Banoffee Pie! You’ve heard of it, right? Toffee, bananas and coffee flavored cream in a pastry crust? There are more to British desserts than Trifle, Spotted Dick, and Sticky Toffee Pudding, you know!
This pie took the British Isles by storm in 1972, and gets more and more popular by the year. I’ve read Banoffee Pie is now on Australian menus, New Zealand menus, and even a few US menus!
Last March, I went to England with a specific goal: to taste Banoffee Pie. It didn’t happen. FINALLY, almost one year later, I got a taste, and it was made by me in my own kitchen! If you want something done right… It’s a pity I had to wait so long, but it was worth the wait 🙂
Now that you’ve heard of Banoffee Pie, don’t wait as long as I did to try it—it’s as easy as pie to make!
The original pie was made in a regular baked short crust pastry, but I made mine in a crust of crushed “Digestive Biscuits”—another English specialty! And, no, I don’t know why they are called “digestive” biscuits. Oh. Maybe I do and now I don’t want to think about it. A graham cracker crust can also be substituted. So, you have three crust options! Pick the one that best suits your tastes, what you have on hand, or is easiest for you to pull together.
Banoffee Pie
INGREDIENTS
For Digestive Biscuit Crust
- 4 oz. melted butter
- 8 oz. English Digestive Biscuits—available in International sections of many larger grocery stores, British Food stores, or Indian markets.
For Bottom Toffee Layer
- 4 oz. butter
- ½ cup dark brown sugar
- 1 can sweetened condensed milk
For Middle Banana Layer
- 3 or 4 small bananas
For Top Cream Layer
- 1¼ cups whipping cream
- ½-¾ teaspoon instant espresso powder to taste
- 2 tablespoons sugar
- Small amount of grated chocolate OR ½ of a Flake bar, crumbled—another very good British chocolate bar!
DIRECTIONS
- Decide what kind of crust you want and prepare it.
- To make the English digestive crust, crush the digestive biscuits in a food processor and then stir in the melted butter.
- Press mixture along the bottom and up the sides of a 10″ tart pan with a removable bottom—if you don’t have a 10″ tart pan, use a quiche pan or a regular pie pan.
- Chill until firm.
- Combine the butter and sugar into a saucepan and place over medium heat. Stir constantly until the butter has melted and the sugar has dissolved.
- Stir in the condensed milk and bring to a boil. Boil for 5 minutes, stirring constantly.
- Pour the mixture into the prepared pie crust, and let sit until cool—this step is ok to prepare one day in advance.
- If using a tart pan, remove the pie from the pan and place on serving tray.
- Cut the bananas in half lengthwise. Using the curve of the banana against the outside layer of the pie crust, begin to layer the banana halves lengthwise on top of the toffee layer. When you get towards the inside you will have to cut the long banana halves to fit.
- Combine the whipping cream, espresso powder and sugar in the bowl of an electric mixer and whip until soft peaks form.
- Spread the cream mixture on top of the bananas.
- Grate the chocolate, you only need a tablespoonful or two, and sprinkle over the top of the whipped cream.
- Serve immediately—or within an hour or two, although leftovers do keep rather well for a bit longer than that…if there ARE any leftovers 🙂
Thanks for stopping by my kitchen today! I hope you make this soon and NEVER say terrible things about British food again! I may get offended! There actually are some very good British foods out there. Fish and chips alone are worth a trip across the pond! And what abut crumpets, and the huge variety of Easter Eggs, and Yorkshire puddings, cornish pasties, Sunday roast with roast potatoes, rhubarb crumble with custard . . . .

This is going on my to do list for next weekend! Have you been to the British store in Campbell, in the Nob Hill shopping Center? Any chance you have a recipe for Oxtail Soup?
I have been to the Briti$h $tore in Campbell-many time$. Oxtail soup was my favorite as a kid, but I haven’t made or tasted it since I left England.