Pie Crust {+ How to Blind Bake}

Published November 20, 2021. Updated November 21, 2021

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Easy Pie Crust – it’s the flakiest, all-butter pie crust (no shortening or lard here), with a crisp and tender texture and delicious flavor.

It’s an old fashioned, made by hand recipe (with a food processor option as well) that’s a million times better than store-bought and worth every ounce of effort.

Blind Baked Pie Crust shown from above on a blue cloth and a wooden platter.

My Idea of the VERY BEST Homemade Pie Crust

Ah the humble pie crust made with the most basic ingredients yet it’s always something (when done right) that leaves people smitten.

I’ve made countless pie crusts over the years and it wasn’t until this past year (after I made 15 or more crusts in a few weeks, I’ve been annoyingly obsessive about it) that I finally felt I could make the best pie crust we’ve had.

Just how good were they? They tasted incredibly delicious bare without the need of a filling. Many of them we were breaking off generously sized, super flaky pieces before they had a chance to be filled.

My mom finally gave me the ” this is better than mom and grandma made” approval so I knew I’d finally gotten in right.

I hope you love it as much as we do in all it’s glorious, golden brown, tender, buttery deliciousness!

It is one of those things that takes some practice but to get a great head start I’ve listed a step-by-step photo guide and have shared many tips for success so you can have a picture perfect pie crust you’ll be proud of this holiday season!

There are also directions included for making the pie dough in the food processor as well if you’re interested (personally I favor the handmade option, but let us know which you like best!).

Tips for Making the Best Pie Crust

The butter:

  • Be generous with the butter! It gives the pie crust a delicious rich flavor. Having the right ratio keeps the crust from tasting floury.
  • Use very cold butter, it will keep it from melting right into the dough and creates wonderfully flaky layers.
  • Stick with unsalted butter. It doesn’t melt as quickly as salted butter, plus by using unsalted you can control exactly how much salt goes into the recipe.
  • In warmer climates you may find freezing the butter for 20 minutes beforehand works better.
  • Work quickly. If you find butter is softening then chill intermittently through process as needed.
  • Cut butter into flour just until you see pea size and double pea size clumps, this equals more air pockets and some slightly higher flakier layers. Less butter clumps throughout makes a denser dough.
  • Bake with the pie pan set one a baking sheet so it catches buttery drips over the edges so they don’t end up at the bottom of the oven.

The water:

  • Only use very cold ice water. Fill the water with plenty of ice about 10 minutes before you plan on using it. Again it’s all about a cold dough.
  • Be sure there’s no ice cubes in the water you measure out or you’ll end up with a pocket of water in the crust once it melts.
  • Water amount needed can vary based on altitude, brand of flour used, and climate, among other things.
  • So with that said just be mindful when adding the water that you add just barely enough to moisten the dough so your crust doesn’t end up oversaturated and soggy (we want crisp and flaky crust right?). It should just hold together when you clump up a portion of it in your hand.

The process:

  • Don’t over-work the dough so it’s more tender. You’ll have to compress it together but you don’t want to knead like a pizza dough or bread dough. Just turn it enough to bring it together.
  • Pinch and seal any cracks you see before chilling. They spread a lot when rolling and it’s just easier to deal with them beforehand. Even still there will likely be some smaller ones when rolling so pinch them back together.
  • Rest the pie crust dough in the fridge. It allows time for the water time to hydrate the dough and evenly distribute throughout, it also allows time for the gluten to relax making it easier to roll.
  • Use a fair amount of flour when you roll out your dough (both below and sprinkling over it) or those buttery streaks can stick to the surface. Some people like to lift the dough and turn as they roll it out which is another option as well but I skip this.
  • Work quickly when rolling, and when shaping the pie crust into the pie dish. Again it’s all about keeping it cold and not over-working it.
  • Pie crust should be rolled out to about 1/4-inch thick and usually a few inches wider than your pie dish you’re using.
  • I like to allow a generous overhang of dough along the edges of dish, then tuck that under creating a nice flaky rim with lots of layers.

Pie Crust shown before baking in a glass pie pan set on a wooden platter.

More Helpful Tips

  • Depending on the type of pie your making (such as apple pie) you may find it works better to bake on a lower rack of the oven so that bottom crust can get more browned and crisp.
  • Pierce the bottom of the pie crust with a pairing knife about 10 times when blind baking (after removing pie weights) to prevent large air bubbles. Just don’t overdue piercing it because we want small air bubbles in there.
  • Use a pie shield so your crust edge doesn’t over-brown or use a ring of aluminum foil.
  • Bake on a pre-heated baking sheet as it gives the crust a head start so it can get more crisp.
  • With a juicy filled baked pie (such as fruit or pumpkin pie) you can partially blind bake before filling (bake it 375 about 20 minutes with the parchment paper and pie weights then uncover, pierce and bake 10 more before filling).
  • If you want a richly golden brown crust you can brush with egg wash (whisk 1 egg with 1/2 Tbsp water and brush over crust with a pastry brush). You can even do this with the blind baked option, just brush over gently after you remove the parchment paper and pie weights before the second baking.

