Atlantic Beach Pie

Atlantic Beach Pie
Julia Gartland for The New York Times
Total Time
55 minutes, plus 4 hours' chilling
Rating
4(3,503)
Notes
Read community notes

Like a dreamy mash-up between a key lime and lemon meringue pie, this surprisingly fast and easy dessert is adapted from Bill Smith, who retired in 2019 after 25 years as the chef at Crook’s Corner, a Chapel Hill, N.C. restaurant that closed in June 2021. He was inspired by the lemon pies he ate at seafood restaurants in Atlantic Beach, N.C., while vacationing there as a child. While a food processor makes quick work of the saltine cracker crust, you don’t really need any special equipment — you can just as easily make it with your hands. Top it with whipped cream just before serving, and if you’re feeling flush, sprinkle it with flaky sea salt as they did at Crook's Corner, and citrus zest as we do: a lazy summer’s day in pie form. —Margaux Laskey

Featured in: A Pie to Cut Through Summer’s Heat

Learn: How to Make a Pie Crust

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Ingredients

Yield:One 9-inch pie

    For the Crust

    • sleeves saltine (with salt) crackers (about 60 crackers/200 grams)
    • 3tablespoons granulated sugar
    • ½cup/113 grams unsalted butter (1 stick), at room temperature

    For the Filling

    • 4egg yolks
    • 1(14-ounce/396-gram) can sweetened condensed milk
    • ½cup/120 milliliters lemon or lime juice, or a mix of the two
    • Pinch of kosher salt
    • Fresh whipped cream, lemon or lime zest and flaky sea salt, for garnish (optional)
Ingredient Substitution Guide

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Make the crust: Heat oven to 350 degrees. Using a food processor or your hands, pulse or crush the crackers finely. (Stop before all the crackers turn to dust; it’s O.K. if you have some little pieces.) Add sugar, then butter.

  2. Step 2

    Pulse to combine or work the butter in with your hands until the crumbs hold together like dough. Press into and up the sides of a 9-inch pie pan. Freeze for 15 minutes, then bake for 12 to 15 minutes or until the crust gets a little color.

  3. Step 3

    Make the filling: While the crust is cooling (it doesn't need to be cold), in a medium bowl, whisk egg yolks into condensed milk, then whisk in the lemon or lime juice (or both), and salt, making sure to combine them completely.

  4. Step 4

    Pour into the shell, and bake for 14 to 16 minutes until the filling has set. Refrigerate until completely cold, 4 hours up to overnight. Serve with fresh whipped cream, lemon or lime zest and a sprinkling of flaky sea salt, if desired.

Ratings

4 out of 5
3,503 user ratings
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Private Notes

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Cooking Notes

First time makin' a note! Made this dozens of times for a while now and people love it. It's a great pie. I have always wound up using 2 sticks of butter for the crust otherwise I find it too crumbly. Makes the baking time of the crust more like 30-35 mins. but it's worth it in my opinion. 16 mins. to cook the filling is always perfect (though I've never added salt to it). I don't even test to see if it's set at this point no matter the oven. Salt flakes on the whipped cream is a must.

I am the daughter and granddaughter of Southern ladies and this recipe is the Real Deal. That said, true confession: l like this better with a graham cracker crust, which is how l made it this afternoon. I also used, and recommend, a blend of lemons and limes both for the juice in the filling and the zest on the whipped cream topping—lovely color and flavor. This is a perfect recipe: maximum deliciousness with minimal fuss. It was worth 18 minutes of oven-on time in Austin on a 103 degree day.

For all those that feel it should have a graham cracker crust & a meringue topping.... That's just a lemon meringue pie or key lime pie!!! This is called Atlantic Beach Pie for a reason.... because it has the added saltiness (Atlantic Ocean is salt water!) And the combination of salt and sweet is great! So the idea is to make something Different!!! Not the same old thing!!

I totally agree. Go with meringue. You’re not wasting whites and really, with such a rich filling why pile on more fat and calories with whipped cream? Also whenever a recipe calls for a crumb crust whether it be graham or saltine, I almost always substitute ginger snaps. Ginger and lemon (or lime) is delicious and complementary.

I like the saltine crust better than graham cracker! If you hate wasting egg whites, but are too lazy to do meringue, replace the 4 yolks with one whole beaten egg--it bakes and sets up perfectly, and who can tell the difference! For a 9-inch glass pie plate, 1 sleeve of saltines is perfect for 1 stick butter. Crushing the saltines in the sleeve + mixing the crust right in the pie plate = no food processor cleanup.

This is so different from Bill Smith's original recipe in his book Seasoned in the South. No sweetened condensed milk but cornstarch to thicken the custard. I've made it, and it's classic. But it's topped with meringue, not whipped cream and the meringue is unusual. The bowl in which the whites are whipped is first coated with vinegar and salt then poured out. Gives a nice salty tang to the meringue.

