
    A sweet pie pastry dough about to be rolled out.
    Putting shortbread pastry in a pie dish.
    Crimping the edges of a shortbread pastry.

    The consistency will be that of play dough when it's done. It will be soft, but if handled delicately it can be rolled out right away. Or, it can be made ahead of time for up to 3 days.

    I like using a shortbread crust for a pie filling that needs refrigeration because it is sturdy, yet also still light-tasting when cold.

    If you don't want to make a pie crust, a quick Oreo Cookie Pie Crust would be really awesome with this pie. It's delicious when paired with the silky chocolate filling and can be a no-bake easy option for making this pie.

    I would not suggest using a flaky pie crust for this pie, since it will be served cold. But if you really want to, you can use this Butter Pie Crust recipe.

    The pie crust will need to be blind baked completely, since this filling is made completely on the stove. Check out this Guide to Blind Baking if this is new to you.

    How to Make the Chocolate Filling

    Essentially, the chocolate filling is a mousse. A mousse can be made in several different ways, but usually, it's made with some type of whipped raw eggs. As stated above, a classic French Silk Pie uses raw whole eggs that are whipped into a sweet buttery chocolate mixture.

    Eating raw eggs just isn't something I want to gamble on, so whenever recipes traditionally call for them, and there is an easy way to cook them instead, that's the course I'll take.

    Let Me Tell You About Pâte à Bombe

    With this recipe, I turned to the french technique of making a pâte à bombe, which is basically a swiss meringue but with egg yolks, or in this case, whole eggs. There are a few different ways the eggs and sugar could be cooked, but to avoid dealing with hot sugar syrups, I decided to cook the pâte à bombe over a double boiler.

    Since most people don't keep an actual double boiler in their homes, (including me), a "makeshift" double boiler will do just fine.

    To set up a double-boiler you'll need a small pot of water and a large heat proof bowl that will fit over the top of the pot. A small pot works best because it only heats the bottom of the bowl and not the sides, which I find useful for preventing any crystalized sugar.

    In practice, making a pâte à bombe looks like whisking eggs and sugar in a large metal bowl (I don't recommend glass at all for this purpose, metal is best) and cooking it on top of a pot of simmering water. There is a visual tutorial of this below.

    Ingredients for French silk pie.

    Visual Overview of Steps to Make French Silk Filling

    As mentioned above, it's important to have all your ingredients ready and prepared as instructed before you get going with the chocolate part. Once you start making the mousse, you can't stop and it's a very fast sequence of events.

    Here is a visual overview:

    Eggs and sugar in a bowl.

    Step 1: Set up a small pot of simmering water and add the eggs and sugar to the heat proof bowl.

    Whisked eggs and sugar in a bowl.

    Step 2: Whisk them over the simmer pot.

    Cooked eggs and sugar in a bowl for French silk pie.

    Step 3: The eggs slowly cook, as the sugar melts and the pâte à bombe goes from being a thin dark yellow mixture to a thickened, fluffy light yellow foam.

    Adding chopped chocolate to a pate a bombe for French silk pie.

    Step 4: Add the chopped chocolate to the hot egg foam. The residual heat will begin to melt the chocolate.

    Chocolate melting into cooked sugar and eggs.

    Step 3: Stir in the chocolate until it's completely combined.

    Butter melting into a chocolate mousse filling.

    Step 4: Toss in the room temperature melted butter pieces and fold it in with a spatula until no butter is visible.

    Adding whipped cream into chocolate silk pie filling.

    Step 5: Add in the whipped cream.

    Mixing french silk pie filling in a bowl.

    Step 6: Gently fold it in until barely any white streaks remain.

    Once you've made your filling, place it inside of the blind baked pie crust. It then needs to chill for 2-4 hours.

    Chocolate mousse filling for French silk pie.

