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Pumpkin Tiramisu

3.8
10 Ratings

Jessie Sheehan

Test Kitchen-Approved
Pumpkin Tiramisu

Photo by Julia Gartland

Serves
9
Prep Time
4 Hours 20 Minutes

Pumpkin Tiramisu is the creamy, elegant, no-bake, holiday-spiced dessert that you didn’t even know you were missing. And in this instance, it is also one of the easiest. Moreover, pumpkin tiramisu is even better than traditional, an unpopular opinion for sure, but one that just needs to be voiced (sorry, haters). A can of pumpkin purée, plus some warm and toasty spices, is all it takes to carry this already fabulously simple and delicious treat straight over the top, in all the best ways.

Here, to avoid making a sabayon, a spiced pumpkin mascarpone whipped cream is layered with ladyfingers, providing the dessert with all the traditional tiramisu feels, but without the extra (timely) stovetop cooking step (I am a step avoider from way back, as is evidenced here). Room temperature mascarpone cheese is whisked together with heavy cream, pumpkin purée, and spices and in just a couple of minutes, a fluffy orange-hued cream is ready for prime time. Crunchy ladyfingers (I’m partial to Savoiardi) are then briefly dunked in a bourbon coffee mixture and snugly placed in the bottom of a baking dish. I like to use boiling water and a generous helping of espresso powder to make the coffee for the extra strong flavor it imparts (and because I’m not the “I have a cup of hot coffee hanging out on my kitchen counter and want to incorporate it into my baking” kind of person). Although traditional tiramisu calls for marsala wine, I like bourbon here. But you do you—even if “doing you” calls for leaving out the booze altogether (no judgment). just add a little extra boiling water or coffee to ensure you have enough liquid for soaking.

The soaked fingers are then topped with half the cream; followed by more fingers and cream. To finish the dessert, I sift a thick and luxurious coating of Dutch process cocoa powder over the final layer of cream, just as I would when assembling a traditional tiramisu. Not only is the contrast of the dark brown cocoa with the orange cream exquisitely beautiful to behold (hyperbolic but true), but pumpkin and chocolate are a match made in flavor heaven and 100 percent contribute to the next-level status of this treat. I like Dutch process for this application, due to its deep brown color. It goes without saying, however, that if chocolate and pumpkin are not your jam, by all means sift some cinnamon over the top, rather than the cocoa powder. But no matter what you choose to sift, pumpkin tiramisu deserves one of the coveted spots at your holiday dessert table—and your friends and family will thank you for including it.


Ingredients

  • 1 1/4 cup boiling water, or brewed coffee
  • 2 tablespoon espresso powder
  • 1/4 cup bourbon, optional
  • 1 1/2 cup mascarpone cheese, room temperature
  • 1 cup packed light brown sugar
  • 1 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground ginger
  • 1/4 teaspoon freshly ground nutmeg
  • 1/8 teaspoon ground cloves
  • 3/4 teaspoon kosher salt
  • 2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
  • 1 1/2 cup heavy cream
  • 1 15 ounce can pumpkin puree
  • 7 ounce crisp lady fingers
  • Dutch process cocoa powder, for dusting

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Directions

  • Step 1

    Whisk together the water, espresso powder, and bourbon, if using, in a small shallow bowl. Set aside.

  • Step 2

    Fit the mixer with the whisk attachment. Place the room temp mascarpone in the bowl of a stand mixer and stir it a few times with a flexible spatula to loosen it. Add the sugar, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, cloves and salt, and whisk on medium speed until combined. Add the vanilla and then the cream in two installments, whisking to combine between each. Add the pumpkin and continue to whisk on medium speed until soft to medium peaks form.

  • Step 3

    Dip half of the ladyfingers, one at a time, in the coffee mixture for 2 to 3 seconds, and then place the coffee-soaked fingers on the bottom of a 2-quart rectangular baking dish, breaking them as necessary to fit snugly.

  • Step 4

    Evenly spread half of the pumpkin mascarpone whipped cream on top of the fingers. Repeat with the remaining fingers and whipped cream. Smooth out the top layer of cream with a spatula. Cover tightly and refrigerate for at least 4 hours, or overnight.

  • Step 5

    Using a small fine mesh sieve or a cocoa powder shaker/duster, generously dust the top of the cake with a thick layer of cocoa powder before serving. Keep the tiramisu covered in the refrigerator for up to 3 days.

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