I did this as described then wondered, why in Heaven's good name use a whipped cream topping when you have the whites of 4 eggs standing by to whip into a mirange (sp?) topping? That's how I did it ... I just happen to luv citrus pies and this one is easy peasy. But I ain't waistin' those egg whites, I'm gonna whip them to cover the pie whenever I put this together then stick it under the broiler for a tint of brown.

It's a pie. If you're that concerned about calories, salt, sugar, fat, etc... maybe don't eat it?

I love this pie... delicious, wicked easy to make.... but way too little of the custard (and too much whipped cream to fill the pie)for my taste. So I doubled the custard recipe the second time and served it with some maine blueberries ...yum

The egg yolks aren't even necessary. I make a no-bake version of this using a packaged graham cracker crust, two cans of fat-free sweetened condensed milk, a cup of lemon or lime juice, and half a teaspoon of salt. The salt and the citric acid cause the milk to thicken without cooking. Just refrigerate for a few hours.

You might be making a pie, but it's not =this= pie ...

This is much better with about a tablespoon of good Tequila and a bit of orange zest added to the filling, and the crust made of crushed pretzels. It's called a Margarita Pie with these changes.

No it wouldn't ;-)

Place the pie dish on a sheet pan.

I substituted Ritz crackers for the saltines because I needed a last minute dessert and couldn’t get to the grocery store. This pie is fabulous. Everyone loved it.

A lovely summer dessert! I agree with another reader that adding more butter to the cracker base keeps it together...and the saltine crackers are a MUST, or it's not Atlantic Beach pie. I wished it had turned out as bright yellow as in your photograph - it comes out closer to a soft butter yellow. Still, delicious!

I am from Atlantic Beach, NC. :) My mom made a pie like this, sometimes lemon, sometimes lime, but the crust she made was like this, but Ritz crackers instead of saltines.

Margaux/Bill: what is the intention? Sweetened or unsweetened whipped cream? Sometimes the devil is in the details. Some reviews have stated that this pie with the added topping of whipped cream is too sweet. The recipe as written does not call for sweetened whipped cream. Thanks for any clarification.

Is the whipped cream sweetened with confectioners sugar or not?

Disappointed in this. Appreciate the stab at creativity with the saltine crust (surprisingly not salty!) but it was flavorless compared to a good ol’ Graham cracker version. I used lemon juice bc our tree is loaded now, and I wish I’d added zest to the filling as well. Not lemon-y enough. Maybe choosing line juice would be better? It’s reminiscent of a lemon chess pie, but to us it wasn’t worth the time or ingredients.

Keeper as is, lovely recipe.

Hardest part of the recipe is making the crust and keeping it a uniform thickness in the pie pan to the correct height. Practice makes perfect so I will keep making it until I get it right. Overall this recipe is true to the original pie and is a winner.

Definitely double the custard.

This pie was a refreshing dessert served on a very hot and steamy evening in Maine. I think I’d prefer a different crust as was mentioned by another member. Will try it with either a graham cracker or ginger snap crust. Delish!

I made this today and followed the recipe as written. It was wonderful! The lemon filling was delicious. The crust is definitely different. We enjoyed the salty flavor of the Saltines. I will definitely make it again. And yes, it came out smoothly and easily from my pyrex pie plate.

I used Simple Mills Almond Flour crackers from Costco, which I've always thought tasted like GF saltines. They didn't work. I think they were too dense, whereas saltines are lighter. I did a 50/50 mix of lemon/lime and added some lemon zest to the filling. I went with whipped coconut cream because I thought it would balance the tropical tartness. The first day it was meh, but the second day - delish! I won't change the filling, but next time try a different GF cracker and whipped cream.

Yes, a keeper. Only issue was a too-crumbly crust but great flavor even though it did not hold together well. The recipe does not state to use fresh lemon and/or lime so I used the juices from plastic bottles of both, on hand in the fridge. It meant I did not have any zest for the whipped cream topping, nor did I have “flaked” sea salt, but I will make this again, trying it with real fruit. So easy, and the ingredients are simple basic ones that can keep on pantry shelves for weeks.

Made this for the first time and it will now be THE go to for summer desserts. It did substitute a pretzel crust, since I found some on sale. Delicious and refreshing. I did it with all lemon juice, but will try a combo the next time. Smooth, creamy, tart and salty all at once. Nothing like easy and delicious all one one!!!

Delish! Added extra everything, can't go wrong

Made exactly as per the recipe. Easy peasy. Absolutely delicious and a huge hit at the Fourth of July. All guests rated 5 stars. Used 1/2 lemon and 1/2 lime juice. Super bright flavor. The flaked sea salt and zest on top was a nice touch.

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Credits

Adapted from Bill Smith, Crook's Corner, Chapel Hill, N.C.

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