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In search of the perfect pastry crust


stellabella

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I did a search and saw some threads that dealt with aspects of making crusts, but I have far more serious problems, folks. Once or twice I've baked The Bread of Affliction, but I've lost count of the times I've baked The Pie Crust of Embarrassment. I cannot make tender crust, and I have tried everything. So I was wondering if we could start a thread in which people who are able to do it well every time walk us [me ] through it?

Be specific. I have tried butter, shortening, butter and shortening, chilling everything, pastry blenders, the food processor, etc. If there are certain products--brands of flour, for example--that work best for you , could you share those, too?

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Try Rose Levy Beranbaum's Pie and Pastry Bible. Her instructions may seem a bit too detailed, to the point of being anal, but if you follow them to the letter, you're guaranteed a perfect pie crust. I love this book. I love all of Beranbaum's books. She's quite simply meticulous. I admire that.

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I second ladybug.

I had lots of trouble with pie dough until I realized that all the admonishments about using the least amount of water are wrong.

Assuming you are talking about home baking, I would add that I also often bake pies on a pizza stone.

If it's something rustic, like a free form pissaladiere, I put it on a piece of parchment or foil and bake directly on the stone. (I don't like the butter melting into my stone).

If it is another sort of tart in a pan that will bake for 45-60 minutes , say fruit. I will put it onto the stone directly, but move it higher towards the end of the baking to keep the bottom from darkening too much and to brown up the top crust better.

If it's something with a custard type filling, I will start it on the bottom on a sheet pan, then move it up. I find doing this (and glazing the bottom with something before adding the filling) helps keep the crust from sogging.

I also prefer an all butter crust which I make in the processor.

Lastly, take the refrigerate commands seriously. I refrigerate the formed crust before filling when I have time. And with something like a fruit or onion tart, I will even make the whole thing ahead and refrigerate until dinner time.

"Half of cooking is thinking about cooking." ---Michael Roberts

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Addendum: (dummy that I am, I can make pate brisee, but can't find the edit button)

To be very specific:

--I used the same flour all the time til I got my act together - King Arthur all purpose. (Beranbaum makes some recommendations)

--I use unsalted butter, usually Plugra, a European style butter at domestic prices if you have a Trader Joe near you.

Don't fortget to add the salt.

"Half of cooking is thinking about cooking." ---Michael Roberts

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Cooks Illustrated "America's Test Kitchen" crust recipe has proven to have the best and most consistent results for me. I have never gotten such rave reviews on a crust before I used this one. It truly is tender, flaky and super super tasty! Here's the link:

http://www.americastestkitchen.com/Recipe/338.shtml

BTW, just a note: I have always used a hand held pastry cutter, never have I used a food processor!

Edited by Elizabeth_11 (log)
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-Elizabeth

Mmmmmmm chocolate.

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I wouldn't recommend using a food processor or mixer - blending for just a split second too long can ruin a pie crust. It's much harder to miss the cue to stop mixing when you're mixing by hand. It's entirely POSSIBLE to use a food processor - but I've tried it many times and only on one occasion can I honestly say my pie crust turned out well when using the food processor.

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this is weird: i remember project (?) posting a detailed and very credible pie crust recipe in a thread called "things they say are easy but they aren't" or something like that, but i cant find it when searching.

anyway, that's a very convincing recipe. perhaps somebody else can find it from this description?

christianh@geol.ku.dk. just in case.

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this is weird: i remember project (?) posting a detailed and very credible pie crust recipe in a thread called "things they say are easy but they aren't" or something like that, but i cant find it when searching.

anyway, that's a very convincing recipe. perhaps somebody else can find it from this description?

I think you're remembering a shortcake recipe. Is this it?

Dave Scantland
Executive director
dscantland@eGstaff.org
eG Ethics signatory

Eat more chicken skin.

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this is weird: i remember project (?) posting a detailed and very credible pie crust recipe in a thread called "things they say are easy but they aren't" or something like that, but i cant find it when searching.

It's a thread called "stuff they say is easy, but it ain't, and yes, the post was by project. In the cooking category.

Click!

