Our perfect apple pie recipe (2024)

  • 15 Ingredients
  • 5 Method Steps

15 Ingredients

  • 1 3/4 cups (260g) plain flour, plus extra for dusting

  • 1/2 cup (75g) self-raising flour

  • 185g unsalted butter, chilled, cut into small pieces

  • 1/3 cup (75g) caster sugar

  • 2 eggs

  • 1 tbsp chilled water

  • 1 tbsp milk

  • Demerara sugar or caster sugar, to sprinkle

  • Ice-cream, to serve

  • Filling

  • 45g unsalted butter

  • 1/2 cup (110g) caster sugar

  • 8 large Granny Smith apples

  • Juice of 1 lemon

  • 1/4 tsp ground cloves

  • 1 tsp Coles Cinnamon Ground

  • Select all ingredients

5 Method Steps

  • Sift flours (1 3/4 cups (260g) plain flour, plus extra for dusting|1/2 cup (75g) self-raising flour) and a pinch of salt into a large mixing bowl. Add butter (185g unsalted butter, chilled, cut into small pieces) and rub lightly into flour with your fingertips. Lift mixture high above the bowl as you rub, to incorporate air into the pastry and make it lighter. Continue until mixture resembles fine breadcrumbs, then stir through sugar (1/3 cup (75g) caster sugar). Lightly beat 1 egg with 1 tablespoon chilled water, then drizzle over flour mixture. Start to bring the dough together by cutting the liquid into the dough with a blunt knife, then form into a smooth ball with your hands, adding a little more water if necessary. Divide dough into two pieces, one slightly larger than the other. Wrap in plastic wrap, and chill for 30 minutes.

  • To make the filling, peel and core the apples (8 large Granny Smith apples), and cut each into 8 pieces. Toss immediately with lemon juice (Juice of 1 lemon) in a large bowl, to prevent apples from discolouring. Place the butter (45g unsalted butter) and sugar (1/2 cup (110g) caster sugar) in a large frypan over medium-low heat. When butter has melted, add apples and spices (1/4 tsp ground cloves|1 tsp Coles Cinnamon Ground), then stir to coat. Cook, stirring occasionally, for 10 minutes or until apples have softened. Set aside to cool.

  • Roll out the larger pastry ball on a floured workbench to a 30cm circle (about 2mm thick). Roll pastry around rolling pin, then unroll over a 22cm metal pie dish. Gently press into corners and allow excess to overhang. Place filling in base with a slotted spoon. Roll the small pastry piece to a 25cm circle. Beat remaining egg with milk (1 tbsp milk), brushing some on rim of the base. Top with small pastry.

  • Lift the pie dish and cut excess pastry from edges with a sharp knife. Crimp edges of pastry together the tail of a spoon. Chill for 30 minutes. Preheat oven to 180C, place pie dish on a baking tray and cut air vents in the centre of the pie. Brush top of pie with more beaten egg, sprinkle with demerara or caster sugar (Demerara sugar or caster sugar, to sprinkle) and bake for 45 minutes or until golden brown.

  • Serve warm or cold with ice-cream (Ice-cream, to serve).

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Recipe Notes

Should you cook apples before putting them in a pie?

Absolutely. Don’t skip this step. While there are apple pie recipes that say to toss the uncooked apples with cornflour and pile in the pastry shell – the theory being that the cornflour will thicken the juices – we believe that cooking the apples first both develops the flavours and helps keep the pastry crisp. If the apple pieces are added straight up, they will pile too high, meaning your pastry will dome over them. As the apples cook down, they will become smaller and start leaking liquid. This results in a soggy bottom and a sunken top.

What is the trick to a great apple pie?

By following this apple pie recipe to a tee, you will have apple pie perfection, as long as you don’t take shortcuts! In order to get the classic homey taste, you have to follow the rules otherwise you may be disappointed. Okay, one exception, you are allowed to make the pastry in a food processor (see below). After making your pastry and filling the crust make sure it spends enough time in the fridge. You want the butter to be cold before it enters the oven, if not it melts into the flour too quickly and you lose the flaky quality. Part of the glory of any apple pie is a generous filling. This recipe uses eight large Granny Smith apples. While other varieties can be used, we like Granny Smiths because they hold their texture when baked. Yes, they are a bit tart, but this is mellowed though the initial cooking with butter and sugar. Allow the cooked apples to cool before placing in the pastry shell. If added hot it will start melting the butter in the pastry.

How do you bake an apple pie so the base isn’t soggy?

Why some cooks insist you must blind bake the pastry before adding the filling, this recipe proves this isn’t the case. Simply place a baking sheet on the bottom shelf of the oven and let it preheat. Place the pie dish on the sheet. The heat from the tray will immediately start crisping the base from below.

Can I use a food processor for the pastry?

