This homemade pie crust recipe is flaky and tender with a rich buttery flavor. It’s my go-to pie dough that I’ve used for years because it’s easy to make with simple and natural ingredients, including real butter (no shortening). I’ll also show you how to create a fluted pie rim and how to pre-bake a pie crust when a recipe calls for it.

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Helpful Reader Review
“Best pie crust ever. So easy! I have made fruit pies, as well as chicken pot pies and used it for a veggie quiche; delicious.” – Monique ★★★★★
Pie Crust Video
Watch the video where I’ll show you how easy it is to make a pie crust from scratch. It comes together in minutes!
Homemade Pie Crust
This pie dough recipe yields 2 single crusts or 1 double pie crust. Homemade pies are irresistibly delicious, and you can always tell when a pie is homemade by the crust. I’ve never been satisfied with a store-bought pie the same way. An all-butter pie crust has a melt-in-your-mouth buttery taste and delicate texture. An Apple Pie or Cherry Pie that is made completely from scratch can’t be beat!
Knowing that I made the pie dough always makes me feel like a real ‘Martha Stewart’ (or should I say ‘Natasha’s Kitchen’… I couldn’t resist)! Watch my detailed VIDEO tutorial below, and you will be cranking out those homemade pie crusts in no time.
P.S. They also keep really well in the refrigerator and freezer if you want to get ahead on your holiday Chicken Pot Pie or Dutch Apple Pie. I always love having pie dough on hand for easy homemade pies (see make-ahead instructions below).

Ingredients for Pie Dough
It doesn’t get any easier than this pie dough, and you probably already have everything you need for a homemade pie crust: all-purpose flour, sugar, salt, unsalted butter, and water.
The butter should be COLD, straight from the fridge so you don’t have to plan ahead to make pie dough. Also avoid handling the butter too much which can soften it. You can pre-dice the butter and put it back in the refrigerator to keep it chilled until needed.

How to Make Pie Dough in 4 Easy Steps
This process is super easy in a food processor but you can also use a pastry blender (see instructions below).
- Measure flour correctly then in a food processor, pulse together flour, sugar and salt.
- Add COLD diced butter and pulse until coarse crumbs and some pea-sized pieces form.
- Add 7 Tbsp ice water and pulse just until moist clumps/ small balls of dough form. Pinch a piece of dough between your fingers, and if it sticks together, it’s done. If your dough is too crumbly, add more ice water, 1 tsp at a time. Be careful not to add too much water, or the dough will be sticky and difficult to roll out.

- Transfer the dough to a clean work surface and gather together into a ball. Resist the urge to knead the dough and avoid overmixing. Fold/knead the dough over itself just enough for it to hold together. You should still see crumbles or pockets of butter in the dough, which create a flaky dough after it’s baked. The dough should not be smooth. Divide the dough in half and flatten into 2 disks. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate for 1 hour before using.

Can I use a Pastry Cutter Instead?
You can use a pastry cutter to cut the butter into the flour/sugar/salt mixture by hand. You can also use 2 forks, but in my opinion, forks make the process slow and annoying, while a pastry cutter or food processor makes the process much easier.
To use a Pastry Cutter: Whisk together the dry ingredients ina a mixing bowl and whisk to combine. Add diced cold butter and lightly toss to coat in flour. Use the pastry cutter to cut the butter into the flour until the mixture looks like a coarse meal with pea-sized butter crumbles. Add the ice water, 1 Tbsp at a time, and stir it in with a firm spatula with each addition. Stop adding water when you see large clumps forming.
How to Make a Pie Crust
Once your dough is chilled, you can roll and form your pie crust.
- Dust work surface with flour and roll a single crust into a 12″ circle. Wrap your pie dough around your rolling pin. If it sticks to the work surface, use a food scraper or spatula to loosen it as you go.
- Carefully transfer crust to 9″ pie dish and unroll it into the pan. Gently press the dough down to line the pie dish. Tuck excess dough underneath itself to make a thick double-layered edge (no waste!).

How to Crimp and Flute Pie Crust
To form a fluted pie rim, hold your thumb and index finger an inch apart on the outside edge of the crust and press between them with the index finger of the other hand. Move around the edges of the pan repeating the motion to create a fluted rim. If you want to get creative with the top of a pie, check out my tutorial on How to Make a Lattice Pie Crust.

