Blind Baking a Pie Crust Might Sound Scary―It's Anything But (2024)

Many sweet and savory pie recipes require pre-baking or "blind baking" a crust. No one really knows where the term got its name, but "blind" baking a crust means baking it without a filling.

Why Blind Bake a Crust?

Some pie and tart recipes have fillings that are not cooked at all, and need to be put into a fully cooked pie shell.

Some recipes like quiches recommend partially cooked pie shells because the baking time wouldn't be long enough to fully cook the dough otherwise.

Pre-baking a crust can ensure that your pie or tart crust will be fully baked and browned, and not soggy.

Blind Baking a Pie Crust Might Sound Scary―It's Anything But (1)

Pre-Baking a Store-Bought Crust

Are you using a homemade pie crust? Or a store bought frozen crust? Most store-bought frozen crusts have much less dough in them than a typical homemade crust, so they'll brown much faster than a homemade crust.

If you are pre-baking a store-bought frozen packaged crust, I recommend following the directions on the package for how to pre-bake that particular crust. Most instructions will have you defrost the crust, prick the bottom of the crust all over with the tines of a fork, and bake at 375°F to 450°F for 10 to 12 minutes.

Pre-baking a homemade crust is an entirely different matter, as homemade crusts can have twice as much dough and a higher proportion of fat than store-bought crusts.

How to Blind Bake a Homemade Crust

The most challenging issue you encounter when pre-baking a homemade crust is slumping sides. Homemade crusts especially have a high fat content. The fat melts when heated in the oven, and unless there is a filling to prop up the sides of the pie crust, it can slump.

Another issue is billowing air pockets in the center. If you don't blind bake with weights, or poke holes into the bottom of the crust, the bottom of the crust can puff up.

For years I pre-baked crusts the way most people did, about 15 minutes at a high baking temperature using foil or parchment and pie weights, then removing the pie weights and foil, poking the bottom of the crust with the tines of a fork, and continuing to bake for 20 minutes, uncovered.

Blind Baking a Pie Crust Might Sound Scary―It's Anything But (2)

This method works, but I've always found it a bit fussy. And even when you poke the bottom of the crust all over with little holes, sometimes you still get air pockets bubbling up at the bottom.

Discovering a Better Method

I have recently starting using a method I learned from Stella Parks at Serious Eats that consistently gives good results, even with hard-to-blind-bake crusts such as my no-fail sour cream 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.

It works! The pressure of the pie weights keeps the bottom of the crust from billowing up, and the sides from slumping too much.

Sugar, Rice, or Beans for Pie Weights

Another thing that Stella recommends is using sugar for pie weights instead of beans or other weights. Why sugar? Because of its small granular size, sugar distributes the weight more evenly against the sides of the crust.

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You might think the sugar would melt, but it's not in the oven long enough to reach its melting point. You can actually re-use the sugar in baking. In fact, cooking the sugar this way lightly caramelizes it, giving it more flavor.

You can also easily use uncooked rice or dry beans. I've extensively tested all three; they all work. I have found that sugar does give consistently better results, and helps keep the sides in place better.

Tips for Blind Baking Success

  • Use a dough that will pre-bake well. A dough that has a ratio of 1 cup of flour to 4 ounces of fat (1 stick of butter) is a high fat ratio dough and is more likely to slump when pre-baked. A dough that has a ratio of 1 1/4 cups of flour to 4 ounces of fat will have better structure and will slump less. (See our All-Butter Crust recipe.)
  • Roll out your dough a little bit wider than usual, so you can crimp the edges in the pie dish a little taller than usual. If the edges are taller or wider to begin with, they'll have more room to shrink.
  • Freeze the un-cooked pie crust for at least 30 minutes, preferably an hour, before blind-baking. If the crust is frozen when it goes into the hot oven, the outside edges will have more of a chance to set before the fat melts.
  • Line the crust with heavy duty foil. Heavy duty foil is less likely to tear than regular foil when you are forming it in the crust or when you are removing it and the pie weights. I've used parchment, but it doesn't mold to the edges of the the crust the way foil can.
  • Use sugar for pie weights. Dry beans and rice also work, but sugar works even better, especially if you are using a dough that is higher in fat content like my favorite no-fail sour cream pie crust.
  • Fill the weights to the top, they'll hold pressure agains the sides of the pie better.

Blind Baking a Pie Crust Might Sound Scary―It's Anything But (4)

Reuse Your Baked Sugar

If you use sugar as a pie weight, you'll be left with about 4 cups of lightly caramelized sugar granules which you can (and should!) easily reuse. Let the sugar cool to room temperature, run it through a food processor to break up any lumps, then store it in a cool, dry place like any other granulated sugar. Use it to make sugar cookies!

Pie Dough by Hand

Many of our pie recipes call for mixing the ingredients in a food processor. Good news! If you don't have a food processor, try our handmade pie crust recipe (no special equipment needed).

How to Make Pie Dough by HandGET THE RECIPE:

From the Editors Of Simply Recipes

How to Blind Bake a Pie Crust

Prep Time5 mins

Cook Time60 mins

Total Time65 mins

Yield1 pie crust

If you know you are making a crust that will be pre-baked, form the edges of the dough higher than usual, above the edge of the pie pan.

