How to Blind Bake Pie Crust (2024)

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Learn to blind bake your pie crust for your pie recipes! You can partially bake it for a baked pie or fully bake it for a no-bake filled pie. Either way, I’ve got you covered!

How to Blind Bake Pie Crust (1)

Table of Contents

  • What is Blind Baking?
  • How to Blind Bake Pie Crust
  • Why Did My Pie Crust Shrink?
  • Watch How to Blind Bake Pie Crust
  • Get the Recipe

What is Blind Baking?

Blind baking a crust is basically when you pre-bake it. You can either partially bake it or fully bake it. Which way you go depends on the pie filling. The main difference is the length of baking time.

  • Partial Bake: If you are going to be baking the pie filling but the filling doesn’t take as long to bake as the crust, you’d want to partially bake the crust prior to adding the filling.
  • Full Bake: If you are making a filling that is no-bake or is cooked on the stove, then you’d want to fully bake the crust so that when you add the filling, the crust is ready to go.

Blind baking isn’t hard, but it is a process to ensure a nice crust that doesn’t shrink or bubble up.

How to Blind Bake Pie Crust (2)

How to Blind Bake Pie Crust

The first thing you need is a good Flaky All-Butter Pie Crust. Once made, it’s time to blind bake it. To successfully blind bake your crust, you’ll want to do two things. One is to dock your crust, the other is to weigh it down.

Dock The Crust

“Docking” the crust refers to poking holes it in. I use a fork and poke holes around the sides and bottom of the crust. Why? As the pie bakes and the butter melts, steam is released. The steam can create air pockets that then bubble up on your crust. Docking the crust gives it little holes where the steam can release so your crust won’t bubble up so much.

Weigh It Down

Our other tool for blind baking is to use pie weights. Pie weights have two important uses. One is to contribute to reducing air bubbles by pushing them down. The second use is to help keep the sides of the crust in place as it bakes so that it doesn’t fall down the sides of the pan or shrink.

You have several options for pie weights. I have two packs of these ceramic pie weights, which work well. There are also metal pie weights. And if you don’t want to buy special equipment, there’s always dry rice or dry beans.

While I’ve used ceramic pie weights a good bit, I have come to love using rice. The smaller pieces ensure better coverage. There’s no space between or gaps, where a bubble could pop up.

You also want to be sure to use parchment paper underneath whatever pie weight you decide to use. Try to lay it as flat against the crust as you can, then add the weights.

Now your crust is ready to be baked!

How to Blind Bake Pie Crust (3)

Bake the Crust

How long you bake the crust depends a little on the particular pie crust recipe and whether or not you are partially or fully baking the crust. For a partially baked crust, I recommend baking for 20-25 minutes at 350 degrees F, or until it’s just beginning to turn golden. If you want it fully baked, remove the pie weights after 20-25 minutes and then bake another 5-10 minutes or until it’s nice and golden.

How to Blind Bake Pie Crust (4)

Why Did My Pie Crust Shrink?

While it can be hard to say with certainty why it shrank, here are a few tips and tricks to ensure that it doesn’t happen.

  • Use Pie Weights: I talked about this before, but the weights help keep the crust in place, so you’ll want to have something to weight it down.
  • Don’t Use Glass: Glass pans with smooth sides are more likely to have the crust slide down the sides or shrink.
  • Refrigerate The Crust: After you prep your crust in the pie plate, refrigerate it for at least 3-4 hours or freeze it for 1 hour.
  • Lower Temperature: Higher baking temperatures lead to more shrinkage. At higher temperatures, the gluten tightens up and leads to shrinking. Rather than baking at 400 degrees or higher, try 350 degrees.
  • Extra Crust: If all else fails, you can make your crust a little larger. If you make your crust a little bigger than necessary, it gives a little wiggle room so that if it does shrink a bit, all is still well. If you make my homemade crust recipe, it actually gives you two crusts so you’ll have extra to work with to make a little bit bigger crust.

I hope you find this method helpful. I have found it to be very successful and produce a great crust!

How to Blind Bake Pie Crust (5)

Watch How to Blind Bake Pie Crust

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How to Blind Bake Pie Crust (6)

Recipe

How to Blind Bake Pie Crust

5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star 5 from 1 review

  • Author: Lindsay
  • Prep Time: 15 minutes
  • Cook Time: 25 minutes
  • Total Time: 40 minutes
  • Yield: 1 crust
  • Category: Dessert
  • Method: Oven
  • Cuisine: American
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Description

Learn to blind bake your pie crust for your pie recipes! You can partially bake it for a baked pie or fully bake it for a no-bake filled pie!