What if my Pie Dough is Too Hard?
Refrigerating the pie dough for longer than an hour will cause it to firm up since it is butter-based. Let it rest at room temperature for 10-20 minutes or until it is easy to roll out with a rolling pin.
If the dough is tough or dense after baking, it is usually due to overmixing, which develops too much gluten, making it chewy instead of tender.
Make Ahead Pie Crust
- Refrigerate pie dough up to 3 days ahead. Allow it to soften slightly at room temperature before rolling it out.
- To freeze pie dough: wrap and seal airtight then freeze up to 3 months. Thaw completely in the refrigerator prior to rolling.
How to Pre-bake Pie Crust (Blindbake)
Some recipes, such as Pumpkin Pie or Quiche Lorraine, call for a pre-baked pie crust, and this is how you blind bake:
- Form your edge. The easiest methods are crimping the rim by pushing all around the edge with a fork, or forming a fluted rim (see tutorial below). Place pie crust in the freezer 30 minutes which will help the crust bake more evenly without sliding down.
- Line the center with a 9-10″ ring of parchment paper and fill about 2/3 full with pie weights (*see below). Preheat oven to 425˚F and bake for 17 minutes until golden at the edges. Remove pie weights, prick the bottom of the crust all over with a fork and place back in the oven without weights for 5 minutes or until golden and the bottom is dried out. Remove beans and let crust cool to room temperature.

What Can I Use Instead of Pie Weights?
When you pre-bake an empty crust a.k.a. “blind-bake,” the dough tends to puff up and rise. Using pie weights solves this problem. Here are some alternatives to store-bought pie weights.
- Dry Raw Beans – beans should not be used for cooking following a blind bake but can be re-used to blind bake pie crust.
- Dry Raw Rice – If using rice, it becomes toasted and can be used for cooking in pilaf recipes after it is use to prebake a pie crust
This really is the most versatile pie dough, whether I’m making Blueberry Pie, Peach Pie or even Mini Pumpkin Pies. What is your favorite pie is for this crust? Let me know in the comments below.
Easy Pie Crust Recipe

Ingredients
- 2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour, plus more to dust, *measured correctly
- 1/2 Tbsp granulated sugar
- 1/2 tsp sea salt
- 1/2 lb COLD unsalted butter, (2 sticks) diced into 1/4″ pieces
- 7 Tbsp ice water, (7 to 8 Tbsp)
Instructions
- Place flour, sugar and salt into the bowl of a food processor and pulse a few times to combine. You can also use a pastry blender* to make the dough.
- Add cold diced butter and pulse the mixture until coarse crumbs form with some pea-sized pieces then stop mixing. Mixture should remain dry and powdery.
- Add 7 Tbsp ice water and pulse just until moist clumps or small balls form. Press a piece of dough between your finger tips and if the dough sticks together, you have added enough water. If not, add more water a teaspoon full at a time. Be careful not to add too much water or overmix as this can make the dough sticky and difficult to roll out.
- Transfer dough to a clean work surface, and gather dough together into a ball – Fold/knead the dough over itself just enough for it to hold together. It should not be smooth and DO NOT overmix. Divide dough in half and flatten to form 2 disks. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate 1 hour before using in recipes that call for pie crust.
Notes
Nutrition Per Serving
Filed Under
This recipe was adapted from the Joy of Cooking and The Bon Appetit Cookbook. They are both amazing general reference books that I have had in my kitchen for years. Highly recommend! Now go forth and make a homemade pie. You can DO THIS!!



