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We Tested 5 Pie Crust Recipes to Find the Easiest, Flakiest & Best-Tasting
From classic to newfangled, from shortening to sour cream.
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228 Comments
Kim A.
October 14, 2019
Thank you so much for this article. I am always trying to up my flaky game with pie crusts so love your article and the commentary.
I also use vodka but read where some only use ice cold vodka instead of any water. I am going try that to minimize the gluten formation.
I also use leaf lard. My husband buys the pork fat and we render the lard and freeze in 4 oz blocks. I use half leaf lard and half butter and get a more flaky and tender crust. But when I’m in a hurry I go for the all-butter crust.
I also use vodka but read where some only use ice cold vodka instead of any water. I am going try that to minimize the gluten formation.
I also use leaf lard. My husband buys the pork fat and we render the lard and freeze in 4 oz blocks. I use half leaf lard and half butter and get a more flaky and tender crust. But when I’m in a hurry I go for the all-butter crust.
AlwaysLookin
October 3, 2019
I'll stick with Melissa Clark's recipe, it's served me well for 20 years ...
Gloria R.
October 3, 2019
I USE SHORTENING. I make at least a dozen pies (mostly fruit) every year. I have been using the following recipe (from Betty Wason's The Everything Cookbook) for almost 50 years. My crusts are flaky and tasty--and the best thing is, I don't have to chill the dough!
For a 2-crust 9" pie: 2 C all-purpose flour, 2/3 C Crisco shortening, 1 1/2 T real butter, 1/4 C water. I ALWAYS mix the dough by hand, using a pastry blender and my fingers, and add the water a little at a time, depending on how humid the day is.
For a 2-crust 9" pie: 2 C all-purpose flour, 2/3 C Crisco shortening, 1 1/2 T real butter, 1/4 C water. I ALWAYS mix the dough by hand, using a pastry blender and my fingers, and add the water a little at a time, depending on how humid the day is.
Smaug
October 3, 2019
That's much like what many of us grew up with- the 3/1 flour to fat (by volume) ratio was long the standard, though chefs frequently use more fat now in the interest of "ramping it up". I learned with half Crisco/ half butter (I am campaigning to resurrect the original meaning of "shortening"- i.e. any fat used to shorten a dough- too bad that Crisco co-opted the word for their own use), never measured liquid etc., but in truth once you have the feel of making it by hand, there's no problem experimenting with different fats, different liquids etc.
Kathi
October 3, 2019
Very interesting comments. My mom was a master pie baker. Flaky, tender pie crusts each & every pie. Her secret: she added a pinch of cream of tarter to her flour. We begged for extra pie crust dough so we could cut it into strips, cover with a cinnamon/sugar mixture, and eat them like cookies. Really miss her and her pies.
Smaug
October 4, 2019
Adding acid is yet another longstanding practice- lemon juice, vinegar and sour cream are the most common, but there are other possibilities; I made an experimental crust for a quiche this morning using a pureed tomato for liquid.
AlwaysLookin
March 13, 2020
Thanks for the tip, I'm gonna try that! My Irish mother-in-law adds it to her Soda Bread recipe.
Colleen
September 24, 2019
I recently made a leaf lard/butter version of pate brisee in the Joy. However, my butter was FROZEN hard. I missed half the butter in with the leaf lard until it was pretty well broken down. Then I added the last half of the butter, I had only quartered lengthwise the sticks, threw those into the processor. Immediately added the water. The dough barely together, I turned it out, and gathered it by hand in the bench. I then did several book folds to work the butter shards into the flakiness I wanted. Adding flour as necessary to keep from sticking. Chilled it overnight, rolled out, par baked for both quiche and apple pie(RLB Fresh Ginger Apple)
Bottom line, I got a beautiful dough, flaky, tender but stood up to the quiche filling without weeping, and fork tender even at the edge on the double crust apple.
As with another commenter, I add flavor to my crusts with herbs, spices, citrus zest as appropriate to the filling.
Bottom line, I got a beautiful dough, flaky, tender but stood up to the quiche filling without weeping, and fork tender even at the edge on the double crust apple.
