Facebook LinkedIn Email Pinterest Twitter Instagram YouTube Icon Navigation Search Icon Main Search Icon Video Play Icon Plus Icon Minus Icon Check Icon Print Icon Note Icon Heart Icon Filled Heart Icon Single Arrow Icon Double Arrow Icon Hamburger Icon TV Icon Close Icon Sorted 汉堡/搜索图标
Recipe

Flaky Pie Pastry

Yield:Yields enough dough for one 9-inch double-crust pie.

成分s

  • 10-1/2 oz. (2-1/3 cups) unbleached all-purpose flour
  • 1 Tbs. granulated sugar
  • 3/4 tsp. table salt
  • 1/2 tsp. baking powder
  • 4 oz. (1/2 cup) chilled, unsalted butter, cut into 1/2-inch cubes
  • 4 oz (1/2 cup) chilled vegetable shortening, cut into 1/2-inch pieces
  • 5 to 6 Tbs. ice water; more as needed

Preparation

  • Put the flour, sugar, salt, and baking powder in a food processor fitted with a steel blade. Chill for 20 to 30 minutes.

  • Pulse the dry ingredients together for a few seconds to blend. With the processor off, Add half of the butter and half of the shortening. Pulse 5 times and then process for 5 seconds. Add the remaining butter and shortening and pulse again 5 times, then process for 5 seconds. You should have a mixture of both large and small crumbs. Empty the mixture into a large mixing bowl.
  • Drizzle 1 Tbs. of the ice water around the edge of the bowl, letting it trickle into the crumbs. Flick the moistened crumbs toward the center with a table fork, rotating the bowl as you work. Repeat with the remaining 4 Tbs. ice water, 1 Tbs. at a time. As you add the water, the crums should begin to form larger clusters. Once you’ve added 5 Tbs. water total, take a handful of crumbs and squeeze them gently; they should hold together. If they easily break apart, the mixture needs more water: add the remaining Tbs., one tsp. at a time, checking the consistency after each addition. If the crumbs still fail to hold together, you can add additional water, but do so sparingly.

  • Gather a handful of the crumbly dough and press it against the side of the bowl to form a small mass, flouring your hand as needed to prevent excessive sticking. Increase the size of this mass by pressing it into more of the crumbly mixture until you’ve used up about half of the total mixture in the bowl. Make a second mass of dough with the remaining crumbs. If some of the crumbs on the bottom of the bowl need more moistening, add a few drops of water.
  • Form the two masses of dough into balls, dust them with flour, and flatten them into 4- to 5-inch disks. Pat the disks to release any excess flour. Score the tops lightly with the side of your hand to create a tic-tac-toe pattern. With cupped hands, rotate each disk on the work surface to smooth the edges of the disks. Wrap each in plastic wrap. Chill at least 30 minutes before using.

Make Ahead Tips

You can make the dough ahead and refrigerate it for up to 3 days or freeze it for up to 4 months (thaw it overnight in the fridge before using). Before rolling, let the dough sit at room temperature until pliable.

Tip

Don’t have a food processor? You can cut the fats in by hand, but you must use a bit more flour—11-1/4 oz. total—and sift it first; you should have 2-1/2 cups after sifting. Also, the butter shouldn’t be rock hard, so take it out of the fridge a few minutes before you start. Your finger should leave a slight imprint when you press the butter. To cut the fats in by hand, whisk the dry ingredients together in a large mixing bowl. Add the cubed butter and vegetable shortening and mix briefly with a fork to coat the fats with flour. Cut the fats into the dry ingredients with a pastry blender or two dinner knives, working the mixture until the particles have a coarse, mealy texture similar to that of fresh bread crumbs with some larger pea-size pieces. From there, continue with the recipe as written to finish the dough.

Reviews

Rate or Review

Reviews (10 reviews)

  • User avater
    magstoria| 11/29/2015

    The best recipe I have every found. Incredibly flaky!

  • user-199745| 12/30/2013

    This is a fairly fool-proof recipe and it was very tender, but the texture was more crumbly or cookie like. I'll try it again, but I'd prefer a more traditional approach.

  • Juilie| 12/23/2013

    Made this for Thanksgiving as I did not have my mothers recipe with me. I am now switching from my mothers recipe to this one! It was amazing and the dough held up so well, it made making the pie a breeze. I can see why they call this Pie Pastry and not a pie crust! Everyone loved it.

  • HerFineness| 12/08/2011

    I just used this recipe to make butter tarts and it was fabulous. I followed the recipe exactly and it was very easy to handle and came out perfect and flaky.

Show More

Rate this Recipe

Write a Review

Videos

View All

Connect

按照烹饪你的罚款favorite social networks

We hope you’ve enjoyed your free articles. To keep reading, subscribe today.

Get the print magazine, 25 years of back issues online, over 7,000 recipes, and more.