Pie Crust Recipe Ingredients You’ll Need

  • Butter: Don’t attempt to use margarine, shortening or lard here, it won’t work the same in this recipe.
  • All-purpose flour: I recommend using unbleached flour. Bleached flour has a more pronounced flavor that would stand out here where so much flour is used without many other flavors to mask it.
  • Salt: Just standard table salt is needed. If you like less salty crust use 1/4 tsp if you prefer the standard slightly overly salty crust use 1/2 tsp. I prefer right in the middle.
  • Sugar: This will encourage browning and help tenderize the crust. Plus it adds a hint sweetness of course.
  • Ice water: Just fill a bowl with a fair amount of ice then add some water (maybe about 1 cup of each), rest a while or stir stir stir for a minute. Use the amount listed from the recipe below, you’ll have lots leftover.

Tools Needed to Make Pie Crust

  • Pastry blender: This is used to cut the butter into the flour. I favor the ones like this with a rubber handle. Or you can use the food processor option and you don’t need a pastry blender.
  • Kitchen scale: I recommend a kitchen scale for the most accurate results, though measuring cups will work just be sure to measure as noted (using scoop and level method for the flour).
  • Mixing bowl: It doesn’t need to be anything fancy just something large enough to hold the volume of ingredients with extra space for mixing. Something like these.
  • Rolling pin: This type here works great.
  • Pie dish: I recommend a glass or metal pie dish. I use this standard size and this deeper dish. Ceramic pie dishes conduct heat slowly and don’t brown or cook as evenly.
  • Pie weights: You can use the real deal pie weights (you’d need about 4 packs) or just use dry beans or even sugar. I usually just go with dry beans.

Collage of eight images showing how to prepare pie crust dough. Collage of eight images showing how to form pie crust dough then roll and fit in pie pan.

How to Make Homemade Pie Crust from Scratch

  1. Whisk dry ingredients: In a mixing bowl whisk together flour, sugar and salt.
  2. Cut in butter: Add butter and cut into mixture using a pastry blender until there are pea size clumps of butter throughout with a few larger clumps of butter. I prefer to cut down in the same area then lift turn the bowl slightly and repeat for more uniformity.
  3. Moisten with water: Add water 1 Tbsp at a time and toss very well between additions with a rubber spatula. You can even press the mixture together a bit with the spatula as you toss.
  4. Only add enough water for mixture to hold together when you clump a portion of it with your hand.
  5. Work dough together by hand: Pour mixture out onto a clean surface. Flatten and press mixture together then fold the mixture over itself once or twice (it won’t be a clean process that’s fine, it’s just a quick layering for more flakiness).
  6. Shape into a smooth round: Compress mixture into a round, then flatten to about a 6-inch disk. Compress and smooth cracks (you don’t want cracks or these will just spread as you roll the dough out).
  7. Wrap and chill: Wrap with a sheet of plastic wrap and chill 1 hour (or up to 2 days. If it chills longer than an hour let it rest at room temperature for about 10 minutes to soften enough to roll).
  8. Roll dough into a large round: Remove from fridge and dust a clean work surface with a fair amount of flour. Roll dough out to a 13-inch round, while bringing cracks together as you roll.
  9. Transfer to pie pan, trim edges: Roll dough up around a rolling pin (I like to dust away excess flour along the edges as I roll it up) then transfer to a 9-inch pie plate. Unroll the dough over the pie plate starting about an inch beyond one edge. Carefully press the pie dough down into the pie plate to snuggly fit along inner edge.
  10. Tuck edges under then decorate: Fold the excess dough along the outside edges under itself and quickly press together. Flute edges as desired.
  11. Chill to until it’s firmed up: Drape loosely with plastic wrap to cover and transfer to fridge. Chill at least 1 hour or up to 2 days.

Collage of six images showing how to prepare a blind baked pie crust.

What is Blind Baking a Pie Crust?

  • Blind baking is a method of pre-baking a pie crust without any filling it. It can be fully baked or partially baked depending on the type of pie.
  • A pie crust is first chilled in the pie pan to help set it so it doesn’t shrink as much.
  • Then it’s lined atop with parchment or foil and filled with weights, this helps keep the pie crust from shrinking (such as melting and sliding into the center of the pie pan as it bakes).
  • It bakes this way for the majority of the time, then the parchment with the weights are removed so the crust can dry, brown slightly, and bake fully uncovered.

