Lemon Meringue Pie

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With a graham cracker crust and sweetened condensed milk filling, this lemon meringue pie is foolproof and easy.

Slice of lemon meringue pie on a plate with a fork.

This lemon meringue pie recipe comes from Myra Santoro, the mom of one of my oldest and dearest friends. Originally from Snow Hill, North Carolina, Myra is a fabulous Southern cook with a huge heart. As a kid, I practically lived at her house and, with so many good smells coming from the kitchen, I was always trying to finagle a way to stay for dinner.

Unlike most lemon meringue pie recipes, which can be rife with issues — a soggy crust, a soupy filling, or a meringue that weeps — Myra’s recipe is foolproof. It’s delicious too: I once made it and left it on the counter with a note for my husband and kids to try it. I came home to find the pie butchered with forks and almost entirely gone; they had not even bothered to slice it!

What You’ll Need To Make Myra’s Lemon Meringue Pie

Pie ingredients including graham cracker crumbs, eggs, and condensed milk.

How To Make Lemon Meringue Pie

Step 1: Make the Crust

Graham cracker crumbs and sugar in a bowl.Start with the crust. In a medium bowl, combine the graham cracker crumbs and sugar. Add the melted butter.

Melted butter in a bowl with graham cracker crumbs and sugar.

Stir with a fork first, and then your hands until the mixture is well combined.

Graham cracker mixture in a bowl.

Using your fingers and the bottom of a clean drinking glass or measuring cup, press the crumbs firmly into the bottom and up the sides of a deep dish pie pan. The crust should be about 1/4-in thick. Bake for about 10 minutes, until just slightly browned. Let the crust sit on a wire rack while you prepared the rest of the pie, and lower the oven temperature to 325°F.

Pie pan with a graham cracker crust.

Step 2: Make the Filling

Combine the egg yolks, sweetened condensed milk, lemon zest, and lemon juice in a medium bowl.

Egg yolks, sweetened condensed milk, and lemon in a bowl.

Whisk to combine and set aside.

Whisk in a bowl of lemon mixture.

Step 3: Make the Meringue

Bring about 1/2 inch of water to a simmer in a pot that’s large enough to hold the bowl of a stand mixer without letting it touch the water. Reduce the heat to low.

Put the egg whites and sugar in the bowl off the heat and whisk until frothy. Put the bowl over the pot and whisk gently but constantly until the whites are very warm to the touch, or about 115°F and the sugar is completely dissolved, 2 to 4 minutes. (Heating the egg whites and sugar before beating them helps stabilize the meringue so it doesn’t weep once cooked.)

Person whisking egg whites and sugar in a bowl on a saucepan on a stovetop.

Remove the bowl from the heat and transfer it to the stand mixer fit with the whisk attachment. Add the cream of tartar.

Bowl in a stand mixer with a whisk attachment.

Beat over medium-high speed until the egg whites form thick, glossy medium-firm peaks, 3 to 5 minutes total.

Thick, glossy egg white mixture in a stand mixer.

When you lift the whisk out of the bowl, the whites should hold their shape but curl at their tips.

Egg white mixture with a curled peak.

Step 4: Assemble the Pie

Pour the lemon filling into the baked crust.

Lemon filling in a graham cracker crust.

Mound the meringue onto the wet lemon filling.

Meringue on wet lemon filling in a pie pan.

Using a soup spoon, gently spread the meringue over the entire surface of the filling, making sure to go all the way to the crust’s edge (it is essential that the edge of the meringue be anchored to the rim of the crust; otherwise it will shrink). Make decorative peaks and swirls in the meringue with the back of the spoon.

Meringue piled on a lemon pie.

Bake for about 20 minutes, or until the meringue is lightly browned.

Baked lemon meringue pie in a pie pan.

Let the pie cool completely on a rack before serving, about 3 hours.

Fork on a plate with a slice of lemon meringue pie.

Photo by Our Salty Kitchen

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Easy Lemon Meringue Pie

With a graham cracker crust and sweetened condensed milk filling, this lemon meringue pie is foolproof and easy.