    Quick Tips for the Chocolate Mousse Filling

    Here are best tips for successfully making the chocolate silk filling:

    • Read the recipe through, and get all your mise en place ready before beginning.
    • Don't walk away from the cooking eggs. While the sugar does offer some "protection" of coagulating egg proteins (aka scrambled eggs), it's best to maintain some movement in this mixture as it comes to 160ºF
    • While it's always useful to have an instant-read thermometer handy when cooking eggs, in this case, it will be very clear when the eggs are cooked to the correct temperature. You'll find they will thicken up enough that when the mixture runs off the whisk, it will create a "ribbon" that holds it's shaped for a few seconds before fading away.
    • Finely chop the chocolate, it ensures it melts quickly.
    • Immediately add the finely chopped chocolate to the hot pâte à bombe. The carryover heat is what is going to melt the chocolate.
    • Make sure the butter is very soft. Again, it's the carryover heat that is going to incorporate the softened butter into the chocolate. However, it's important that the butter is still in its solid form when it's combined with the chocolate. If it's too cold, it won't combine with the chocolate. And if you try to add melted butter because you didn't soften it on time, it also will encounter problems during the mixing process.

    The Special Whipped Cream that Brings it All Together

    Whipped cream in a mixing bowl.

    What would a French Silk Pie be without a pile of whipped cream on top?

    This recipe calls for adding cream fraiche (or sour cream) to the heavy cream, along with a touch of sugar and vanilla. It adds a unique element to the pie that really brings it all together.

    A bonus of adding creme fraiche to the whipped cream is that it helps stabilize it. While whipped cream is always better served fresh, the stabilized whipped cream will hold up well on any leftover pie for about 2 days if need be.

    How to Serve It

    A chocolate silk pie.

    It's perfectly acceptable to leave the pie unadorned since it already has that gorgeous cream top. But, it's always a fun idea to add a little decorative flair on top.

    Since you are already chopping chocolate to make the filling, it makes sense to chop some extra to sprinkle on top of the pie. You could also drizzle a bit of chocolate ganache on top of the whipped cream! Or purchase some chocolate curls.

    Storing Leftovers

    Serve the pie soon after it has finished setting up (about 4 hours or up to 1 day). The pie will keep in the refrigerator for a few days, but it's best served within two days.

    A slice of chocolate silk pie on a plate.

    More Chocolate Recipes

    • A sliced chocolate cream pie.
      Classic Chocolate Cream Pie
    • Chocolate strawberry tarts drizzled with melted chocolate.
      Chocolate Strawberry Tartlets
    • An easy chocolate pie sprinkled with flaky salt and cut into slices.
      Easy Chocolate Pie (No-Bake)
    • A chocolate strawberry pie drizzled with melted chocolate.
      Chocolate Covered Strawberry Pie

    I am so honored when you make a recipe from my site! If you make this Chocolate French Silk Pie, please leave a star ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ rating with your experience! If you have any questions about this recipe, feel free to comment here, and tag me on instagram!

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    Full Recipe

    Chocolate French Silk Pie

    A slice of chocolate french silk pie on a plate piled high with whipped cream.
    Print Recipe

    5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star

    5 from 3 reviews

    Smooth, rich and elegant, this French Silk Pie is a must-make for any chocolate lover. This pie, made without raw eggs, features a homemade shortbread cookie crust with a mousse chocolate filling and an indulgent tangy whipped cream top. 

    • Author: Kelli Avila
    • Prep Time: 00:25
    • Cook Time: 00:40
    • Total Time: 1 hour 5 minutes
    • Yield: Serves 8-10
    • Category: Sweet Pie
    • Method: Stovetop
    • Cuisine: American

    Ingredients

    For Shortbread Pie Crust

    • 1-½ cups (180 grams) all-purpose flour
    • ¼ cup (30 grams) powdered sugar
    • ½ teaspoon (3 grams) coarse kosher salt
    • ½ cup (113 grams) unsalted butter, cold
    • 1 large egg

    For Chocolate Silk Filling:

    • 1 cup (227 grams) heavy cream
    • 3 large eggs
    • 1 cup (200 grams) granulated sugar
    • ½ teaspoon (3 grams) coarse kosher salt
    • 6 ounces (170 grams) bittersweet chocolate
    • ½ cup (113 grams) unsalted butter, very soft

    For Tangy Whipped Cream:

    • 2 tablespoons (30 grams) creme fraiche or sour cream
    • 2 tablespoons (24 grams) granulated sugar
    • ¼ teaspoon vanilla extract
    • 1 cup (230 grams) heavy cream
    • ¼ cup (30 grams) chocolate shavings / chopped chocolate

    Instructions

    Prepare the Pastry:

    1. Add the flour, powdered sugar, and salt to the bowl of a food processor, and pulse until well combined. Add in the butter and pulse 5-7 times, or until the butter is broken down into tiny pebbles.
    2. With the motor running, add in the egg and let the dough process until it forms together into a cohesive ball around the blade, about 1 minute.
    3. Transfer the dough to a flour-dusted work surface.
    4. Roll out the pie dough to an 11″ circle and line a 9” pie plate, crimp the edges as desired. Prick the bottom of the dough all over with a fork. Place the pie in the freezer while the oven preheats, at least 15 minutes.
    5. Preheat the oven to 375ºF.
    6. Once chilled, line the pie dough with a piece of round parchment paper and then add pie weights (dry rice/beans/lentils work great), making sure to push the weights to the edges.
    7. Bake for 20 minutes, then remove from the oven and carefully remove the parchment and pie weights. Return the now empty pie shell to the oven and bake for an additional 10 minutes, or until the pastry is fully cooked through. Set aside until ready to use.

    Make the Chocolate Silk Filling:

    1. Before beginning, have all equipment and ingredients ready to go. Once you start this recipe it needs to be completed without stopping in between tasks.
    2. Using a whisk or an electric mixer, whip cream until medium stiff peaks. Set aside in the refrigerator until ready to use.
    3. Fill a large sturdy pot with a few inches of water and turn on the heat to medium. This is the bottom of your makeshift double boiler.
    4. Combine the eggs and sugar in a large metal heat-proof bowl (one that can fit inside the makeshift double boiler without the bottom touching the water). Whisk the eggs and sugar together until fully combined.
    5. Set the bowl over the steaming water. Alternate between whisking the mixture and scraping down the sides of the bowl with a spatula, until all the sugar has dissolved and the yellow mixture has lightened in color and has thickened, forming ribbons when the mixture falls off the whisk and into the bowl. It should have reached a temperature of 160°F. It will take anywhere from 10-15 minutes.
    6. Remove the mixture from the heat and immediately add in the salt and chopped chocolate. Stir the chocolate in with a rubber spatula until it’s fully melted.
    7. Add the pieces of very soft butter, and continue to stir until until the butter is fully combined. The mixture should be very glossy.
    8. Fold in ⅓ of the chilled whipped cream into the chocolate to lighten it up. Then, fold in the remaining.
    9. Immediately transfer the chocolate filling into the prepared pie crust and smooth over the top. Let set up at room temperature for an hour before chilling in the refrigerator for at least 3 hours or overnight.

    Assemble the Pie:

    1. Make the whipped cream: To the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with a whisk attachment, add creme fraiche, sugar, and vanilla. Whip on medium speed, scraping down the sides of the bowl until combined. Add heavy cream and whip on medium speed until the cream has reached very soft stiff peaks, about 2 minutes more.
    2. Place whipped cream on top of the pie. Using an offset spatula spread the cream evenly on top of the pie.
    3. Garnish the pie with chocolate shavings or as desired.
    4. Serve immediately or keep chilled until ready to serve.

    Notes

    Have a question or looking for tips? The text written above the recipe is always a great first place to start! This French Silk Pie was developed with love,  and I always include loads of explanations, tips, step-by-step photos and technical advice shared before the recipe.

    Weighing your flour is the most accurate way to measure. If you aren't going to weigh it, make sure to spoon it into the cup, and then level it off. If you scoop the flour out with the measuring cup and then level, it could change the outcome of the final product.

    Be sure to read the recipe through thoroughly before beginning. Have all your ingredients measured out, and all your equipment ready and anticipate what to expect for the best possible outcome for this pie. 

    I don't recommend using glass bowls for the double boiler, even if they are heat safe.

    The pie will keep pretty well for 1-2 days in the refrigerator.

    Did you make this recipe?

    Please leave a start rating and a review, and share a photo on IG and tag @everydaypie

    Some of the links on this page may be affiliate links. Everyday Pie is a participant in the Amazon Associates Program. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases, at no extra cost to you.

