Lattice Pie Crust Recipe - ZoëBakes (2024)

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Lattice Pie Crust Recipe - ZoëBakes (1)

With very few ingredients you can make one of America’s most beloved desserts, the pie. We start with the crust, the frame which holds the filling, in this case, white peach and raspberry. It should be tender and flaky, buttery and a lovely compliment to whatever you have put inside. I am forever hunting for what I consider the perfect pie crust. There are as many recipes as there are households. Every family seems to have their own prized recipe. If you are having a tough time recreating your grandmother’s crust, it may not be the fault of the recipe, but the technique you are using. Try following my instructions on how to make this dough, with a lattice pie crust. I got the recipe from Dorie Greenspan’s latest tome Baking: From My Home to Yours.

Perfect Pie Dough 101 for Lattice Pie Crust

Find all the equipment I use here.

Do you have pie questions or need to troubleshoot your recipe? Check out my guide onhow to make pie crust.

Hint before you get started, everything should be as cold as possible. On a really hot summer day I will even freeze my flour before I get started so that it doesn’t melt the butter as I’m mixing. At any point in the process if your butter seems too soft just throw the whole thing in the freezer for a few minutes.

The recipe at the bottom of this post is “Good for almost everything pie dough” from Baking: From My Home to Yoursby Dorie Greenspan. You can see me make this dough step by step below.

Pie Dough Making Equipment

Cuisinart 7-Cup Food ProcessorLattice Pie Crust Recipe - ZoëBakes (2)

Marble Rolling PinLattice Pie Crust Recipe - ZoëBakes (3)

Pastry WheelLattice Pie Crust Recipe - ZoëBakes (4) used to trim the lattice strips

Pastry BrushLattice Pie Crust Recipe - ZoëBakes (5)

How to Make Perfect Pie Dough for Lattice Pie Crust

The following directions are mine and Dorie may or may not agree with me!

There are many ways to cut the butter and shortening into the flour, but I prefer to use a combination of my Cuisinart and my hands. The Cuisinart breaks up the fat quickly, so there is less time for it to get warm.

Put the butter in the machine in 3 parts and pulse 2-3 times. By the time you’ve added all of the butter, some of it will completely blend into the flour and some will be in large pea-sized pieces.

Add the ice water to the dough 3 tablespoons at a time and pulse just once to combine. If you pulse too much at this point you will continue to break down the butter too much.

Once you’ve added all of the water pour the dough out onto the counter, or into a large flat bowl. It may still need some water, so I like to do the rest by hand so that I don’t end up breaking down the butter too much.

First try pressing the dough together to determine if it is too dry. If it isn’t holding together, or there is still powdery flour then add a couple more tablespoons of water and try pressing together again.

Lattice Pie Crust Recipe - ZoëBakes (7)

The dough should come together without falling apart, but not be too mushy with water.

Lattice Pie Crust Recipe - ZoëBakes (8)

Press into a log and cut into 2 pieces.

Form the dough into disks and wrap well with plastic. See the whole pieces of butter in the dough, this is what you want to create the flakiness. Chill for at least 2 hours.

Lattice Pie Crust Recipe - ZoëBakes (9)

Once the dough is chilled sprinkle flour onto your counter.

Lattice Pie Crust Recipe - ZoëBakes (10)

Roll the dough out from the center, adding a little flour and turning the dough a 1/4 turn to make sure it isn’t sticking too much to the surface. If you use a rollpat or vinyl you will end up using less flour.

Lattice Pie Crust Recipe - ZoëBakes (11)

Make sure the dough will fit the pan you are using. There should be about 2 extra inches around the pie plate.

Lattice Pie Crust Recipe - ZoëBakes (12)

Use your rolling pin to transfer the dough to the pie plate. Put the rolling pin in the middle of the dough and fold the dough over the pin to lift it.

Lattice Pie Crust Recipe - ZoëBakes (13)

Place the dough in the pie plate, don’t force or stretch it or it will shrink away from the sides as it bakes. Put the pie plate with dough into the refrigerator to rest while you make the lattice.

Lattice Pie Crust Recipe - ZoëBakes (14)

Roll the next disk of dough out just as you did the first one, but this time you need to build it on a sheet of vinyl or a rollpat so it can be lifted. Now you will use a pastry wheel to cut strips in the dough. Depending on your personality you can measure the strips or eyeball them. When you are finished cutting the strips remove every other one and set aside.

Fold up every other one of the remaining strips to the middle point. Lay one of the pieces that you had set aside over the strips that are laying flat. Unfold the strips and repeat with the next set.

Continue until you get to the end of this side and then start this on the other side.

Once the lattice is prepared slide the vinyl or rollpat onto a cutting board or baking sheet so that you can easily transfer to the refrigerator. You need to let this chill so that it is easier to slide onto the filled pie.

