Pie Crust Recipe with Butter and Shortening (The Best!) (2024)

A recipe for one pie crust to rule them all: the perfect combination of butter, shortening, and a touch of sugar.

Pie crusts have a reputation for being difficult to make, and they can be. So many opinions and different techniques. It’s enough to make you throw up your hands and buy a premade one (for which I would NEVER judge you).

But making your own is no big deal. This recipe is easy to follow and you can make it the day before so you aren’t so stressed.

It’s versatile enough to be used for both sweet and savory pies.

Pie Crust Recipe with Butter and Shortening (The Best!) (1)

Pie Crust with Butter and Shortening (Tender + Flaky)

For a perfect pie crust that's easy to work with and is super flaky, you need butter, Crisco, and some patience. This recipe requires chilling but is easy to make.

Prep Time 30 minutes minutes

chilling 2 hours hours

Total Time 2 hours hours 30 minutes minutes

Serving Size 8 slices

Equipment

  • Food processor or pastry blender

Ingredients

  • ¾ cup cold unsalted butter 1 1/2 sticks
  • 3 cups all-purpose flour
  • ¾ teaspoo salt
  • 2 tablespoons sugar
  • cup vegetable shortening such as Crisco
  • ½ cup water

Instructions

  • Cut the butter into the flour. Chop the butter into about eight pieces using a knife and blend them into the flour by pulsing with a food processor or using a pastry blender. Keep working until the butter is the size of small peas.

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  • Add the remaining ingredients to form a dough. Add the salt, sugar, shortening, and water and stir by hand or with the food processor. Mix until a dough forms. It will look slightly dry and crumbly, but should come together as a ball. If it is does not, add more water one teaspoon at a time.

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  • Allow dough to rest. Turn dough out onto a cutting board and divide in two. Shape the pieces into rough discs and wrap them tightly in plastic wrap. Place them in the fridge to chill for at least one hour, or up to overnight.

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  • Roll out and prepare for filling. Place discs to warm at room temperature for 15-30 minutes before rolling out. Unwrap the first one and place on a generously floured counter. Using a floured rolling pin, roll out to desired thickness. Carefully transfer to the pie plate and trim and crimp the edges.

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Notes

When dividing the dough, consider how you are using it. For a lattice-topped pie, you’ll want a bit more dough for the bottom crust and a bit less for the strips.

If you don’t want to crimp the edges, just use a fork to press a design in.

Notes about what you’ll need

You’ll need the following for this pie crust:

  • Butter
  • Vegetable shortening such as Crisco (If you don’t have shortening, you can substitute butter. All butter pastry is lovely too.)
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Butter adds great flavor to everything, and baked goods especially, but Crisco has a magic way of improving texture. The solution? Use a pie crust recipe that uses both!

The easiest way to cut flour into butter is to use your food processor. A few pulses make quick work of it.

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If you don’t have a food processor, I’d recommend grabbing a pastry blender. It’s like a giant rolling fork and makes quick work of this step. It’s super handy for biscuits and crumb toppings too.

trimming and crimping

If you use a baking dish with high edges, such as deep-dish or quiche pans, it might be that no trimming is needed.

But if you want to use a regular pie dish, you’ll need to trim it a bit.

You want a one-inch overhang, and the easiest way to do this is with kitchen shears.

For a one-crust pie, crimp before you fill. For a double crust, crimp at the end.

Push the inner edge out with the index finger of one hand while pinching the outer edge in with the thumb and index finger of the other. Repeat over all edges of your pie. You’ll get a classic scalloped edge.

And there’s nothing wrong with just pressing a fork all along the edge if you don’t want to crimp!

🥫 Storage instructions

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You can store pie crust in the fridge for up to 3 days, or in the freezer for up to 2 months. If you’re freezing it, wrap it tightly in plastic wrap and then place it in a freezer bag.

🔍 FAQs

What if I don’t have shortening?

If you don’t have shortening, you can substitute butter. All butter pastry is lovely too.

What if my recipe calls for a baked pie crust?

You’ll need to blind-bake, and blind baking means you’re baking an empty pie shell.
Line the crust with parchment paper, then fill the pie with pie weights to prevent it from shrinking.
Bake at 375 degrees until the edges of the crust are golden brown, about 30 minutes.
For a partially baked crust, bake for about 10 minutes, and the crust will continue baking once filled.

How to blind bake

Blind baking means you’re baking an empty pie shell. If your recipe calls for a pre-baked crust, here’s how you do it.

  1. Line the crust with parchment paper, then fill the pie with pie weights to prevent it from shrinking.
  2. Bake at 375 degrees until the edges of the crust are golden brown, about 30 minutes.
  3. For a partially baked crust, bake for about 10 minutes, and the crust will continue baking once filled.