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    1. Kathy

      November 26, 2024 at 10:53 am

      Love, love, love this recipe. Is this pie freezeable? Thanksgiving is two days away and I made the pie but just noticed you said good in fridge 1-2 days.

      Reply
      • Kelli Avila

        November 26, 2024 at 12:23 pm

        I haven't tried freezing it, but my instincts tell me it might be ok? Maybe slightly weepy? But no more so than if you left it in the fridge from now until Thursday?

        Reply
        • Sarah

          November 27, 2024 at 1:30 pm

          I’m confused about the whipped cream. The recipe steps direct you to fold it into the filling but the whipped cream recipe indicates it is for topping the pie.

          Reply
          • Kelli Avila

            December 02, 2024 at 3:43 pm

            Hi Sarah, I encourage you to go through the whole recipe, ingredients to instructions to make sure you understand it. Your information is there. I often find it helpful to visualize myself making the recipe as I go through it before beginning to make sure I understand. If you are still confused after reading it through, let me know and I can try to clarify to you. But beyond rewriting what I've already written in the recipe, it is probably easiest if you just read it through again 🙂

            Reply
    2. Cat

      November 08, 2024 at 12:53 am

      I made this pie for my dad’s birthday cake. It was fabulous! I made it with gluten free flour, and the crust was excellent! Thank you - this is now a family staple.

      Reply
    3. Kim C

      May 09, 2024 at 11:43 am

      Can you make the chocolate filling the day ahead and fill the pie crust the day you are serving it?

      Reply
      • Kelli Avila

        May 09, 2024 at 12:43 pm

        I don't recommend it. Part of the texture would be lost.

        Reply
    4. Sharon E

      January 19, 2024 at 4:04 pm

      Do you use cold butter or softened butter for the crust?

      Reply
      • Kelli Avila

        January 19, 2024 at 6:04 pm

        Cold!

        Reply
    5. Haley

      November 23, 2023 at 8:53 pm

      Holy cow this pie is phenomenal. I am not a baker, and have always struggled with pie crust but I followed this recipe and I’m honestly shocked I made something so delicious. Will be making again!

      Reply
    6. Hester

      May 03, 2023 at 12:40 pm

      Hi Kelli! Do you recommend mixing the eggs and sugar over the double boiler with a hand-held electric mixer or by hand with a whisk?

      Reply
      • Kelli Avila

        May 06, 2023 at 7:58 am

        Hi Hester. Whichever you prefer! I did it by whisk!

        Reply
    7. Stephanie Craig

      April 18, 2023 at 8:07 am

      Just to confirm, you do not chill the egg/sugar/chocolate mixture before folding in the whipped cream? It isn't too hot to deflate the cream? Want to make sure before I start the recipe. Thanks

      Reply
      • Kelli Avila

        April 18, 2023 at 4:31 pm

        Hi Stephanie--the recipe is correct. The chocolate and butter bring down the temperature of the hot eggs. In fact, they do such a good job at it which is why I instruct all the mise en place being ready ahead of time because you have to move straight from cooked eggs/sugar to the chocolate, then butter then whipped cream. Good luck!

        Reply
        • Stephanie

          April 24, 2023 at 8:00 pm

          Thanks so much! Making this tomorrow

          Reply
        • Brenda

          March 04, 2024 at 9:18 am

          The title for this recipe states "no raw eggs" but yet you have eggs in both the crust and the filling?????????

          Reply
          • Kelli Avila

            March 04, 2024 at 11:31 am

            Right, the eggs are cooked in this recipe. Traditional French Silk Pie contains never cooked raw eggs in the finished recipe, mine does not.

            Reply
    8. Lynda McDaniel

      March 19, 2023 at 8:19 pm

      A little bit of cooking skills required, but of do worth the effort!

      Reply

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    Hi! I'm so glad you are here!

    I’m Kelli, pie lover, mom of two, and a former professional cook and baker turned recipe developer! I'm the creator of Everydaypie.com, a baking resource dedicated to sharing recipes for pie, pastry and more! Here you'll find detailed recipes, step-by-step photos and tons of tips to make you a better baker.

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