While I should be a pedant and say no, of course you can! Making pastry by hand is rewarding but there’s very little difference between the end products and both will be superior to regular store-bought pastry. Pulse the two flours, sugar and salt in a food processor to just combine. Add the butter and pulse until the mixture is the texture of fine breadcrumbs. Add the egg and water and now process until the mixture forms a rough ball. Transfer to a work surface and gently knead into a smooth ball. Continue as per recipe.

NUTRITIONAL INFORMATION

Nutrition per Serving

%Daily Value#

Nutrition information and Health Score does not include ingredients listed as to serve or any serving suggestions.

Nutrition information is calculated using an ingredient database and should be considered an estimate.

# The % daily values indicates how much of a nutrient in a food serving contributes to a daily diet, based on general nutritional advice for a diet of 2100 calories a day.

* Health Scores are calculated on a 1-10 scale based on nutrient density and USDA (global standard) recommendations for a healthy diet. A higher Health Score indicates a healthier recipe. The value is based on the impact of macronutrients and micronutrients in the recipe.

Image by Brendan Smith

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Our perfect apple pie recipe (2024)

FAQs

Should I prebake the bottom crust for apple pie? ›

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 the bottom crust of apple pie from getting soggy? ›

Crust dust is a 1:1 mixture of flour and granulated sugar. When baking a pie, especially a fruit pie, a couple of teaspoons of crust dust sprinkled into the bottom of the crust will help prevent the crust from becoming saturated with juicy filling as it bakes.

What is the best apple for making apple pie? ›

The best apples for making apple pie
  • Braeburn. This apple is a descendant of Granny Smith, but slightly sweeter. ...
  • Cortland. ...
  • Crispin (Mutsu). ...
  • Golden Delicious. ...
  • Granny Smith. ...
  • Honeycrisp. ...
  • Jonagold or Jonathan. ...
  • Northern Spy.
Oct 8, 2021

How long should I prebake my pie crust? ›

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.

How do you get a crispy crust on the bottom of a pie? ›

Getting a brown, flaky/crispy bottom crust on your pie is all about quick and effective heat transfer. That's why aluminum or aluminum/steel pans — rather than glass or stoneware — are your best choice for baking pie. Metal, especially aluminum, transfers heat quickly and efficiently from oven to pie crust.

What is the best thickener for apple pie filling? ›

Very often flour or cornstarch is used, but in certain instances tapioca, arrowroot and potato starch can also help achieve the desired consistency. Tapioca starch is preferable for products that will be frozen because it will not break down when thawed.

What is the apple pie rule? ›

Here's a look at one of the most unusual laws on the books in the Badger State. In Wisconsin, it is illegal to serve apple pie in public restaurants without a slice of cheese on top. Yes, you read that right: cheese is required on top of any apple pie that is served in a public restaurant in Wisconsin.

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

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

Should you poke holes in the bottom of pie crust? ›

With docking, the holes allow steam to escape, so the crust should stay flat against the baking dish when it isn't held down by pie weights or a filling. Otherwise the crust can puff up, not only impacting appearance but also leaving you with less space for whatever filling you have planned.

Is it better to cook apple pie filling first? ›

To bring out the best apple flavor and texture, pre-cook the filling for about 5 minutes on the stove. Bake and cool the pie, and then top with vanilla ice cream for the ultimate homestyle dessert.

Why is there so much liquid at the bottom of my apple pie? ›

We suspect the soggy bottom is being caused by juices from the apples in the pie, rather than the shortcrust recipe itself. Even with semolina in the bottom of the pie, to soak up the juices, there is still a risk that the juices will seep into the base.

What apples should not be used for apple pie? ›

There are a few apples that don't make the cut. While great for snacking, Gala, Fuji and Red Delicious are the most common apples that won't hold up in the oven and will give you a watery-mushy pie, tart or cake.

How many apples do you need for pie? ›

It's hard to know exactly how many apples you'll need for an apple pie, but for one 9-inch pie, you probably won't need more than 10 apples. If your apples are smaller, you'll probably need 10; if they're really big apples, you'll use fewer of them.

How many apples are 6 cups? ›

If the recipe calls for 6 cups of sliced apples, you'll likely need about 8 medium-sized apples, or about 2 pounds of medium-sized apples. Now go fill your home with the scents of the season and bake the day away.

Should you bake bottom crust first? ›

"Blind baking" is the term for baking a piecrust before you add anything to the pie. If you don't blind bake the crust, the liquid from the filling will prevent the pastry from becoming flaky and crisp. You'll be left with a pie that has a soggy bottom. (It tastes just as bad as it sounds).

Do you grease the bottom of a pie crust? ›

Pie and tart doughs have so much butter in them that they almost self-grease as they bake. The butter melts and turns into steam and browns the bottoms making them crispy. If you add more grease into that situation, the texture of your pie crust may change in the oven. So you definitely don't want to overdo it.

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