How to Blind Bake Homemade Pie Crust

  1. If blind baking (such as for a cream pie), set oven rack in center and preheat oven to 375 degrees. Place a baking sheet in oven to preheat.
  2. Crumple up a sheet of parchment paper (large enough to cover the pie), then line the parchment paper along the interior of the pie crust. Fill with pie weights or about 1 lb of dry beans. Trim away excess parchment paper if it’s very high.
  3. Place crust on baking sheet in preheated oven and bake until edges are golden brown, about 25 to 30 minutes.
  4. Remove crust from oven then lift out the parchment paper with beans. Pierce crust about 10 times randomly along the bottom with a pairing knife.
  5. Return to oven and bake until crust has dried and is slightly golden brown, about 10 to 15 minutes longer. Tent edges with a pie shield or a ring of heavy duty aluminum foil at any point as needed to prevent excess browning while baking.
  6. Let crust cool on a wire rack before filling.

How to Make a DIY Pie Shield

  • Before you being baking the pie cut out a 14 by 14-inch sheet of heavy duty aluminum foil.
  • Place a standard 9-inch pie plate in the center of the foil and use the pointed edge of closed scissors to trace a circle around the bottom edge of the pie dish (you can do it just a little larger too if needed).
  • Cut the interior circle and you’ve got a quick homemade pie shield.
  • I’ve found this method works better than piecing together a foil ring from several sheets and the heavy duty foil doesn’t tear as easy or blow around as easy in the oven.
  • Cover your pie crust edges once they’ve browned to your liking with the foil ring then crumple a few of the outer edges under to help it stay in place.

A baked unfilled pie crust.

Pie Dough Storage

  • This pie crust dough will keep wrapped in the plastic wrap in the fridge for 3 days before baking. Just rest at temperature for about 10 minutes before rolling (maybe 5 minutes if you house is very warm).
  • Or freeze wrapped in foil in and an airtight container for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the fridge, then rest on the counter for 10 minutes before rolling.

Baked Pie Crust Storage

  • A fully blind baked (unfilled) pie crust will keep well at room temperature for about 3 to 4 days.
  • Or freeze up to 1 month well wrapped. Just be mindful of it’s placement in the freezer as not to break it.

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A baked unfilled pie crust.
5 from 3 votes

Pie Crust Recipe {+ How to Blind Bake}

The most delicious, flakiest, all butter pie crust! Recipe doubles well for two pie crusts (double all ingredients, in step 5 pour mixture out from mixing bowl and divide into two portions and proceed with each step for each portion separately.
Servings: 8 (1 single layer crust)
Prep30 minutes
Cook40 minutes
Chill2 hours
Ready in: 3 hours 10 minutes

Ingredients

  • 1 1/4 cups (178g) unbleached all-purpose flour (scoop and sweep to measure)
  • 1 Tbsp (12g) granulated sugar
  • 1/2 tsp (scant) salt
  • 10 Tbsp (141g) unsalted butter, very cold, cut into cubes about 1/2-inch
  • 3 to 4 1/2 Tbsp ice water

Instructions

  • In a mixing bowl whisk together flour, sugar and salt.
  • Add butter and cut into mixture using a pastry blender until there are pea size clumps of butter throughout with some larger clumps of butter.
  • Add water 1 Tbsp at a time and toss well between additions with a rubber spatula. You can even press the mixture together a bit with the spatula as you toss.
  • Only add enough water for mixture to hold together when you clump a portion of it with your hand.
  • Pour mixture out onto a clean surface. Flatten and press mixture together then fold the mixture over itself once or twice (it won't be a clean process that's fine, it's just a quick layering for more flakiness).
  • Compress mixture into a round. Then flatten to about a 6-inch disk. Compress and smooth cracks (you don't want cracks or these will just spread larger as you roll the dough out).
  • Wrap with a sheet of plastic wrap and chill 1 hour (or up to 2 days. If it chills longer than an hour let it rest at room temperature for about 10 minutes to soften enough to roll).
  • Remove from fridge and dust a clean work surface generously with flour. Roll dough out to a 13-inch round, while pinching any cracks along the edges together as you roll.
  • Roll dough up around a rolling pin (I like to dust away excess flour along the edges as I roll it up) then transfer to a 9-inch pie plate.* Unroll the dough over the pie plate starting about an inch beyond one edge. Carefully press the pie dough down into the pie plate to snuggly fit along inner edge.
  • Leave about 1-inch excess dough around the lip (outermost edge) of pie plate while trimming excess that's over an inch, especially where uneven.
  • Fold the excess dough along the edges under itself and quickly press together. Flute edges as desired (with your fingers or a tins of a fork).
  • Drape loosely with plastic wrap to cover and transfer to fridge. Chill at least 1 hour or up to 2 days. Use as directed in your pie recipe.
  • If blind baking (such as for a cream pie or other no bake filling), set oven rack in center of oven and preheat oven to 375 degrees. Place a baking sheet in oven to preheat.
  • Crumple up a sheet of parchment paper (large enough to cover the pie), then line the parchment paper along the interior of the pie crust. Fill with pie weights or about 1 lb of dry beans. Trim away tall excess parchment paper.
  • Place crust on baking sheet in preheated oven and bake until edges are golden brown and sides of crust are starting to dry, about 25 to 30 minutes.
  • Remove crust from oven then lift out the parchment paper with beans. Pierce crust about 10 times along the bottom with a pairing knife.
  • Return to oven and bake until crust has dried and is slightly golden brown, about 10 to 15 minutes longer. Tent edges with a pie shield or a ring of heavy duty aluminum foil at any point as needed to prevent excess browning while baking.
  • Let crust cool on a wire rack before filling.

Notes

  • *I recommend a glass or metal pie dish. I use this this standard size and this deeper dish.
  • Note that every oven browns a little differently. Your crust may not end up quite as golden brown and that's fine as long as it's baked and dried through and crisp.
  • The dough can also be made in the food processor. Just be very mindful of the size of the butter as every model is different you don't want to pulse it in too much. It should still be visible by the end of mixing.
FOOD PROCESSOR DIRECTIONS
  • Add flour, sugar and salt to a medium food processor (I use 7 cup size). Pulse 5 seconds.
  • Add half of the 1/2-inch butter cubes and pulse in 1-second bursts 8 times. Add remaining half of the butter and pulse until they are about 1/3-inch, about 15 to 20 (1-second) bursts.
  • Drizzle in water 1 Tbsp at a time, adding only enough as needed and pulsing about 3 quick times after each addition.
  • If you can clump a portion of the dough together and it holds you've added enough water.
  • Dump dough on clean surface and continue as directed in step 5.
Nutrition Facts
Pie Crust Recipe {+ How to Blind Bake}
Amount Per Serving
Calories 212 Calories from Fat 126
% Daily Value*
Fat 14g22%
Saturated Fat 9g56%
Trans Fat 1g
Polyunsaturated Fat 1g
Monounsaturated Fat 4g
Cholesterol 38mg13%
Sodium 122mg5%
Potassium 28mg1%
Carbohydrates 18g6%
Fiber 1g4%
Sugar 2g2%
Protein 2g4%
Vitamin A 438IU9%
Calcium 8mg1%
Iron 1mg6%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.
Nutrition values are estimates only. See full disclaimer here.

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11 Comments

  • Kristen S

    I really appreciated all the advice and tips in your recipe! I followed it and when blind baking, my pie crust slid down the sides of the dish :( I’m not a baker so I’m thinking of all the possible areas I may have done wrong that caused it: possibly added too much water to the dough, did not have had enough baking beads/weights, placed it on a low rack that was too hot so it just melted it all? Wondering if you know which of these could be the culprit – or something else? Thank you for you insights!

    • Jaclyn

      Jaclyn Bell

      I’m sorry it didn’t turn out perfect for you! It could definitely be one of those – too much liquid added, not enough weights, weights removed too early, crust not chilled enough beforehand or oven not hot enough. I would try leaving weights in a bit longer next time and adding as little liquid as possible those are most likely the issue. Some people will blind bake with weights nearly the whole time and you may even find that helpful. Happy Holidays!

  • Mary

    Excellent crust! People raved about the pies for Thanksgiving yesterday, calling out my crusts in particular. I’m 66 and have been baking for years and I’ll never use another recipe. Doubles beautifully!

  • Kerry

    I love this recipe so much! I have made it over and over again. It’s always consistent in the way it turns out. Now I just need an empanada pastry recipe 😁

    • Jaclyn

      Jaclyn Bell

      No it should still taste delicious just be sure to wrap it up well or store in an airtight container.

  • Homer

    Thank you for the clear instructions and detailed hints and tips.
    I think I’ve got all the information I need to improve my next apple pie :-)

  • Pat Gaumer

    I just made 3 pies using this recipe. I used my food processor & watched carefully so the dough did not get warm. I eliminated the sugar. Chilled dough for 30 minutes. Best pie crust ever. It puffed up like puff pastry.