Pie Pastry How to and Tips
- 1 12 cups all-purpose flour
- 14 teaspoon salt
- 12 cup lard or 12 cup vegetable shortening or 12 cup combination of shortening and butter, chilled
- 3 tablespoons ice water
- Sift together the flour and salt; sift again.
- Cut in the shortening or lard with a pastry blender or two knives until the mixture resembles coarse cornmeal.
- Add ice water a tablespoon at a time (approximately 3 tablespoons in all), stirring the dough around the bowl with a fork.
- As soon as it is moist enough to gather into a ball, wrap in wax paper and refrigerate for about 30 minutes.
- Handle the dough as little as possible.
- Roll half of the pastry dough out on a floured surface to about 1/8-inch thickness.
- The pastry should be about 1 1/2 inches larger than the the pie plate.
- Repeat with the other half of dough for a double crust pie, or freeze the remaining dough for a future pie.
- Makes enough for a double crust for a 9- or 10-inch pie, or two single crusts.
- My Note: I trusted this one and had a wonderful result.
- The juices from the filling didn't even make the crust soggy.
- Like some PotPie Do.
- * If recipe calls for a pre-baked crust, prick the pie shell with a fork and bake in a preheated 350*F. oven for about 3 minutes; remove from the oven and prick some more if the crust is puffing up.
- Return to the oven and bake 5 minutes longer.
- Place on a wire rack to cool, then fill as recipe directs.
- * For best results, refrigerate all ingredients prior to making the dough - even the flour.
- *Use pastry flour or all-purpose.
- Bread flour has too much gluten to make a tender crust, and cake flour is too soft to give the proper body.
- *Lard and shortening produce the most tender crusts.
- You may use half lard or shortening and half butter if you want the buttery flavor.
- *The pockets of fat make the flakiness in the crust.
- Use a pastry blender or 2 knives to cut in fat.
- Dough should still have some pea-size pieces.
- Handle as little as possible with your hands.
- *All liquids should be ice-cold.
- *For a flakier crust, substitute ice cold sour cream or heavy cream for the water.
- *Sugar in a pastry dough sweetens and tenderizes.
- *Blend liquid in just until the dough begins to hold together.
- Overworking toughens the dough.
- *Chill the dough for 30 minutes for easier rolling.
- *To prevent a soggy crust, refrigerate for 15 minutes before filling or seal by brushing with slightly beaten egg white, then refrigerate for 15 minutes.
- *Setting the pie pan on a metal baking sheet during baking also helps prevent soggy crusts.
- *Enhance the flavor of your dough by adding spices such as nutmeg, ginger, or cinnamon.
- *Meringue won't "weep" if you blend a teaspoon of cornstarch into the sugar before beating it into the egg whites.
- *Sprinkle toasted ground nuts or fine cookie crumbs over the dough and gently press them in before filling or baking.
- ** How to Freeze Pie Crust Dough **
- Take some of the work out of making pie by making your pie crusts ahead and freezing them.
- Here's how:.
- Option 1:.
- 1.
- Make up the dough for your pie crust, following the instructions in the recipe that you've chosen.
- 2.
- Then, form the dough into a ball; and place it in a freezer bag, or wrap it in a double layer of plastic wrap.
- Label and date it.
- Note: If your pie crust recipe makes more than one crust, divide the dough into individual pie amounts before freezing.
- 4.
- Store your dough in the freezer for up to three months.
- To Use: Thaw your pie dough in the fridge overnight.
- Then, roll it out as usual.
- Option 2:.
- 1.
- Make your dough; roll it out; and form your crust in a pie plate.
- 2.
- Then, stick the whole thing pie plate and all in a freezer bag.
- To Use: Thaw your pie crust in the refrigerator overnight, and proceed with your pie recipe; or use your crust frozen, and simply add a couple minutes to the normal bake time.
- Tips: Keep a couple pie crusts in the freezer at all times for easy last-minute desserts.
- Think about making your pie filling ahead, too.
- Make your pie crusts in disposable pie plates, so you can make a bunch at once (this will also make them easy to stack in the freezer).
- *And practice!
- Every time you make a pie crust from scratch, it will get easier.
- Soon it will take only a few minutes - less time than letting a refrigerated crust soften at room temperature.
- And the cost savings are really tremendous.
- Have fun experimenting!
flour, salt, lard, water
Taken from www.food.com/recipe/pie-pastry-how-to-and-tips-509061 (may not work)