Servings: Serves 8 to 10
Prep Time: 25 Minutes
Cook Time: 20 Minutes
Total Time: 45 Minutes

Ingredients

For the Crust

  • 1½ cups graham cracker crumbs, from about 12 whole crackers
  • ⅓ cup sugar
  • ¼ cup (4 tablespoons) unsalted butter, melted

For the Filling

  • 4 large egg yolks (reserve the whites for the meringue)
  • 1 (14-oz) can Eagle sweetened condensed milk (see note)
  • 1 teaspoon packed finely grated lemon zest, from 1 lemon
  • ½ cup fresh lemon juice, from about 3 lemons

For the Meringue

  • 4 large egg whites
  • 6 tablespoons sugar
  • ¼ teaspoon cream of tartar

Instructions

For the Crust:

  1. Preheat the oven to 375°F and set an oven rack in the middle position.
  2. In a medium bowl, mix together the graham cracker crumbs and sugar. Add the melted butter; stir with a fork first, and then your hands until the mixture is well combined. Using your fingers and the bottom of a clean drinking glass or measuring cup, press the crumbs firmly into the bottom and up the sides of a 9 x 1.5-inch pie pan. The crust should be about ¼ inch thick.
  3. Bake for about 10 minutes, until just slightly browned. Let the crust sit on a wire rack while you prepared the rest of the pie. Lower the oven temperature to 325°F.

For the Filling:

  1. In a medium bowl, whisk together the egg yolks, sweetened condensed milk, lemon zest, and lemon juice. Pour into the warm crust.

For the Meringue:

  1. Bring about ½ inch of water to a simmer in a pot that's large enough to hold the bowl of a stand mixer without letting it touch the water. Reduce the heat to low. Put the egg whites and sugar in the bowl off the heat and whisk until frothy. Put the bowl over the pot and whisk gently but constantly until the whites are very warm to the touch, or about 115°F (the temperature does not need to be exact; the mixture should feel hot, but not so hot that you can't leave your finger in there) and the sugar is completely dissolved, 2 to 4 minutes.
  2. Remove the bowl from the heat and transfer it to the stand mixer fit with the whisk attachment. Add the cream of tartar. Beat over medium high speed until the egg whites form thick, glossy medium-firm peaks (they should hold their shape but curl at their tips), 3 to 5 minutes total.
  3. Mound the meringue onto the wet lemon filling. Using a soup spoon, gently spread the meringue over the entire surface of the filling, making sure to go all the way to the crust’s edge (it is essential that the edge of the meringue be anchored to the rim of the crust; otherwise it will shrink). Make decorative peaks and swirls in the meringue with the back of the spoon.
  4. (Be sure you've reduced the oven temperature to 325°F.) Bake for about 20 minutes, or until the meringue is lightly browned. Let the pie cool completely on a rack before serving, about 3 hours.
  5. Lemon meringue pie is best eaten the day it’s made, but leftovers will keep, loosely tented with aluminum foil and refrigerated, for 2 days. Just keep in mind that meringue gets quite sticky in the fridge. Do not freeze.
  6. Note: Several readers have had issues with the filling being too runny. I believe this is likely caused by using less common brands of sweetened condensed milk, such as Meadow Gold or Weis. Please use Eagle brand sweetened condensed milk for reliable results. Also, for Canadians, please note that Canadian Eagle sweetened condensed milk comes in a smaller-sized can than the American version (you will need two cans but you won't use all of it).

Nutrition Information

Powered by Edamam

  • Per serving (10 servings)
  • Calories: 309
  • Fat: 11 g
  • Saturated fat: 6 g
  • Carbohydrates: 47 g
  • Sugar: 39 g
  • Fiber: 0 g
  • Protein: 7 g
  • Sodium: 138 mg
  • Cholesterol: 100 mg

This website is written and produced for informational purposes only. I am not a certified nutritionist and the nutritional data on this site has not been evaluated or approved by a nutritionist or the Food and Drug Administration. Nutritional information is offered as a courtesy and should not be construed as a guarantee. The data is calculated through an online nutritional calculator, Edamam.com. Although I do my best to provide accurate nutritional information, these figures should be considered estimates only. Varying factors such as product types or brands purchased, natural fluctuations in fresh produce, and the way ingredients are processed change the effective nutritional information in any given recipe. Furthermore, different online calculators provide different results depending on their own nutrition fact sources and algorithms. To obtain the most accurate nutritional information in a given recipe, you should calculate the nutritional information with the actual ingredients used in your recipe, using your preferred nutrition calculator.

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Comments

  • Hi, I am from Australia and have been making this recipe for years with a couple of differences…….we don’t add dugar to base and also we don’t bake the base, but I will definately be trying that next time. Our Sweetened Condensed Milk is 395 g and we only use 3 eggs, separated, but will adjust to 4 next time. Sonetimes I heat the meringue but if in a rush I don’t bother.
    Everything else is much the same and like you it has NEVER disappointed!
    Thanks for the extra hints.

  • Love the recipe but as others have said the filling is way too runny. And yes, we used Eagle sweetened condensed milk. We also used a simpler method to make the meringue and it turned out perfect. Simply beat the whites, at cream of tartar, and slowly add the sugar and beat on high until it peaks.

    Lemon Meringue is my favorite pie.

  • Thank you for the information concerning egg whites. I never knew about heating the whites up then beating them so they don’t weep. I appreciate the lesson.

  • I was hoping that this would be the answer to my lemon meringue woes and it wasn’t, completely. It was easy and tasty but not polished enough to make again. The anchored meringue shrunk a tiny bit and pulled apart the already crumbly crust and the filling would have set up better if chilled after baking. It was a little weepy at the center and my husband asked why it wasn’t chilled. I am in the US and I did use Eagle brand condensed milk.

  • I really like this recipe and the pie went quickly at a church potluck. Lemon is one of my all
    time favorite desserts and this one is a keeper. I agree about the Eagle Brand milk, mine stayed firm even after being out of the fridge for a while so the extra change spent was worth it.

  • I am most definitely not a baker but I made this today and it was amazing! Thank you!!! Delicious and absolutely foolproof, my family loved it. I’m in Hong Kong so substituted digestives for the Graham crumbs and used 1/2 teaspoon lemon juice instead of cream of tartar, the results were great – one for my repertoire!

  • I tried this recipe for the first time last night and it turned out amazing!! It was my first attempt at a meringue, and I am super pleased! Thank you for the awesome recipe!

  • Hi Jenn,
    I wonder if the persons having trouble with the recipe are Canadian.
    I noted that the quantity found in one can of ‘Eagle sweetened condensed milk’ sold in the U.S.A. is 14 oz. whereas one can of ‘Eagle sweetened condensed milk’ sold in Canada contains only 10 oz. of product.
    They maybe erroneously assuming the cans sold are the same in both countries.
    Canadians would have to buy two cans and use one can (300 ml)and 114 ml from the second can to arrive at the 14 oz. your recipe calls for.
    Just a thought.

    • This is an excellent point, Maria. I have updated the notes in the recipe to explain this. Thank you!

      • Hi Jenn,
        I am Canadian and have made many of your recipes using condensed milk – I do read the ingredient list and pay special attention to the amounts. I have noticed that the size of the cans are different (who knows why!) and I make adjustments. If everyone paid attention to the amount of product in the can, there would be no issues…. Thanks for all your great recipes!

  • This was a hot mess! The filling was way too runny…such a disappointment since I made it for dessert on Easter and had no backup. I would never criticize a home cook for a recipe like this, but I expect so much more from a trained chef! Test your recipes and make the appropriate adjustments! I added two extra egg yolks to try to thicken it up but it was still runny. I looked up similar recipes and they all called for 2 cans of sweetened condensed milk along with the egg yolks, so maybe that would help…but idk since I am not the “trained chef.” Taste was good but texture was all wrong.

    • Hi Kathy, I’m really sorry you had a problem with this! I’ve read a number of incoming comments and I’m a bit stumped because this has always been very predictable when I’ve made it. Is there any chance you used whole eggs in the filling instead of egg yolks? Also, what brand of sweetened condensed milk did you use? I’ve had the best luck with Eagle brand. I did some research and found that lesser-known brands can be much runnier and may contribute to the runny filling.

    • Kathy, obviously you did not follow the recipe or allow ENOUGH time for this to set. It does take time for it to set. This is a recipe that should be made the day before really. So attack no one no more. It’s not the chef in the incident….it’s the baker who obviously lacks experience in baking or is just not a baker. So go away nasty person! Be off.

    • MY FILLING GOT EGGY AND RUNNY! TOO 🙁

      • — JEWELL M DICKERSON
      • Reply
    • No need to be rude. Constructive feedback is fine – disrespect is not.

      • — Stacy on November 9, 2022
      • Reply
  • I made this as an Easter treat and it was perfect!! I live alone and am on my own this holiday, so I halved the recipe, put it into a 9×6 oval Pyrex and figured I would take my chances — it turned out perfectly!! I baked it on the lowest rack of my toaster oven and it came out great.
    I had no issues with my lemon filling not setting — I used Eagle Brand sweetened condensed milk. I let the pie cool for about 2.5 hours on the counter and then popped it in the fridge during dinner. There was a tiny bit of liquid when I cut into it, but my layers held beautifully and it felt firm and set. I found the filling perfectly tart and the meringue came out wonderfully.
    This dessert was a really sunny end to a somewhat solitary day — thanks for a wonderful recipe, as always, Jenn!

    • 🙂 Glad you enjoyed it!

      • This was amazing and easy. I never made meringue before!! Everyone ate it up. They said it was better then Shari’s lol 😆 thank you so much.

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