👩🏻‍🍳 Expert tips

  • Don’t overmix: handling the dough too much will make it tough
  • Be gentle when you’re transferring the dough to the pie pan. You don’t want to stretch it out or else it’ll become too thin.
  • This recipe makes enough for a double-crust pie. If you only need a single crust for your pie, cut this recipe into half OR freeze the other half according to the recipe’s make-ahead instructions below.

📘 Related Recipes

  • Cinnamon Sugar Peach Apple Pie
  • Blackberry Raspberry Pie
  • The Best Apple Pie with Brown Sugar

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Pie Crust Recipe with Butter and Shortening (The Best!) (2024)

FAQs

Is the best pie crust made with butter or shortening? ›

Butter: For that unparalleled buttery flavor and flaky layers. Vegetable Shortening: For structure and stability. More on this below. Ice water: Liquid brings the dough together.

What is the secret to a good pie crust? ›

For Flaky Pie Crust, Keep Everything COLD, Especially Your Butter. If your kitchen is above 73°F, you can refrigerate all of your ingredients and equipment including your bowl, rolling pin, and pie plate until it's between 65-70°F (dip an instant-read thermometer into your flour to gauge the temperature).

Is Crisco the best for pie crust? ›

Lard makes a tasty crust, but is not recommended for health reasons. Try using half butter and half Crisco. It yields a nice, flaky crust with a butter flavor. This combination works well for single crust pre-baked pie recipes.

What happens if you use too much Crisco in pie crust? ›

When there is too much fat in the pie crust, it crumbles. There isn't enough flour to form the flakes, so the extra fat just melts as it bakes and the pie crust falls apart as you cut into it.

Is American or European butter better for pie crust? ›

If you want a rich, buttery flavor, a higher fat content butter is best, which means a French or European product may be the right choice. The fat is where the flavor resides, so more fat means more flavor. In addition, when butter is blended with other ingredients, it creates small pockets in the pastry.

Why add apple cider vinegar to pie crust? ›

The acid in the apple cider vinegar tenderizes the dough by slowing the gluten production in the dough. This prevents it from getting tough and elastic like bread dough. Love me tender. If you've ever bitten into a slice of pie with a tough crust, you know the value in a tender, flaky pie crust.

How do you get a crispy crust on the bottom of a pie? ›

Choose the Right Rack in the Oven

Which rack you use in the oven can help ensure a crisp crust. Baking the pie on a lower rack will concentrate heat on the bottom of the pie and help the crust crisp.

How long should you chill pie dough before rolling out? ›

Chill in the fridge for 30 minutes, or up to overnight. Tip: Chilling hardens the fat in the dough, which will help the crust maintain its structure as it bakes. And the short rest before rolling relaxes the dough's gluten, helping prevent a tough crust.

Is it better to bake with Crisco or butter? ›

Cookies Made with Butter vs Shortening

Those made with only shortening bake higher and spread less during baking. The butter cookie provides better flavor and a crispier exterior with browning around edges and a chewy interior; the shortening cookie spreads less, holding its shape better while baking.

Which flour is best for pie crust? ›

Flour: For a tender crust, choose a low-protein flour. Pastry flour, with a protein content of about 8-10%, ranks between all-purpose flour and cake flour. All-purpose flour works just fine for pie crusts, while cake flour might lack enough protein to form a workable, elastic dough.

What is the problem with Crisco shortening? ›

As a hydrogenated oil, Crisco is loaded with trans fats. Trans fats have a chemical structure that our bodies have trouble recognizing, and they create free radicals in the body.

Is Crisco better than butter for pie crust? ›

Yes, you can use shortening as the fat in a pie crust recipe. Shortening creates a flakier crust than butter, but the flavor won't be as good. To improve the flavor, add an egg, a little apple cider vinegar and sugar.

What is the difference between using butter and vegetable shortening for a pie crust? ›

As shortening is 100% vegetable oil, it has a higher melting point than butter, so stays solid longer when baking. When the shortening does finally melt, steam forms in pockets and puffs the layers of dough apart, making a slightly flaky and less flavorful crust.

What is an advantage to using shortening as your fat in a pie crust? ›

As shortening is able to withstand higher temperatures and does not melt easily, it creates flaky and crisp yet tender pie crusts when used alone or in combination with butter.

Can I use butter instead of Crisco in pie crust? ›

You can swap out any solid fat for another when making pie crust. The colder and more solid your fat is, the easier it is to make your crust. I have used lard, shortening, butter, margarine, even bacon grease, to make pie crust, and they all work just fine.

Can you substitute Crisco for butter in pie crust? ›

Shortening or lard or butter are the normal ingredients for pie crusts, as the fats are larger globules that are between layers of dough and flour (lamination) that make the crust flaky and tender and hold together. Yes you can, it will change the flavor.

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