As with another commenter, I add flavor to my crusts with herbs, spices, citrus zest as appropriate to the filling.
Babs
June 18, 2019
The sour cream pie crust was a dream! My 93 y/o dad wanted an apple pie for father’s day, and I needed a great crust. This one was easy to make, roll and was very flaky. It will now be my go-to pie crust!
Kallan
June 16, 2019
Butter-vinegar does taste great and is easy to work with. I’ve made it for my last 4 pies — both savory and sweet. But in my experience, it shrinks a TON! Disappointed that this review didn’t cover shrinkage even though it was mentioned at the beginning. Any tips for that?
Smaug
June 16, 2019
Avoiding overworking the dough, keeping hydration to a minimum, using a low protein flour- all of which are aimed at keeping gluten formation to a minimum. None of these will prevent it, but will help. The vodka crust (replacing some of the moisture with alcohol, which won't raise gluten) allows a moister crust, which does handle more easily. Rubbing in some of the shortening (a generic term for whatever fat you use) will help some. Or you can look up an old pie book by Pamela Azquith- she claims that her crusts never shrink, though her recipe seems unextraordinary. Mostly (in my experience), you just learn to adjust for it.
Bea
August 24, 2019
I find to prevent shrinkage is to chill the pie crust after it's in the pan at least 30 minutes in the freezer . Also adding a tbsp of lemon juice to the dough works well.
Amy S.
February 21, 2020
What is a low protein flour? I have never heard of it before. Is it a certain brand of flour?
Smaug
February 21, 2020
Different types of wheat have different protein percentages, and flours are milled for different characteristics using this. Of what's readily available, generally bread flour is highest, then unbleached all purpose, then bleached AP, then cake or pastry flours. Non wheat flours are mostly low or no protein.
Cynthia
May 28, 2019
I’ve become a convert to weighing ingredients instead of measuring. I don’t want to have to add more sour cream to make an acceptable dough. I just want it to magically happen.
Michelle J.
May 10, 2019
An elderly friend, born in the 1800s and the best cook I ever knew swore by baking powder. She added just less than 1/4 tsp for a flakey cream every time.
cosmiccook
February 11, 2019
I forgot to add the WORST part of pie-dough (for me) is the rolling and shaping. I'd HOPED Santa would have brought me Food 52's rolling pin (I'm pining for) and the board with diameters sizes on it. Now those are GENIUS!
cosmiccook
February 11, 2019
I use Stella Parks easy butter dough recipe. Admittedly, for all my years of baking and cooking pie doughs are my nemesis! Stella gets me the closest. One thing I do w pie doughs--I add flavor in the flour & liquid. citrus zest, Chili powder, herbs Provence or other baking spices depending on the filling. I add bitters to the water, Liquours etc. I get a lot of compliments despite my dough not coming as flaky as I like. I can't seem to find the sweet spot of when to STOP working the dough!
Greg
February 11, 2019
Just mix your fats and you’ll get the flakey crust you want. Butter for flavor and shortening for the flakey factor. They work differently when it bakes and you’ll get the result you want.
The other secret about pie dough is to NOT work it a lot. That’s what develops the gluten and toughens it up. My grandmother swore by never using her thumbs on the dough since they were stronger and more likely to wire the dough harder.
So get by with as little mixing as possible and roll it out from there.
I use the vodka recipe because they say it makes it even more tender and I can’t dispute that — my crusts are very tender.
The other secret about pie dough is to NOT work it a lot. That’s what develops the gluten and toughens it up. My grandmother swore by never using her thumbs on the dough since they were stronger and more likely to wire the dough harder.
So get by with as little mixing as possible and roll it out from there.
I use the vodka recipe because they say it makes it even more tender and I can’t dispute that — my crusts are very tender.
Sally B.
January 16, 2019
I still think you cannot beat butter and Lard crust !
Dick M.
May 10, 2019
I switched to lard sever years ago when Crisco changed its ingredients. lard worked well and then about a year ago someone on his site wrote about how good butter it. I tried butter and like it very much. Most call for unsalted butter ant then add salt. That makes no sense to me. I use good salted butter and it is great. Just add less salt to taste.
Abby
January 15, 2019
The sour cream and butter pie crust was sensational. I have always bought pie crusts in the past as a few futile attempts left me hopeless. But the sour cream pie crust recipe was perfectly behaved, shockingly easy and very well received. Have already shared the recipe with 5 friends!
Leslie V.
January 16, 2019
I scrolled thru the above article and did not see the actual recipe for the Sour cream pie crusts. could you share please. thanks
Leslie V.
January 16, 2019
I found the recipe but not enough pie dough for my 10" pie plates. The vinegar egg recipes uses 3 cups flour. This reg recipe says not so good for a blind crust, too much fat.
Leslie V.
January 16, 2019
Bon Appetit has one that uses Buttermilk. I will try to locate it and share. Forgot about that recipe until now. Sunday I made 8 batches of the Vinegar and egg recipe, 3 cups flour and 1 1/2 C unsalted butter adding 2 T sugar.... and froze the disks. I have to use the Food processor as i have Arthritis and cannot do it by hand anymore. I was careful to just combine, dumped the dough on the floured board and carefully compacted all the crumbs into a roll, cut in half and flattened into two disks. Baked a !0"peach pie on Monday ..it was great the cowboys said..I did use my canned peach pie filling, 3 quarts.. i had processed last fall.
Bea
August 24, 2019
It's up there, all you do is add ¼c sour cream instead of water. She added 2 tbsp extra. Look above it's there. Hope that helps.
AngiePanda
November 13, 2019
This gives me hope! I've bought my pie crusts for years because I have never been able to make one I was pleased with...guess I'm going to be trying again soon.
Hollis
August 14, 2018
Growing up, we had a yellow plastic bowl, just the right size, that we made pie dough in. We finally wore a hole in a specific spot where the fork would hit as we added water, then 'forked' the dough together to the magic time where in the dough coalesced into a ball. We used whatever flour mother bought, always Crisco, salt and water out of the tap to make our pies. Never had I heard of adding vinegar or vodka; using butter or anything like that. I think making cornbread and pies were the first dishes I learned to cook from Mother and Granny.
Smaug
July 26, 2018
Having made a lot of pie crusts over the years, I mostly just wing it now; I have never seen the need, or indeed the advisability of producing identical results for a home baker. I have never measured liquid; the great majority of people live in places where humidity varies enough over the course of the year that wood furniture will tear itself apart if not carefully designed to withstand the changes- it's rather ingenuous to suppose that the moisture level of your flour will be consistent. This is also one of several reasons that weighing ingredients isn't as infallible as people seem to believe. I might add spices such as cinnamon or nutmeg if it seems appropriate, or sugar- very small quantities can make a big difference. I sometimes add different sorts of liquor- such as rum or bourbon, if the flavor seems appropriate. If I have sour cream or cream cheese open, or left over egg yolks, I might use those. I also find it a more interesting challenge to roll out and use the crust without trimming than to go for a perfectly uniform border- pie making should be fun; I'm not running a bakery (which needs uniform results for commercial reasons). An infinite number of combinations produce excellent results if you're sensitive to how the dough is behaving and adjust your technique appropriately. It is simply not practical for a home cook to make hundreds of trial crusts under controlled conditions in hope of reaching some sort of abstract "ideal"- if cooking stops being a learning process, it becomes drudgery.
AnnieO
November 22, 2018
Even tho this is an older post I feel compelled to comment about the underlying elitist nature of your post. The author conducted a very legitimate test, as BAKING is more science than nurture like cooking is. You called out the author as being stupid for her test shame on you.
Smaug
November 23, 2018
It's unfortunate that the nature of my post eluded you, but surely in the future you could manage without gratuitous insults.
Dr C.
July 23, 2018
My mother made the flakiest, most tender, delicious pie crust using flour, lard, a smidgen of salt and a little ice water. It never failed and her pies were famous, especially her sour cherry pie. She gave me the recipe. I used it time after time and went out and bought a cake.
When I was in my late twenties, I found a "never-fail" recipe in a Farm Journal cookbook. It called for vinegar and an egg. I tried it and never looked back! Now my pie is famous, especially lemon meringue. Pioneer Woman on the Food Channel makes a glorious peach slab pie. I use her filling recipe with "my" pie crust and it is absolutely killer!