Ingredients

Homemade Pie Crust

Instructions

  1. Prepare pie crust according to instructions. Place it in a 9 inch pie plate and flute or crimp the edges as desired. “Dock” the crust bypricking the crust with a fork to allow steam to escape evenly. This helps the crust not bubble up and cook unevenly.
  2. Refrigerate the crust for 3-4 hours or freeze for about an hour. You want to be cure the crust is very cold.
  3. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F and line the pie crust with parchment paper. Be sure the parchment paper presses all the way against the crust so that it’s flush.
  4. Fill the pie crust with pie weights, rice or beans.
  5. Bake for 20-25 minutes, or until the crust just begins to brown. At this point, the crust is partially baked and it is done if that’s what you want. For a fully baked crust, remove the parchment paper and pie weights and bake for another 5-10 minutes, or until the crust is golden.
  6. For a no bake pie filling, let the crust cool completely before adding the filling. For a filling that will be baked, you can add it to the crust while warm.

Categories

  • Fall and Holiday Favorites
  • Holidays
  • Pie
  • Recipes
  • Recipes with video
  • Sweets and Treats
  • Thanksgiving
How to Blind Bake Pie Crust (2024)

FAQs

How to Blind Bake Pie Crust? ›

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.

What's the best way to blind bake a pie crust? ›

Stella advocates lining a frozen crust with foil, filling with pie weights, and then baking at an even 350°F temperature for the entirety of the baking time. No removing of the pie weights mid way, no poking the bottom with a fork.

What happens if you blind bake without weights? ›

If you don't have pie weights, you could use something similar like pennies, dry beans, dry rice, or even sugar. I don't recommend blind baking your crust without anything to weigh it down though, because it will likely lose its shape, bubble, and shrink.

What temperature should I prebake my pie crust at? ›

Line the crust with foil, parchment, or a paper coffee filter. Fill it about two-thirds full with dried beans, uncooked rice (or other uncooked grain berries), pie weights, or granulated sugar. Bake the crust in a preheated 375°F oven for 20 minutes, set on a baking stone or steel if you have one.

What temperature do you blind bake pastry at? ›

Heat oven to 200C/180C fan/gas 6 or the stated temperature for the recipe you are using. Line the tart tin with baking parchment and fill with ceramic baking beans or dried pulses.

Should I egg wash my pie crust before blind baking? ›

An egg wash is not necessary when blind baking, though if you want to add some shine to the edges of the pie, you can brush the crust with egg wash after removing the pie weights and before returning the pie to the oven to finish baking.

Do you grease a pie dish before blind baking? ›

BLIND BAKING BRILLIANCE

Add the dough straight to your tin. There is no need to grease the tin before you line it with pastry – the high butter content in the pastry will naturally stop it from sticking.

How do you keep pre baked pie crust from getting soggy? ›

Blind Bake

The most common way to ward off a soggy pie crust is by a process called blind baking. Blind baking means you pre-bake the crust (sometimes covered with parchment or foil and weighed down with pie weights to prevent the crust from bubbling up) so that it sets and crisps up before you add any wet filling.

How long to bake homemade pie crust at 350 degrees? ›

If your recipe doesn't have instructions and you're wondering how long to pre bake the pie, here's what I do: I pre bake the prepped pie crust at 350°F. If the crust is homemade from scratch, I pre bake for 35 minutes. If the crust is store-bought, I pre bake for 30 minutes.

How do you Prebake a pie crust without shrinking it? ›

Higher temperatures make the gluten in pie crusts tighten up and shrink a bit. So if your recipe requires pre-baking the pie crust, it will shrink less if you bake it “low and slow” (around 350 degrees F).

How do you know when to blind bake? ›

When Do You Need To Blind Bake a Crust? There are two times when blind baking is necessary: When we're making a custard pie or when the pie filling is unbaked. With a custard pie, like a pumpkin pie, the moisture in the filling can make the crust soggy before it has time to actually bake.

Should I bake the bottom pie crust first? ›

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.

How do you keep pastry from shrinking when blind baking? ›

When blind baking, line the pastry with baking paper and fill to the brim with baking beans/uncooked rice, which will support the sides of the pastry and help prevent shrinkage. Start shortcrust off at 190°C/170°C fan/gas 5 to quickly set the pastry. If the oven temperature is too low, the pastry will shrink.

What to use instead of pie weights? ›

What Can You Use Instead of Pie Weights? Instead of pie weights, you can use dried beans or rice, granulated sugar, popcorn kernels or steel ball bearings. If you are not using pie weights, the idea is to mimic what the pie weight does and to make sure that the alternative is oven-safe.

Can I use wax paper to blind bake a pie crust? ›

When we checked with Reynolds, one of the biggest manufacturers of waxed paper, they said it should never be directly exposed to the heat of the oven, so that left us with just foil and parchment paper to test. We blind baked batches of our Foolproof Pie Dough with each one.

Can you use aluminum foil to blind bake crust? ›

You can blind bake like a pro by keeping a few tips in mind. Line the unbaked pie crust with parchment paper or aluminum foil. Use pie weights, dried beans, or clean coins to weigh down the lined crust so the bottom doesn't puff and the sides don't slouch while it bakes.

How long to par bake pie crust at 350 degrees? ›

If your recipe doesn't have instructions and you're wondering how long to pre bake the pie, here's what I do: I pre bake the prepped pie crust at 350°F. If the crust is homemade from scratch, I pre bake for 35 minutes. If the crust is store-bought, I pre bake for 30 minutes.

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