Ingredients

  • 1 frozenhomemade pie crust

Method

  1. Preheat the oven to 350°F:

    Make sure you are starting with a frozen pie crust, not defrosted. Your pie crust should been in the freezer for at least 30 minutes, preferably an hour.

  2. Line the inside of the frozen pie crust with foil:

    Use heavy duty aluminum foil, pressing the foil against the sides and bottom of the crust, allowing the foil to extend by a couple of inches on two opposing sides.

    Blind Baking a Pie Crust Might Sound Scary―It's Anything But (5)

    Blind Baking a Pie Crust Might Sound Scary―It's Anything But (6)

    Stick-free heavy duty foil works well for this, to help keep the crust from sticking to the foil when you remove it. You may need two sheets of foil to get full coverage.

  3. Fill the pie crust with pie weights:

    Fill the pie crust to the top with pie weights. You can use ceramic weights, dry beans, rice, or white sugar. Sugar works well because of its small granule size; it distributes the weight more evenly against the crust. (Baking the sugar this way also lightly caramelizes it, making it even more flavorful if you want to use it later for baking recipes.)

    Blind Baking a Pie Crust Might Sound Scary―It's Anything But (7)

    Blind Baking a Pie Crust Might Sound Scary―It's Anything But (8)

  4. Bake:

    For a pie that you will cook further, like a quiche, bake the crust until it's dry and just beginning to brown, but still pale in color, about 20-30 minutes if you are using pie weights or beans and 45-50 minutes if you are using sugar.

    For a pie that will need no further baking, like a chocolate cream pie, bake the crust until it's evenly browned and crisp-looking, 30-45 minutes if you used pie weights or beans and 60-75 minutes if you used sugar.

  5. Remove from oven:

    Remove the pie shell from the oven. Using the excess foil on 2 sides of the pie shell, lift out the pie weights from the pie shell. Let the pie weights cool. Store them for future use.

    Did you love the recipe? Give us some stars and leave a comment below!

    Simple Tip!

    When baking a pie with your pre-baked pie crust, I recommend protecting the rim from getting over-baked with aluminum foil or a pie rim protector.

  • Pie Crusts
Blind Baking a Pie Crust Might Sound Scary―It's Anything But (2024)

FAQs

What temperature should you blind bake a pie crust at? ›

Add pie weights, dry rice, dried beans or (as I've done here) dry wheat berries, enough to fill the pan 2/3 full. Chill the crust for 30 minutes; this will solidify the fat, which helps prevent shrinkage. Bake in a preheated 375°F oven for 20 minutes. Remove the pie from the oven, and lift out the paper and weights.

How to blind bake a pie crust without shrinking? ›

Use pie weights.

Line the pie crust with a big piece of parchment paper or aluminum foil, then use pie weights to weigh down the pie crust to keep it from sliding down and shrinking. You can buy pie weights or you use dry beans, uncooked rice, or even pennies.

What does blind baking prevent the crust from doing? ›

Pre-baking, or blind baking, is a process in which pie dough is placed into its pan and baked in the oven prior to filling. Pre-baking keeps the rising steam from puffing up the layers of crust during baking.

Why is it important to dock a pie crust before baking or blind baking it? ›

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.

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.

Why did my pie crust shrink when I blind baked it? ›

Here's our problem: As the pie dough bakes, the fat melts. This causes the pie crust to shrink down the sides of the pie dish. And as the fat melts, it creates steam.

How do I stop my 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.

How long do you blind bake pastry for? ›

Fill with rice, dried beans, or metal or ceramic baking weights. (This stops the pastry base rising during cooking.) Place on a baking tray and cook in an oven preheated to 220C for 8-10 minutes.

What happens if you don't pre-bake pie crust? ›

"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).

Can you reuse rice after blind baking? ›

Can You Reuse Rice after Blind Baking? While rice should not be cooked or eaten after blind baking, it can be continually used as an alternative to pie weights. If you are using rice to weigh down your pie crust while blind baking, make sure to label and store it with your other baking supplies for your next creation.

Can you bake blind without beans? ›

But there are alternatives to baking beans – some of which you may even have in your cupboard. If you're new to blind baking, the simplest homemade solution is rice. It acts as a great pastry weight and does not burn – plus it's easy to tip out or save to use again.

What weights are good for blind baking pie crust? ›

Dried beans - Although you can't cook and eat them after use, dried beans make great reusable pie weights. Dried beans weigh down your pie crust to prevent misshaping during blind baking like traditional pie weights.

What temperature is most suitable for blind baking pastry shells? ›

In almost all cookbooks, the recommended temperature for baking a pie or tart pastry blind is 425 to 450 degrees.

What temperature to bake pie crust at 350? ›

Bake 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 egg white? ›

Lift up the paper, or aluminum foil liner with the weights and carefully move it to the bowl. Prick the sides and bottom again with a fork, Brush the sides and bottom of the crust with lightly beaten egg white. This will create a barrier to the liquid in your filling.

What temperature do you bake pies at? ›

1. Preheat the oven to the temperature that your recipe recommends. Most fruit pies bake at a temperature between 350 degrees F (175 degrees C) and 450 degrees F (230 degrees C). Some recipes call for baking the pie in a 450 degree F oven to begin with, then turning down the oven to about 350 degrees F.

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