Laminated Pie Dough
Updated Nov. 25, 2024

- Total Time
- 30 minutes, plus 2 hours’ chilling
- Prep Time
- 5 minutes
- Cook Time
- 15 minutes plus 2 hours’ chilling
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1tablespoon apple cider vinegar
- ⅔cup/115 grams ice water
- 3cups/385 grams all-purpose flour
- 2tablespoons/28 grams sugar
- 2teaspoons kosher salt (such as Diamond Crystal) or 1 teaspoon fine salt
- 1¼cups/285 grams cold unsalted butter, cut into cubes
Preparation
- Step 1
In a liquid measuring cup, add the vinegar to the ice water. In a large bowl, whisk together the flour, sugar and salt. Add the butter and gently flatten some of the larger pieces with your hands as you massage them into the flour. You want some pieces about the size of a marble, and some small and flat. Larger pieces create flakes in the crust while smaller pieces make it tender.
- Step 2
Make a well in the center of the mixture and pour in about ½ cup of the icy vinegar water. Using a fork, gently work the flour into the water until it is mostly hydrated, adding more liquid if needed. Turn the dough out onto a clean surface and gently knead it together a few times until the unincorporated bits of flour begin to disappear. Some floury bits are OK.
- Step 3
Press the dough into a square, about 1½ inches thick, and cut into quarters. Stack 2 of the quarters on top of one another (place the others to the side) and gently press into another square about 1½ inches thick. Slice that into quarters again, and stack those 4 quarters on top of one another. Form that stack into a round and cover loosely with plastic wrap. Use a rolling pin to gently roll over the covered dough round to flatten it out into a round about 1½ inches thick. Repeat this process with the remaining two quarters. Refrigerate for at least 2 hours and up to 2 days until ready to use.
Private Notes
Comments
Made this right after it was posted and used for the chess pie recipe. Worked really well for me with all of Vaughn's additional tips (watch the video!). Thank you Vaughn for the great video and recipe! This method and fat ratio is extremely similar to the book "Sister Pie" which is my normal go-to pie dough, but makes a bit more which is ideal for me (I like to have extra for decoration or if I mess up the rolling etc)
Will this work work gluten free flour?
How long and at what temperature to bake this for once it’s ’ready to use’?
I made this recipe for the Maple Chess Pie. The recipe was easy to follow and the pie dough was light and flaky. This is my new go to pie dough.
Best crust ever! Ingenious!
I think my butter flakes were too big. It was as definitely flaky, but it slumped horribly during the blind bake, even though it was frozen for hours beforehand. Overall, I’ll go back to Genevieve Ko’s food processor method. It may not get the flakiness, but it’s easier for a reliable crust.
