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« Baker's Dozen: A Batch of Sweet Links! | Main | Sweet Memories: A Video Roundup of Bake For Good via King Arthur Flour »
Wednesday
May142014

The Secret to Perfect Pie Crust? It's in Your Hands (Plus a Giveaway)

Pie crust technique

Note: this post includes a giveaway at the bottom! Lucky you.

You're always taught the same basic rules with pie crust. Cut small pieces of cold butter into a mixture of flour and salt; blend until the pieces are like peas. Add cold water, a little at a time, until the dough will come together in a clump. Gather, flatten into a disc, chill, and proceed. 

But recently, I learned a method that basically rocked my everloving, pie-eating world. Because it involves using your fingers to attain the perfect consistency.

This was very exciting to me because I actually kind of despise most kitchen tools. Especially the pastry cutter, because it is such a pain to wash. In general, the more functions I can get out of one tool, the more I like it. Wooden spoons and wire whisks? Awesome. Garlic press? Not so much. 

But enough about me--back to the pie. You're probably wondering some things. Let me try to answer:

Where the method came from

I learned this method at the Bake For Good event in Los Angeles, part of the Bake For Good Tour, where baker Robyn told us it was a method she'd learned from famed foodie Marion Cunningham.

By the way, if you want to know more about the event, check out this video.

Cherry cream walnut pie

How it works

Basically, the method includes working in larger than usual hunks of butter, and instead of mashing them with a pastry cutter, you squeeze the butter pieces with your fingers to flatten them.

    Cherry cream walnut pie

Why you should immediately adopt this practice

Those pieces of flat butter will make for the coveted "VB" (visible butter) in your rolled crust, and the taste is flaky and fantastic on your resulting pie.

Pie crust technique

I have co-opted and adapted it for my own use at home with a sort of mashup between traditional and by hand methods. Best of both worlds, and still, minimal stuff to clean.

And here, I will share it with you. Aren't you lucky?

Making Pie Crust with Your Hands

adapted from King Arthur Flour, who adapted it from Marion Cunningham

enough for a double crust pie

  • 2 1/2 cups flour
  • 1 1/4 teaspoons salt
  • 1 cup (2 sticks) cold unsalted butter
  • 1/4 to 1/2 cup very cold water

Procedure

  1. Sift together the flour and salt in a large bowl. Set to the side.
  2. Size your butter. One stick cut into small pieces, the other cut into fairly large pieces (double the size you'd usually cut for a pie crust.
  3. Cherry cream walnut pie
  4. Work in the stick of smaller butter with a plastic dough scraper (my new favorite tool and very easy to clean). It's not going to have the same impact that double the butter would in terms of working in, but go for the regular pea sized consistency.
  5. Now, add the bigger hunks of butter. Gently coat them with flour in the mixture, so they won't stick to you when you squeeze them. 
  6. Cherry cream walnut pie
  7. Now, one by one, squeeze all of those pieces of butter until they're flat like pancakes. Cherry cream walnut pie You don't have to be too precious about it. Grab, squeeze, then move on to the next one.
  8. Got 'em all? OK. Give the mixture another stir with your pastry scraper. Now, start adding the water. Switch back to your dough scraper.
  9. Keep on adding it bit by bit until the dough forms a shaggy consistency, still floury but you can clump it together.
  10. Pie crust method
  11. Gather, form into a ball, and place on top of a sheet of plastic wrap. Wrap the plastic on top of it, not too snugly, and then flatten it into a disc with your hand. Doing it this way, I learned, helps the dough spread out into the plastic and is just less messy.
  12. Pie crust method

Proceed with your recipe as usual. 

GIVEAWAY!

Hooray! King Arthur Flour has offered to reward one lucky reader with one of their mega cool dough scrapers, a cookbook, AND some of their highly patented and extremely delicious boiled apple cider (perfect for flavoring apple pie and using as a slightly fancy pancake syrup). Want to win? All you have to do is leave a comment (don't panic if it doesn't pop up right away; comment moderation is enabled) answering the following question:

What's your favorite type of pie to eat, and how do you like it served?

Apple pie with cheese for breakfast? French silk pie à la mode for dessert? It's all game here. I'll choose a winner by EOD Pacific time one week from today!

