Everything you've always wanted to know about pie crust but were too afraid to ask (2024)

Everything you've always wanted to know about pie crust but were too afraid to ask (1)

Before I dive into today’s post, I want to show you a photo of what my pies used to look like just a few years ago:

Everything you've always wanted to know about pie crust but were too afraid to ask (2)

Fast-forward several year and many pies later and these days my pies are pretty consistently looking like this:

Everything you've always wanted to know about pie crust but were too afraid to ask (3)

I’ve made a lot of pie crusts in my life, but only after many, many less-than-ideal attempts have I finally come to understand some key factors behind consistently great pie crust that’s tender yet flaky, rolls easily, and crimps beautifully, with no soggy bottoms to be found.

Everything you've always wanted to know about pie crust but were too afraid to ask (4)

I think the vast majority of pie crust recipes make a lot of assumptions about what home bakers already know—much of which I humbly think they/we/you do not necessarily know! So today I’m going to address some common pie troubleshooting questions, as well as share a few of my go-to techniques for better pies. You can apply these tips to your own pie-making adventures, no matter which recipe you prefer. And, of course, I’d really love to know your own tips for mixing, rolling, and baking pie crust, or whether you end up trying any of the ones below. If you’ve always considered making your own crust too daunting, I hope this little guide serves to inspire some confidence.

–Chaey

Happy Thanksgiving week! This week’s posts are free for all to enjoy. If you enjoy what you see and want to support this work, consider becoming a paid subscriber.

Q: When a pie dough recipe calls for a range of water, e.g. “2 to 4 Tbsp. ice water” how do I know how much water to add?
A: It depends how much you’ve worked your butter into the dough.
Many pie dough recipes will instruct you to work the butter into the flour until the largest butter pieces are “no bigger than a pea.” Others will call for you to rub butter into the flour until the mixture resembles “coarse crumbs.” Still others will call for you to smash large slices of butter into the flour to create “flat sheets.” If none of these indicators mean anything to you, don’t fret. All you need to remember is this: The more you work the butter into the flour, aka the harder it is to actually *see* the butter bits throughout the flour, the less water you will need to bring the dough together, because the butter is already hydrating the dough. Butter already contains quite a bit of water, so when you’re smooshing it quite a bit into the flour, you’re already starting to work water into the dough.

A good general rule of thumb is to always start by adding the lowest quantity of water called for, toss it through the flour/butter with your hands to evenly coat (as if you’re dressing a salad), then take a handful of dough and firmly squeeze it in your hand. It should easily clump together and feel neither overly dry nor wet/sticky, like so (if you’re interested in the stand mixer method I’m using in the video, see here):

Q: What does it mean when a recipe says to mix the dough “until shaggy”?
A: Honestly, the easiest way to answer this is to show you photos of what the perfect “shaggy” dough looks like to me:

Everything you've always wanted to know about pie crust but were too afraid to ask (5)Everything you've always wanted to know about pie crust but were too afraid to ask (6)

In the photos above, you can see the dough on the left is comprised of moist clumps (I am so sorry, I will try not to repeat this phrase ever again) with some looser, drier bits. Once you use your hands to press the dough into a disc, the dry bits get incorporated into the dough mass.

Q: Why does my dough always crack around the edges when I’m rolling it out?
A:
A wonderful question that has too many answers, but if I had to guess, the answer is likely one of three things:

  1. Your dough might be too dry or unevenly hydrated. When dough doesn’t have enough water, or if it’s not properly hydrated (more on that below), it will feel and look dry and be prone to cracking. Not good. See the video above for an example of properly hydrated dough.

  2. Your dough is too cold. Generally, you don’t want to roll out cold dough straight from the fridge—the butter will have solidified into hard chunks that won’t want to roll out into thin sheets (aka future FLAKES) within your beautiful dough. Let the dough sit out at room temperature for 10 to 15 minutes before rolling, or until a gentle finger prod leaves an indentation in the dough.

  1. Your rolling technique could use a little finessing. Rolling out dough isn’t random—creating a nicely round disc of dough requires a series of even, consistent moves with your pin. I use the pastry chef Melissa Weller’s technique: Start in the center of the disc and roll away from you, moving from 12 o’clock to 3 o’clock across several rolls. Lift up the dough, dust the surface with a little more flour if needed, and turn the dough clockwise 90° and roll out again. Whatever your preferred method, constantly lifting the dough to make sure it’s not sticking to the surface is key.