When I was in my late twenties, I found a "never-fail" recipe in a Farm Journal cookbook. It called for vinegar and an egg. I tried it and never looked back! Now my pie is famous, especially lemon meringue. Pioneer Woman on the Food Channel makes a glorious peach slab pie. I use her filling recipe with "my" pie crust and it is absolutely killer!
mudd
April 27, 2019
This sounds just like a dough recipe I found in a old ny times cookbook which was all old time American recipes egg plus cider vinegar added
mudd
April 28, 2019
Here’s pie dough w/beaten egg and cider vinegar
3 c flour
1.5 c butter (cut in 1/4 inch chunks and frozen)
1 tsp salt
1 egg,beaten
5 tbls water
1 tblsp cider vinegar
Work butter with fingertips into flour till it looks like oatmeal. Mix egg, water and vinegar together and kind of fluff into flour w/fork just enough so dough starts to come together. Dump onto plastic wrap and divide into 2 or 3 pieces. Wrap separately and chill
3 c flour
1.5 c butter (cut in 1/4 inch chunks and frozen)
1 tsp salt
1 egg,beaten
5 tbls water
1 tblsp cider vinegar
Work butter with fingertips into flour till it looks like oatmeal. Mix egg, water and vinegar together and kind of fluff into flour w/fork just enough so dough starts to come together. Dump onto plastic wrap and divide into 2 or 3 pieces. Wrap separately and chill
MB
October 15, 2019
Ahhh. This was the recipe handed down by my mother and grandmother (born in the late 1800's). Vinegar and egg with a little ice water. Like others, I've tried many different recipes but always come back to this one. My mother and grandmother used a pastry cutter (which i still have). I use a food processor (sparingly). Not sure what the vinegar and egg do from a chemistry standpoint, but this recipe works!
harrisson
June 12, 2018
Retired pastry chef: Advice from my mother and grandmother- keep every ingredient as cold as possible and handle the dough minimally, just enough to bring it together.
Experience taught me: Use all butter or combine shortening and butter with vodka as the binder from Cooks Illustrated.
Important: wrap the dough discs in plastic and rest in freezer or refrigerator for at least an hour but better overnight.....resting covers a multitude of sins...I make my dough in the food processor, 1st dry pulsed, then shortening pulsed in lightly, then frozen butter cubed pulsed in to large pea size, then vodka pulsed in until just holding together.(do not over work), then make into discs, wrap, refrigerate/freeze and rest......It ALWAYS works well.
Experience taught me: Use all butter or combine shortening and butter with vodka as the binder from Cooks Illustrated.
Important: wrap the dough discs in plastic and rest in freezer or refrigerator for at least an hour but better overnight.....resting covers a multitude of sins...I make my dough in the food processor, 1st dry pulsed, then shortening pulsed in lightly, then frozen butter cubed pulsed in to large pea size, then vodka pulsed in until just holding together.(do not over work), then make into discs, wrap, refrigerate/freeze and rest......It ALWAYS works well.
Leslie V.
June 4, 2018
Any High Altitude pie dough suggestions, here? Not all of us live at sea level., remember.
now to my thoughts.
I am thinking of 1/2 cold lard butter and vodka. salt sugar and maybe a pinch of baking powder.
now to my thoughts.
I am thinking of 1/2 cold lard butter and vodka. salt sugar and maybe a pinch of baking powder.
Leslie V.
June 4, 2018
Also when Shortening is mentioned, do you mean white or butter flavored, and what brand..?
Thanks.
Thanks.
Nicholas P.
June 3, 2018
Odd that the one thing not tried was lard which makes such a different pie dough as to be almost unbelievable. The texture is so short it melts in the mouth, and yet somehow gives the feeling of flaky as well. The downside being that it is also incredibly soft and can be difficult to work with. In the end, it's totally worth it, however. You would do well to repeat this using lard as one of the variables.
Nicholas P.
June 3, 2018
I didn't even read the comment just below from Rachel, whom I now consider my kindred spirit.




















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