The Ultimate Flaky and Tender Pie and Tart Crust on notjustspice.com

Delicate and buttery with a dainty lift, the ultimate flaky and tender pie and tart crust is in a league of its own. Dedicated to saving pies and tarts worldwide, this hero enhances your pie and tart experience like no other crust.

I know how choosy and how particular one can be when baking a pie. I also know it can be intimidating, like it was for me. But once I mastered (as much as I could) the classic pastry crust, I knew that could master the ultimate flaky and tender pie and tart crust. It can be tricky but when you get it right, it’s sublime. Follow the instructions, and you’ll see the results for yourself! After all they’re outlined by the baker who wrote the The Pie and Pastry Bible.

The Ultimate Flaky and Tender Pie and Tart Crust on notjustspice.com

Rose Levy Rosenbaum has dug deep and come up with all sorts of tips to enhance a humble pie crust: the addition of vinegar and the usage of pastry flour lessens gluten development to a large degree (thanks to the acidity in the vinegar), relaxes the dough and makes the crust more delicate; the addition of aluminium-free baking powder aerates the crust giving it a dainty lift; and the addition of cream cheese and cream makes it gracefully smooth, more flavourful because of the milk solids (their fat coats the flour). It also browns more than the other pie crusts.

The Ultimate Flaky and Tender Pie and Tart Crust on notjustspice.com

But what about the water, you ask? There is no water! The water from the cream cheese is adequate. That is why this crust is more tender than an all-butter crust. I used it to make a lattice crust on the ultimate apple pie — which was nearly impossible, what with the crust being super tender. But since I really wanted to make a lattice crust, I ended up making the crust thicker than normal. I also made a strawberry pie after a few days, and this time, I knew I should not risk a lattice crust.

The Ultimate Flaky and Tender Pie and Tart Crust on notjustspice.com

Ensure that the dough is chill at all times it is out of the fridge. When you roll it, you don’t want the butter melting, as the dough won’t lift off of your surface! Ensure your rolling surface is well floured too. And yes, the rolled crust has to chill in the fridge before baking so it relaxes doesn’t shrink in the oven.

According to Rose, it took her several years and over 50 years to get this ultimate flaky and tender pie and tart crust just right. And here it is for you!

The Ultimate Flaky and Tender Pie and Tart Crust on notjustspice.com

The Ultimate Apple Pie on notjustspice.com

The Ultimate Flaky and Tender Pie and Tart Crust on notjustspice.com

The Ultimate Flaky and Tender Pie and Tart Crust

Ingredients

Double Crust or Lattice Pie (for a 9-inch pie)

  • 12 tablespoons (170 g) unsalted butter, cold
  • 2 and 1/2 cups + 1 tablespoon (290 g) pastry flour (or bleached all purpose flour, or 2/3 bleached all purpose flour and 1/3 cake flour)
  • 1/2 teaspoon fine sea salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon aluminium-free baking powder
  • 1/2 cup (128 g) cream cheese, cold
  • 3 tablespoons heavy cream
  • 1 tablespoon cider vinegar

Single Crust

Halve the above ingredients

Instructions
  1. Cut the butter into 1/2 cubes and freeze them for 30 minutes.
  2. Ensure everything is cold, including the mixing bowl. I usually sift the flour into my mixing bowl and let it rest in the freezer for 15 minutes. The cream cheese and cream also sit in the freezer!
  3. Start off by putting the flour in a food processor (you could use a pastry cutter) and pulse it for 2 seconds.
  4. Then add the baking powder and salt and blend for a few seconds.
  5. Add the cream cheese next and pulse the food processor for 20 seconds, until the mix resembles course meal.
  6. Now add half the butter and pulse until you find pea sized bits of the butter in your mix. The first time I made this crust, I didn’t like how fine the butter had become. So, I recommend adding the other half at the end, so you are left with bigger pieces of butter.
  7. Add to it the cream and vinegar and pulse for a few seconds, until you find small pea sized bits of butter.
  8. Add the remaining butter and pulse for a few seconds more.
  9. Empty it all onto a cold work surface and press it down together with your knuckles and the balls of your palm, until the whole thing can hold itself together and has a tiny amount of stretch. To ease the process you could empty the dough into a freezer-weight plastic bag and press the dough together from the outside of the bag or wrap it with plastic wrap and try binding it together that way. Here’s what I did since I don’t own a freezer-weight plastic bag: I let a steel mixing bowl rest in the freezer for 30 minutes, and emptied the mix into that.
  10. Shape it into two discs, wrap them up in plastic wrap and store them in the fridge for 45 minutes.
  11. Take the cold discs out and let them rest for 10 minutes.
  12. Lightly flour your work surface with some flour and rub some flour on your rolling pin sleeve.
  13. Roll out the discs one by one into thin flat discs, pushing out from the middle towards the ends.
  14. For a 9-inch plate, roll out your dough to a 12 and 1/2-inch disc.
  15. Lightly flour the disc, fold it in quarters, lift it up and ease it into the pie plate and then unfold it gently and ease it into the pie plate.
  16. For a single crust pie, tuck under excess dough and press down. Refrigerate for 1 to 24 hours.
  17. For a double crust pie, leave about a centimetre over the edge of the plate and trim the excess. Refrigerate until you are ready to fill the pie. After you are done with the filling, roll out another 12 and 1/2-inch disc for the top crust. Brush the bottom crust with water and tuck the top crust under the bottom crust.

Related Links:

Rose’s Favourite Flaky and Tender Pie or Tart Crust (realbakingwithrose.com)

The Ultimate Apple Pie (notjustspice)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

%d bloggers like this: