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Razzleberry Pie

Razzleberry pie happens when you throw raspberries, blackberries, blueberries, and a little magic into a pie crust. Honestly, I must admit, I had never heard of this kind of pie until my husband told me about it. He had discovered it years ago when he and a close friend from high school stumbled upon it at a roadside dinner while on a road trip.

What is Razzleberry?

To clarify, “razzleberry” is not a real fruit or type of berry, but rather a flavor of pie made popular by Marie Callender (Restaurant & Bake Shop). Razzleberry, however, is not a common pie flavor where I grew up (in NYC) or, from what I can tell, where I live now (in Northern California), despite Marie Callender’s being based on the West Coast. What I quickly discovered is that razzleberry pie is at its core a simple marrying of three of my favorite things; a combination of fresh, ripe red raspberries, juicy blackberries, and sweet blueberries which create a memorable, sweet-yet-tart, flavor surrounded by a flaky, buttery crust. Razzleberry pie, for obvious reasons, has quickly become one of my favorite summer pie flavors.

razzleberry pie

Marionberries

Some believe the berry combination in a razzleberry pie tastes very similar to marionberries. For those unfamiliar, marionberries are a rare blackberry variety from Oregon and certainly something I had never tasted until moving to California. More than half the blackberries grown in Oregon are of the Marion variety. Marrionberries and common blackberries are both members of the blackberry family, but marrionberries are a hybrid of two types of blackberries, the Chehalem and the Olallieberry.

razzleberry pie

The Marion blackberry has only been in existence since the late 1950s. They are medium-sized, conical in shape, longer than they are wide, with a dark purple to black hue and a sweet-tart flavor. Various razzleberry pie recipes out there will instruct you to use marionberries when making this kind of pie and, if you can find them, this can work, although as a berry aficionado, I think it yields a slightly different-tasting pie.

razzleberry pie

Fresh or Frozen?

If you ask me, fresh berries are always going to have better flavor, so when I make razzelberry pie I prefer to use fresh berries, but if you need to go frozen, or you’re simply craving a razzelberry pie in the middle of winter, frozen can work just fine. But, when you are buying frozen fruit, try to avoid buying fruit that is frozen with sweet syrup, which will ruin your pie. But when it comes to the crust, don’t cheat, make the real deal, or don’t make pie at all!

razzleberry pie

About the Author

Andrea Potischman

I am a professionally trained NYC chef turned CA mom and food blogger. I post about real food, with doable ingredient lists that are family friendly.

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