Tuscaloosa Tollhouse Pie

The in-laws are coming in from Mississippi this weekend for their annual hair appointments (every 5 weeks) so I'm donning the baking apron and trying a new recipe. This one comes from one of my favorite books at the moment, "Baked" by Southern boys Matt Lewis and Renato Poliafito (they now live in Brooklyn and own a dessert shop, also called "Baked"). I've tried several of the recipes in this book and they have all been wonderful.
This recipe calls for a pie dough that they include on a separate page. I tried it and had a few problems with it but taste wise, it is fine. It was really, really sticky though as I was making it and almost impossible to work with. The next time I think I will try Ina Garten's dough recipe that I use for the apple tart. Or if you don't even want to fool with making your own, I'm sure a frozen one from your supermarket will work fine.
Baked’s Tuscaloosa Tollhouse Pie
* 1/2 recipe pie dough, chilled
* 1/2 cup all-purpose flour
* 1/2 cup sugar
* 1/2 cup firmly packed brown sugar
* 2 eggs, room temperature
* 3/4 cup (1 1/2 sticks) unsalted butter, softened and cut into pieces
* 1 tb whiskey (I used Southern Comfort)
* 3/4 cup walnuts, toasted and chopped
* 1 1/4 cups chocolate chips
On a lightly-floured surface, roll out dough to form a 12-inch round. Press into a pie dish, folding under edges. Freeze crust while you make the filling.
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
In a bowl, whisk together flour and sugars; set aside.
Fit an electric mixer with its whisk attachment, and beat eggs on high speed until foamy, about 3 minutes. Switch to the paddle attachment, and mix in flour and sugars on low. Turn mixer to high and beat for 2 minutes; add butter and beat on high until combined. Scrape down sides, add whiskey, and beat on high for another minute, then fold in walnuts and 3/4 cup of chocolate chips.
Pour filling into chilled pie shell, sprinkle remaining 1/2 cup chocolate chips over the top, and bake for 25 minutes. Cover edges of crust with foil and bake for another 25 minutes; remove from oven when inserted knife or pie tester comes out clean. Cool on a cooling rack completely (at least one hour) before serving.
Tip: Store in refrigerator and heat up a slice for 15 seconds in the microwave. Serve with ice cream. YUM!

Comments
Frances
Also, makes me want to visit the boys in NY.
Annual hair appointment? Very intriguing...
Michael is a hairdresser, which explains the hair appts.
Annual haircuts? They don't really wait a whole year between haircuts do they? Hope not!
Yum!
Thank you for your comment on my Inspiration post. Yes, that is Washington state.
Southern Comfort has been a favorite baking ingredient here for decades - like to add it to pumpkin pie filling and fruit cake.
Annie at the Transplantable Rose
Lashings of ice cream please.
Lashings of ice cream please
Marnie