Q: What should I do if my dough is sticky/hard to roll out?
A:
First, don’t just reach for more flour—too much extra flour will make the crust tough, and won’t treat the real problem, which is that your butter is too soft. I recently read in Weller’s cookbook A Good Bake that it should take no more than one to two minutes to roll out a pie crust. I then timed myself rolling as fast as I could, checked the stopwatch, then lol’d and lol’d and lol’d. Unless you’re a professional pastry chef like Weller and have the experience of rolling out thousands of crusts under your apron belt, it likely takes you more like 5 minutes or longer to roll out a full crust. During this time, I absolutely guarantee that the butter in the dough is going to get soft enough to cause the dough to start sticking to your work surface. Unless you work very quickly, you will likely need to re-chill your dough in the fridge during the rolling process at least once, maybe even twice. I usually chill for 5-10 minutes at least once during my rollout process, and ever since I accepted this reality, my crusts have markedly improved. In the meantime, you know I’ll be working on that speed.

Q: My crust ALWAYS shrinks! HELP.
A:
There are two likely culprits:

  1. You’re inadvertently stretching the dough when you lay it in your pie pan. The gluten in the dough is like a rubber band: Stretch it out and it’s gonna want to spring back pretty much immediately. My preferred method for gently getting dough into pan with minimal stretching is to fold the rolled-out dough into quarters (make sure it’s chilled/floured adequately before folding so it doesn’t stick to itself) then place it in the pan and gently unfold it. Then I go around the pan and gently lift and lower the dough as far down into the pan as it can go, working a little bit at a time until I’ve worked my way around the whole circumference of the pie. From there you can trim the excess and crimp as usual.

  2. You’re not resting the shaped dough long enough before baking. Once the dough is shaped and crimped, the last thing you want to do bake it right away. Chilling the shaped pie allows the aforementioned gluten to relax and the butter to get nice and cold again, both of which help your pie hold its shape better once it’s in the oven.

And because I have so much to say on this subject, here are a few more useful tips that are my personal preference:

  1. For evenly hydrated dough that won’t crack when I roll it out, I always gently run a rolling pin over a wrapped disc of dough to smooth out the cracks and crumbles and eliminate any air bubbles in the plastic wrap. This ensures that every last bit of flour, including the drier bits, will get evenly hydrated by the butter and water as the dough rests in the fridge.

Everything you've always wanted to know about pie crust but were too afraid to ask (7)Everything you've always wanted to know about pie crust but were too afraid to ask (8)
  1. I always roll out my dough between two sheets of lightly floured plastic wrap. Not only does the plastic wrap do a terrific job of preventing sticking while requiring less flour (remember, too much dusting flour absorbed into the dough = tough crust), it also makes it a breeze to transfer the dough mass to a sheet pan when I need to re-chill the dough mid-roll.

  2. I always chill my dough for at least 2 hours before rolling out, and then chill again for at least 1 hour after shaping in the pie pan. There are undoubtedly faster methods out there, but this is what I’ve found to work best for me in terms of maintaining pretty crimps and the overall shape of the crust.

    Everything you've always wanted to know about pie crust but were too afraid to ask (9)
  3. When crimping the edge of the crust, I make it a point to press down and “anchor” the crimps securely into the lip of the pie pan. That lip around the pie pan is there for a reason—use it! I’ve noticed that when I do this, my crimps are more crisply defined after baking, and are less likely to slip/shrink.

    Everything you've always wanted to know about pie crust but were too afraid to ask (10)Everything you've always wanted to know about pie crust but were too afraid to ask (11)
  4. After trimming away any excess dough around the rim of the pie pan, I shingle the scraps together on a piece of plastic wrap, wrap it up, then gently roll over it with a rolling pin to create one mass of dough. You can use this dough for little decorative cutouts, letters, etc. This is a trick I picked up from The Pie & Pastry Bible (see below).

Finally, if you really want to go deep on all things pastry dough, I cannot recommend these books enough:

The Pie & Pastry Bible by Rose Levy Beranbaum really is the bible, and is my favorite reference book for anything and everything about pies/tarts/pastries.

A Good Bake by Melissa Weller isn’t solely dedicated to pie, but Weller has a lot of great tips in the pies section and also goes deep on laminated pastries, if you want to go there!

The Book on Pie by Erin Jeanne McDowell answers every question you could possibly have about pie in an easy-to-understand, approachable way.

Dappled by Nicole Rucker, who owns the pie shop Fat + Flour in LA, wrote this dazzling cookbook for the fruit lovers, aka me.

Happy baking, y’all—leave questions/comments/troubleshooting in the comments as they arise and I’ll do my best to answer them promptly!

Everything you've always wanted to know about pie crust but were too afraid to ask (12)
Everything you've always wanted to know about pie crust but were too afraid to ask (2024)

FAQs

What is the number 2 most important thing when making pie crust? ›

#2—Add cold water

Before you start making the dough, fill a glass with ice and water. Add the ice water gradually to the dough, about one tablespoon or so at a time, and stop when the dough is just moist enough to hold together when a handful is squeezed.