Once the lattice is chilled it will slide easily onto the pie shell filled with fruit. Then you will need to trim the excess length off of the lattice strips.

They should fit just over the filling.

Fold up the sides of the pie shell and then crimp them in whatever design you choose.

Lattice Pie Crust Recipe - ZoëBakes (15)

Brush the surface of the lattice pie crust, but not the edge of the pie shell, with egg wash.

Sprinkle with sugar, I then stick the pie into the freezer for about 15 minutes while the oven is preheating to 425. Freezing the dough will help to set the dough so that it won’t blow out your design when it goes in the oven. After 30 minutes, turn the temperature down to 375°F and bake until the fruit is bubbling and juices are translucent. The length of time to bake your pie will be determined by the filling. My peach-raspberry pie took about an hour. You may need to tent the crust if it is browning too quickly as the filling bakes fully.

Lattice Pie Crust Recipe - ZoëBakes (16)

Perfect Pie Crust

Before you get started, everything should be as cold as possible. On a really hot summer day I will even freeze my flour before I get started so that it doesn't melt the butter as I'm mixing. At any point in the process if your butter seems too soft just throw the whole thing in the freezer for a few minutes.

4.93 from 14 votes

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Course: Dessert

Author: From ‘Baking: From My Home to Yours’ by Dorie Greenspan

Ingredients

For a 9-inch Double Crust

  • 3 cups (390g) all-purpose flour you can replace 1/2 cup with whole wheat flour
  • 1/4 cup (50g) sugar
  • 1 1/2 tsp salt
  • 2 1/2 sticks (283g) very cold (frozen is good) unsalted butter cut into tablespoon sized pieces
  • 1/3 cup (40g) frozen vegetable shortening cut into tablespoon-sized pieces
  • ~1/2 cup ice water have more at the ready just in case
  • egg wash 1 egg mixed with 1 tablespoon water
  • sugar for sprinkling

Instructions

  • Combine the flour, sugar, and salt. There are many ways to cut the butter and shortening into the flour, but I prefer to use a combination of my food processor and my hands. The food processor breaks up the fat quickly, so there is less time for it to get warm. Put the butter in the machine in 3 parts and pulse 2-3 times. By the time you've added all of the butter, some of it will be completely blended into the flour and some will be in large pea-sized pieces. Add the frozen shortening and pulse until it too is pea-sized pieces (it is much softer, so it breaks down quickly). Add the ice water to the dough 3 tablespoons at a time and pulse just once to combine. If you pulse too much at this point you will continue to break down the butter too much.

  • Once you’ve added all of the water pour the dough out onto the counter, or into a large flat bowl (pasta serving bowl works well). It may still need some water, so I like to do the rest by hand so that I don’t break down the butter too much.

  • First, try pressing the dough together to determine if it is too dry. If it isn't holding together, or there is still powdery flour then sprinkle a couple more tablespoons of water evenly over the dry spots and try pressing together again. Fold the dough several times over itself with a bench scraper. The dough should come together without falling apart, but not be too mushy with water.

  • Press into a log and cut into 2 pieces. Form the dough into two disks and wrap it with plastic. Chill for at least 1 hour, but this can be done the day before, or put it in the freezer for a couple of weeks (Allow to defrost overnight in the refrigerator, not the counter or it will be too soft).

  • Once the dough is chilled sprinkle flour onto your counter, a silicone mat. Roll the dough out from the center, adding a little flour and turning the dough a 1/4 turn to make sure it isn’t sticking too much to the surface. If you use a silicone mat you will use less flour.

  • Make sure the dough will fit the pan you are using. There should be about 2 extra inches around the pie plate. Use your rolling pin to transfer the dough to the pie plate. Put the rolling pin in the middle of the dough and fold the dough over the pin to lift it.

  • Place the dough in the pie plate, don’t force or stretch it or it will shrink away from the sides as it bakes. Put the pie plate with dough into the refrigerator to rest while you make the lattice.

  • Roll the next disk of dough out just as you did the first one, but this time you need to build it on a sheet of vinyl or a silicone mat so it can be lifted. Now you will use a pastry wheel to cut strips in the dough. Depending on your personality you can measure the strips or eyeball them. When you are finished cutting the strips remove every other one and set aside.

  • Fold up every other one of the remaining strips to the middle point. Lay one of the pieces that you had set aside over the strips that are laying flat. Unfold the strips and repeat with the next set. Continue until you get to the end of this side and then start this on the other side.

  • Once the lattice is prepared slide the vinyl or silicone mat onto a cutting board or baking sheet so that you can easily transfer to the refrigerator. You need to let this chill so that it is easier to slide onto the filled pie.