I never was one to make a good apple pie, but since I’ve been followed your recipe it’s been a big hit. Thank you Natasha
That’s so great to hear. You’re very welcome!
Thank you so much for you pie crust recipe! Can hardly wait to make it
You’re welcome, Carol! Let us know how it turns out.
I am looking forward to making pies if any kind. Thank you
I refrigerated the pie crust overnight, now it is so hard I can’t roll it out. Is it because I left in in the fridge too long?
Hi Stacey. After refrigerating the crust, you should allow it to sit at room temperature until it is soft enough to work with. You don’t want it to be warm, but if it’s too cold, you will not be able to roll it out.
This may be beginners luck – I live at high altitude so I thought it might not be the one for me. It came together easily and was just as easy to roll out. Yummy. My husband says no more store bought pie crust. Used one for a green Chile quiche and froze the other.
I’m so glad this worked out well for you, Karen! Thank you so much for sharing that with me. I don’t have experience with high-altitude baking but you can find more tips on High Altitude Baking HERE, I hope this helps for any future baking you will try at a high altitude.
This pie crust is so amazing! I make a slightly smaller batch of dough to use on the bottom of the pie. Then I bake blind and use puff pastry on top. I love love love this recipe!
That sounds delicious!
This dough is falling apart. Measured everything correct and followed the guide.
Hi Lisa! The amount of water can vary depending on the temperature of your ingredients, your environment, and the way things are measured. It’s best to go off of visual cues to know when to add more or use less water. I have been using 6 to 8 tablespoons of water. If your daughter was too dry you just need to add a little more cold water. Also, be sure to measure your flour correctly, the way I am struct here in my how to measure ingredients tutorial.
Idk what in gods name this was supposed to make but it’s not a pie crust
Hi Rebecca! This is the same crust we use in our chicken pot pie and our famous apple pie recipe (which has thousands of 5-star reviews on the blog). This recipe has been tested and proven to work. I’d be happy to help troubleshoot if you provide some more information as to what the issue was.
There is no way you followed the directions correctly. It’s my go to pie crust recipe and it works every time!!
This pie crust paired with the chicken pot pie recipe is absolutely amazing!!
We think so too! Thank you for sharing!
The only pie crust I will be using from now on! Came together so easily (albeit with a bit of work as I made it by hand) and was so easy to roll out. I made it for your apple pie, and oh my goodness, what a winner of a recipe combination!
This turned out good and I’ll make again, but was frustrating as I selected half recipe and it seemed to refresh after I was part way through and didn’t notice until I put full amount of water in and it was goo. Ended up adding the rest and froze a crust, but checked again and site definitely keeps refreshing to double crust quantity, so something the watch for if you adjust that slide bar.
Hi Carrie, thank you for your feedback. When you click the number of servings and slide it to your desired serving size, it should adjust the ingredients. However, we have not found an update yet that will automatically adjust the instructions too. I tested sliding the serving size and it didn’t go back to the full serving size ingredients. How long did you leave the page in idle?
Hi Natasha! i made this pie crust yesterday, as i was rolling it, it was breaking like tearing apart. What do you think i did wrong? also do you put in the freezer or just the fridge?
Hi Sharlyn. The most common reason this happens is due to using too much flour. Be sure to measure your flour correctly. I show my process in my tutorial on How to Measure Ingredients. You may try adding a little bit more water if this happens again. The amount of water to use can fluctuate a bit depending on the temperature of your ingredients and how things are measured so it’s best to use visual cues (I use about 6-8tbsp water). Just make sure not over work the dough, you want to work it just until it comes together.
– I chill it in the refrigerator.
Fantastic flavour and flake. I made the whole recipe and got two 6″ lattice pie crusts out of it which are the perfectly sized pies for our household
I’m so glad you enjoyed it, Dawn!
I followed this to a tee. Also refrigerated the dough while working with it. It came out tough.
Hi Deborah. If your pie crust was tough, that is a result of overworking the dough. You’ll want to knead it just until it comes together. This is how you’ll obtain a flaky crust. I hope you’ll try again.
Can you keep the dough overnight in the fridge and use the next day?
You can prepare the crust and refrigerate up to 3 days ahead. Soften slightly at room temperature before rolling it out.
Hi, I was wondering how long you should bake this crust for and at what temp also. Thanks!
Hi Alexis. If you are referring to pre-baking the crust, please see the instructions above in the blog post. I use this crust for my sweet and savory pies, and the instructions for baking are included in those recipes on my blog, for example my apple and cherry pie recipes which can be found along with the other pie recipes in my PIE CATEGORY HERE.
I love your recipes! Just a question can I make this pie crust in a blender?
Hi Roula, a pastry blender will work, but a food processor will make the process much faster and easier. Yes, salt will work. I hope you love this recipe!
First my crust was too sticky; it kept sticking to the rolling pin and the mat. One Google piece of advice was to flour the dough, the pin and surface. Did that but now my crust falls apart too easily.
Hi Ramon, it sounds like maybe there are inconsistencies in how the ingredients are being measured. Check out our post on how to measure ingredients for baking which will help to get consistent results. If the dough seems dry to begin with, I wouldn’t add more flour.
I cant wait to try this recipe. Can I use salted butter and omit the sea salt?
Hi Dora, I imagine that may work! I hope you love it.
Love this crust. It’s buttery and flaky. Used recipe 2x for savory and sweet pies. No alterations besides mixing by hand for one and in stand mixer with pastry attachment for the other. No issues.
I’m so happy it all worked out and you loved it, Julia!
Hi! I can’t wait to use this recipe with my lemon curd next week! If I’m blind baking this crust, do you have a recommendation for how long and at what temperature? Thank you!
Hi Faigy, it isn’t necessary to blind bake for the cherry pie. The crust works out great without blind baking. If I were to blind bake I would probably do it at Preheat your oven to 375°F for 15 minutes or so depending on your oven and altitude.