This is pretty much how I do it, and mine are always flaky. Remember that depending on what you are putting in the crust, it is often wise to pre-bake it somewhat.

Susan Fahning aka "snowangel"
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I never make pie crust because my mother lives three doors down. She loves to bake, so we eat a lot of pie, and her crust is, to me, the perfect balance of tender and flaky.

I don't have her recipe, but I know she uses all-puropose flour, crisco, butter (50-50...I'm trying to get her to switch to lard, but she just says, "so you make the damn pie"), water, vinegar, and an egg. Mom claims this is foolproof crust and can be made by hand or in the processor without any noticeable difference.

Jim

olive oil + salt

Real Good Food

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My mother makes a beautiful pie crust using crisco. She insists that the secret is to use a pastry cutter, aim for a combo of small flakes (tenderness) and larger ones (flakiness), and to handle it as little as possible.

Aside: friends of my parents one used bear lard (leftover from a black bear, I believe) to make pie crust. I can't remember how they said it turned out.

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Here's my mother's recipe:

Nan's Pie Crust

makes 2 double or 4 single crusts

3 c flour

1.5 c shortening (she told me she's been using 1 c crisco and .5 c butter)

1 T salt

mix flour and salt (sifting optional), cut in fat until you get that small crumb consistency (or do it in processor)

in a separate bowl beat together

1/3 c water

1 egg

1 T vinegar (plain white)

add to flour mix, blend well, and chill

let sit out about 15 minutes before rolling out.

Mom says if the dough starts to break up while you're rolling, just ball it back up and start over.

Jim

olive oil + salt

Real Good Food

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My mother makes a beautiful pie crust using crisco. She insists that the secret is to use a pastry cutter, aim for a combo of small flakes (tenderness) and larger ones (flakiness), and to handle it as little as possible.

That was my Mom's method, too - crisco and a pastry cutter. Her crusts were always perfectly flaky and tender, though not much flavor. Bernard Clayton also recommends the crisco/butter combo method, but I usually use Martha Stewart's recipe from her Pies and Tarts book which uses all butter. You can enhance the tenderness of an all butter crust by using about a third cake flour to two thirds AP.

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I posted this is the other thread too, but what the heck. In Chez Panisse Fruit they say to cut in half the butter first, then add the other half and cut that in. That way you end up with a mix of small and large pieces. They also recommend lifting the flour-butter mixture up in your hand and letting it sift through your fingers to mix as you add the water. It's worked wonders for me, I used to have consistency issues :wink: . They say that Jacques Pepin taught them that when he was there visiting. He says to cut in 1/3 first, then 2/3 though.

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I've been on this quest for years...

On this particular day, my findings are:

Crisco and Butter (1 c crisco, .5c butter) is the way to go. Lard works well too, but for heavier pies (like pecan) and pot-pies.

I add crisco to the flour first, than the butter so that the butter are the large pieces and don't get warm.

Refrigerate, Refrigerate, Refrigerate, Refrigerate! (the dough, the pie plate - glass only kids, the pin - preferably marble, and the rolled crust before filling.)

Don't over-roll

Prick and egg-white-wash the bottom before filling or blind baking.

Both Martha's recipe and the ones for various crusts in the California Culinary Academy Volume are good, much as I love Rose Levy-B, no pie should be that hard.

Tomorrow I may change my mind.

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All right folks, I'm going for it! I just mixed up my first batch of pie crust batter and it's sitting in the freezer. Now I'm going to work on the innards. I've played around with a rhubarb blueberry crumble that turned out really well. The last one was a bluberry boyenberry and that wasn't half bad. I still have no idea how to make a crumble but it certainly is a lot of fun trying.

For the crusts, I used Jim's mother's recipe. I first put the cup of crisco in the flour and mixed until it was consistent. Then I added a stick of cold butter that had been cut up and again with hands, mixed until most of the fats were incorporated. I then added the wet ingredients and put the mix in the freezer. Hmm, I'd like the flour to have a chance to absorb the water so I'm going to move it to the fridge for half an hour.

It sure would be nice if this pans out!

Edited by col klink (log)
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