  • Once the lattice is chilled it will slide easily onto the pie shell filled with fruit. Then you will need to trim the excess length off of the lattice strips. They should fit just over the filling. Fold up the sides of the pie shell and then crimp them in whatever design you choose.

  • Brush the surface of the lattice, but not the edge of the pie shell, with egg wash. Sprinkle with sugar, I then stick the pie into the freezer for about 15 minutes while the oven is preheating to 425 F. Freezing the dough will help to set the dough so that it won’t blow out your design when it goes in the oven.

  • After 30 minutes, turn the temperature down to 375°F and bake until the fruit is bubbling and juices are translucent. The length of time to bake your pie will be determined by the filling. My peach-raspberry pie took about an hour. You may need to tent the crust if it is browning too quickly as the filling bakes fully.

Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

You might also like:

Lattice Pie Crust Recipe - ZoëBakes (2024)

FAQs

What is one thing you should not do when making pie crust? ›

A: First, don't just reach for more flour—too much extra flour will make the crust tough, and won't treat the real problem, which is that your butter is too soft. I recently read in Weller's cookbook A Good Bake that it should take no more than one to two minutes to roll out a pie crust.

How do you seal a lattice pie crust? ›

Trim the edges of the strips flush with the dough of the underlying pie dish, which should be about half an inch over the sides. Fold back the rim of the shell over the edge of the lattice strips, and crimp to secure. Bake until browned: Bake pie as directed in your recipe.

What is it called when you bake a pie crust before filling? ›

Use this page to learn how to blind bake a pie crust, whether that's fully blind-baking before adding a no-bake filling, or partially baking (par-baking) the crust before returning to the oven with a filling.

What happens if you don't chill pie crust before baking? ›

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.

Should you always Prebake pie crust? ›

You do not need to pre-bake a pie crust for an apple pie or any baked fruit pie really, but we do freeze the dough to help it stay put. Pre-baking the pie crust is only required when making a custard pie OR when making a fresh fruit pie. you should probably get: Pie weights are super helpful to have for pre-baking.

What is one of the most common mistakes made when preparing a pastry crust? ›

The Most Common Pie Crust Mistakes (And Ways To Avoid Them)
  • The ingredients are too warm. ...
  • The pie dough is overworked from excessive mixing or rolling. ...
  • The pie dough isn't given enough time to relax and chill. ...
  • The pie dough is shrinking down the sides of the pan.
Oct 18, 2022

How to blind-bake the bottom of a pie? ›

Cut a piece of parchment slightly larger than the pie dish. Line with the parchment paper and fill with pie weights or dried beans, filling right to the bottom of the crimps. Place the pie tin on a baking sheet, and place in the oven. Bake for 15 to 18 minutes, or until the edges are slightly golden brown.

Can you lattice store bought pie crust? ›

If the lattice is the biggest challenge you want to tackle, you can certainly use store-bought ready-to-roll pie dough instead of the crust recipe provided. To get started, roll out the first disk of dough on a lightly floured surface and place in the pie plate, pressing gently to fit and folding under any overhang.

Will parchment paper protect pie crust? ›

Unfold the parchment paper and test out your shield on the pie plate to see if the crust will be sufficiently covered. You may need to trim the outside edges of the parchment paper, if there is a lot of excess that hangs off. Now you have an easy one-time-use parchment shield that will prevent your crust from burning!

How do you keep the bottom of a pie crust from getting soggy? ›

Brush the Bottom with Corn Syrup or Egg White

Coating the inside surface of the bottom crust will create a barrier to prevent sogginess.

What do you brush on pie crust to keep it from burning? ›

Egg wash is a mix of beaten whole egg and water (or milk or cream), which is used to brush onto the top of baked goods before baking. The purpose of egg wash is to provide a nice golden brown, shiny finish on your baking. I use this egg wash for pie crust, or this also makes a great egg wash for bread recipes.

What is a lattice crust and how is one made? ›

Cut the dough into strips, using a pizza cutter or pastry roller. The width of the strips is totally up to you, and you can make one or two braids with the strips if you wish. Arrange half of the strips over the pie, in parallel lines. Fold back every other strip (or process two by two, it's up to you).

How to make a pie crust shape? ›

Make a “v” with two fingers on one of your hands and brace against the outside of the crust. Use the index finger of your other hand to push between the “v” and make an indent. Repeat all around your pie until you have a beautifully crimped pie crust.

What is the procedure for preparing a prebaked pie shell? ›

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Cut out a circle of aluminum foil or parchment paper and fit it into the chilled pie shell. Fill with rice, beans, or ceramic pie weights and bake the pie shell for about 15 minutes, or until the edges are just golden and beginning to pull away from the sides of the pan.

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