What is important to remember about handling a pie crust dough? ›

Don't Handle Dough for Too Long

If you handle the pie dough for too long, you risk the heat in your hands melting the butter in the crust. For this reason, some bakers prefer to use a pastry cutter or pulse all the ingredients in the food processor. When making pie dough, I like to use my hands.

Is too much flour will make the pie crust tough True or false? ›

A: First, don't just reach for more flour—too much extra flour will make the crust tough, and won't treat the real problem, which is that your butter is too soft. I recently read in Weller's cookbook A Good Bake that it should take no more than one to two minutes to roll out a pie crust.

What does pie crust promise mean? ›

I love the line from the original Mary Poppins where Mary says, “Oh, those are pie crust promises… easily made, easily broken!” I suspect most of us make promises with good intentions, feeling sure that we can deliver on whatever it was we said we would do.

What is the secret to a good pie crust? ›

1. Use Very Cold Butter or Fat. Butter, shortening, lard, or suet—whatever fat the recipe calls for should be well-chilled and cut into small pieces to start with for the flakiest crust in the end. The fat in a pie crust must maintain some of its integrity in the dough to make the crust truly flaky.

What are 3 characteristics of a good pie crust? ›

Traditionally, what you're looking for in a pie crust are three basic things: you want it to be fully cooked through, without any doughiness between the filling and the bottom crust, you want the crust to be light and flaky with discernible layers, and, of course, you want there to be a rich, buttery flavor.

What is the best flour for pie crust? ›

Choose all-purpose flour or pastry flour. Don't skip or reduce the salt; it's critical for flavor. Various types of fat work well; choose your favorite. Add just enough liquid to hold the dough together.

Why is my pie crust cracking? ›

The fridge temperature solidifies the fat and makes the crust mixture more likely to crack and break if it gets too chilly. The important takeaway from all that resting-in-the-fridge hype is not the fridge part—it's the rest time.

What makes pie crust tough? ›

Tough pie crusts are typically the result of working the dough too much (again, gluten). You don't need to make sure it's a perfectly uniform ball. “As long as the dough is mostly holding together, you don't need to spend a lot of time kneading it,” Susan Reid wrote for King Arthur Baking.

What is one of the most common mistakes bakers make when preparing a pastry crust? ›

The Most Common Pie Crust Mistakes (And Ways To Avoid Them)
  • The ingredients are too warm. ...
  • The pie dough is overworked from excessive mixing or rolling. ...
  • The pie dough isn't given enough time to relax and chill. ...
  • The pie dough is shrinking down the sides of the pan.
Oct 18, 2022

What happens if you overmix pie crust? ›

In order to make good dough, you will want to mix it only until it's wet. You want to make sure not to over mix the dough—overworking the dough will cause the crust to get tough. Make sure to handle it as little as possible. Rework the dough only a second time and throw away the left overs.

What happens when you don t weigh down your pie crust before baking? ›

Pie weights are used in blind baking to help keep the crust from bubbling, shrinking away from the pie plate or tart pan or puffing up on the bottom when there is no filling in it.

What does finger in my pies mean? ›

If you say that someone has a finger in every pie, you mean they are involved in a lot of things. He very much likes to have a finger in every pie. He's a man with fingers in a lot of pies. See full dictionary entry for finger.

Why did butter leak out of pie crust? ›

Sometimes you can see leakage of butter from the crust around the edge of your pie dish. A little leakage is fine, but if you find that you are getting pools of butter, it is likely that you have not incorporated the butter well enough. Pie dough is cracking when you go to roll it out.

Do vegans eat pie crust? ›

While there are many pie crusts that are vegan, it depends on the brand and the ingredients used. Don't just assume that most pie crusts are completely vegan. There's a lot of middle ground here. At grocery stores, you'll find an array of pie shells and pie dough, some may be made without animal products.

What are 2 pointers for successful rolling of pie dough? ›

Two key pointers to keep in mind when rolling dough: First, always work with well-chilled pastry; otherwise, the dough will stick to the counter and tear. Second, never roll out dough by rolling back and forth over the same section; each time you press on the same spot, more gluten develops that can toughen the dough.

What are the two main components of pie? ›

While both pie and tarts are (usually) desserts with two main components, a baked crust, and a filling, there are a few marked differences between the two and some careful things to consider when making either, like choosing ingredients and deciding when and where to serve them.

What are the two most important thickeners for pie fillings? ›

Cornstarch makes for a shiny, glossy filling. A little goes a long way because it has twice the gelling power of flour. Flour thickens nicely but leaves more of a matte finish. You'll need to use twice as much as you would with cornstarch.

What is the most important part of a pie? ›

Probably the single most important part of any good pie is the crust. If the crust is hard, or tough, or burned, or has a funny flavor, it really doesn't matter how good the filling is. I have about a dozen recipes for pie crust, and the only real difference between most of them is the type and quantity of fat used.

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