The New York Times recipe: Key lime pie bars with vanilla biscuit crust are a sweet-tart treat for summer

Samantha Seneviratne
The New York Times
Samantha Seneviratne’s creamy Key lime bars with vanilla wafer crust, on July 28, 2018. These bars taste like Key lime pie but they’re so much easier to share (and easier to make). (Mark Weinberg/The New York Times)
Samantha Seneviratne’s creamy Key lime bars with vanilla wafer crust, on July 28, 2018. These bars taste like Key lime pie but they’re so much easier to share (and easier to make). (Mark Weinberg/The New York Times) Credit: MARK WEINBERG/NYT

Traditionally, Key lime pie is made from Key limes, known in Australia as West Indian limes. They’re smaller and seedier than conventional limes, and their aromatic juice more sour. Combined with super-sweet condensed milk, egg yolks and a graham cracker crust, that juice makes a terrific pie.

These dessert bars are the traditional pie’s less fussy but equally irresistible buddy. Go ahead and use Key limes if you’ve got them, but the limes available in most grocery stores, called Persian or Tahitian limes, will work beautifully, too. They’re also considerably less work to juice. You’d need about a dozen Key limes to get the ¾ cup of juice you need for these bars, whereas you’ll need only about six conventional limes. And — purists, avert your eyes — if you’re short on time, you can use bottled Key lime juice. Just check the ingredients before you buy: you want 100 per cent juice without added sugar.

For the crust, vanilla wafer cookies step in for the classic graham crackers; in Australia, substitute for shortbread or plain sweet biscuit, such as Marie. The vanilla in the cookies complements the floral notes of the lime juice nicely. To finish, the bars are topped with lightly sweetened whipped cream. The cream tames the lime’s acidity and is less finicky than meringue.

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Super simple to make and travel-friendly, these bars beg to be taken to your next picnic, no plates or silverware required. Cut them before you leave the house to make sharing easy, but bring the heavy cream and confectioners’ sugar, unwhipped, in a jar. (Keep both the jar and the bars chilled, if possible.) Just before serving, make a big show of shaking the jar to whip the cream and spoon it onto the individual squares. Then sit back and feign exhaustion while the praise rolls in. You’ll look like you’ve earned it.

Recipe: Key Lime Pie Bars With Vanilla Wafer Crust

For the crust:

320g plain sweet biscuits, such as Marie, to substitute for vanilla wafers or graham crackers

2 tbsp granulated sugar

115g unsalted butter, melted

For the filling:

420ml condensed milk

5 large egg yolks

180ml Key lime or conventional lime juice

1 tsp lime zest

For the topping:

240ml cold thickened or whipping cream

1 tbsp icing sugar

Step 1 Heat oven to 180C. Line a 23cm (9-inch) square pan with parchment paper, leaving a 5cm overhang on two sides. In a food processor, combine biscuits and sugar, and pulse until you have fine crumbs. Add butter and process until evenly moistened. Transfer mixture to prepared pan and press it down into an even layer. Bake until fragrant and a shade darker, 15 to 17 minutes.

Step 2 Meanwhile, prepare the filling: in a medium bowl, whisk together condensed milk, egg yolks, lime juice and lime zest.

Step 3 Pour filling over crust (it’s OK if it’s still warm) and bake until the filling is set, about 15 minutes. Transfer to a rack to cool completely, then cover and refrigerate for at least 4 hours.

Step 4 Use a sharp knife to release edges. Using the parchment overhang, carefully lift and transfer the bar to a cutting board. Just before serving, whip cream and icing sugar until soft peaks form. Top bars with whipped cream and cut into 16 squares to serve.

Makes 16 squares

Total time: 45 minutes, plus chilling

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