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Reader Comments (507)

Favorite Pie? You mean I have to chose? I'll have to say that most of the time it's peach and sometimes apple. The scoop of ice cream isn't required, but it is so good to add to warm pie.
May 14 | Unregistered CommenterTamika
I love any pie but my favorite is a tie between my mom's peach pie and my chocolate pie
May 15 | Unregistered CommenterPam
My favorite pie is Strawberry-Rubarb with a scoop of vanilla ice cream on a Spring day. Wait. I love a piece of Blueberry pie on the Fourth of July with or without vanilla ice cream. But do I love it more than Cherry Pie? Aw heck, it is the Fourth. Make it a slice of each. But what about Apple pie? It is not only iconic, but the pie I am known for making. It's delicious. Oh and what about Pumpkin Pie? In all my pie eating life I have always saved room for a slice of pumpkin pie on Thanksgiving with both family and whipped cream. I love pie.
May 15 | Unregistered Commenterpam
My favourite pie is raspeberry pie. It's even better when the raspberries are wild ones. I remember picking them as a kid when we'd go to the cottage and then my mom would make a pie with them that I always ate with chocolate ice cream. Wild raspberries are hard to find now and, with two small kids, even harder to go pick. Luckily, the road I live on still has a bunch of plants so this year the girls might be old enough to share this special event with. (I'm doing my PhD on traditional foods and would love to hear your stories! email me at emilyweiskopf@hotmail.com)
May 15 | Unregistered CommenterEmily
A cooked apple/applesauce custard cream with meringue. Yum.
May 15 | Unregistered CommenterSandi
Favorite pie? It's so hard to pick a favorite….cherry, key lime, apple, peanut butter….I can go on and on. I guess if I have to pick one, it's Cherry Rhubarb. What? Not strawberry rhubarb? Nope….cherry. Sweetness of cherries mixed with rhubarb makes for a great texture and taste!
May 15 | Unregistered CommenterMJ Warner
My favorite is pumpkin pie with pecans on top! Plus fresh whipped cream on top!
May 15 | Unregistered CommenterMHulgrave
i love fruit pies, with crumb topping, with vanilla ice cream
May 15 | Unregistered Commentersharona
Chocolate Pie! hands down!!!
May 15 | Unregistered Commentercarol
I would have to say my favorite type of pies are cheddar apple hand pies. I could eat them all day, any day. We recently finally bought a hand pie cutter. Perfect for cutting then crimping the pie, both in one tool, and easy to clean too! :)
May 15 | Unregistered CommenterTamara
I love my grandmother's strawberry rhubarb pie warm out of the oven with no toppings!
May 15 | Unregistered CommenterSarah H.P.
Peach Pouch Pie. It has a small amount of blueberries and raspberries in the filling. Made in a pie plate with a large bottom crust. The extra crust gets folded over the filling about 2 in. You dampen the folded over crust and sprinkle on sanding sugar. Bake. It is rustic, beautiful and yummy.
May 15 | Unregistered CommenterPam
I love strawberry rhubarb pie, but the rhubarb doesn't like me. But I have to say it's my favorite, warm right out of the oven.
May 15 | Unregistered CommenterAlicia J.
I LOVE pecan pie!! Straight up!
May 15 | Unregistered CommenterLaura R
Great idea on how to do the pie. I've always tried for VB (that's visual butter vs. Visual Basic). I am a 4th generation pie maker from the PacNW. We love huckleberry pie, but have to be careful about how we acquire. If the bears are at our picking spots, we go back another day. We make it super simple to let the flavor shine and eat it a la mode of course to soak up more of that huckleberry flavor. If there are no huckleberries, we can be forced to love blueberry, marionberry, peach and almost any other fruit cooked simply and well in a butter crust.
I love peach pie with peaches from the farmers market! But a good coconut cream or pecan won't be passed up either.
May 15 | Unregistered Commentersuzanne M
Ooh, this is a wonderful find! Can't wait to try this soon.

I think I'd have to go with fresh pumpkin pie in the fall and rhubarb pie in the spring. During the summer months I'll stick with citrus-y cream pies. Winter I drop the pies and start making cheesecakes because why not.
My favorite pie is any kind of berry pie with a crumble topping. I looooove me some crumble topping!
May 15 | Unregistered CommenterRachel
Pecan pie, or german chocolate pie!
May 15 | Unregistered CommenterPaula
Chocolate cream pie!!!
May 15 | Unregistered Commenterrachel
Dutch apple pie with a LOT of cinnamon is my fave. :D there's something about the streusel...
May 15 | Unregistered CommenterDanica
Strawberry rhubarb pie, served warm with vanilla bean ice cream!
May 15 | Unregistered CommenterKatie
My favorite pie is chocolate cream served cold.
May 15 | Unregistered CommenterKelli
My own French Rum Raisin Apple Pie warm with heavy cream is wonderful, my moms Coconut Meringue is stupendous, but my favorite is my friend Jennifer's French Silk Pie.
Salted chocolate pecan pie, warm, with or without ice cream. So good...
May 15 | Unregistered CommenterMike
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