Years ago I was one of those people who thought making pie dough from scratch was difficult, a waste of time, and downright ridiculous. If the grocery store conveniently sold premade pie crusts, why on earth would I make one? Then I realized the reason I used store bought pie dough was because I was horribly afraid of being a pie-dough failure. In matters that apply to the kitchen, instead of running from my fears, I prefer to confront them.
So I scoured the Internet reading countless pie crust recipes, techniques, and tips and I made my very first pie dough. While it wasn't the best crust ever, it was flavorful and buttery. The rewarding and addictive (all of a sudden I wanted to make pie shells over and over again) experience boosted my confidence level as a home cook.
If you've never made pie crust, or pate brisee, as it's known in French, I highly encourage you to experiment with it this Summer. Once the basic procedure is mastered, you can use the dough for fruit pies, custard pies, savory tarts, hearty quiches, and much more. Check out step-by-step photos and learn how it's done by clicking through.
From Martha Stewart
Ingredients
2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon salt
1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, cold, cut into small cubes
1/4 cup ice water, plus more if needed
Directions
- In the bowl of a food processor, combine flour and salt; pulse to combine. Add butter, and pulse until mixture resembles coarse crumbs with some larger pieces remaining, about 10 seconds. (To mix by hand, combine dry ingredients in a large mixing bowl, then cut in butter with a pastry blender.)
- With machine running, add ice water through feed tube in a slow, steady stream, just until dough holds together without being wet or sticky. Do not process more than 30 seconds. Test by squeezing a small amount of dough together; if it is still too crumbly, add a bit more water, 1 tablespoon at a time.
- Turn out dough onto a clean work surface. Divide in half, and place each half on a piece of plastic wrap. Shape into flattened discs. Wrap in plastic, and refrigerate at least 1 hour or overnight. The dough can be frozen for up to 1 month; thaw overnight in the refrigerator before using.
Makes 1 double-crust or 2 single-crust 9-inch pies.
Print recipe with images | without images






Esprit
Patrizia Pepe
Anna Sui
Now what went in that crust??????????????????????
1Great method, but what do you do if you don't have a food processor? I make crust from scratch and I generally use a pastry blender to cut the butter into the flour, then I add enough ice water to make dough. Is that ok too?
2I use a fork - if you mix with your fingers the pastry usually gets hard.
I have a "plan B" recipe that I made up/adapted from my mum's when I couldn't eat dairy: using oil, warm water and flour and mixing with a wooden spoon. Roll it out while it's still warm, and it makes a really crusty dough for quiches! (which I can't really understand, since dough is usually crusty because the cold butter and chilled water creates steam when put in the hot oven)
3I use the fork method too since I'm lacking in the food processor department too.
Advah-It's probably the oil that makes it crusty...think deep fried...all of those things are crusty too.
4Post New Comment
Please share your opinion with our community, but make sure it is on topic and follows our Community Rules. We moderate comments and prohibit personal attacks, threats, spam, lewd images, or the promotion of your personal website.