Nothing says summer to me like
strawberry pie. Â But before you make the most delicious mouthwatering creation of fresh berries and homemade glaze piled high with
whipped cream, you have to make a good pie crust. Â
I had been making a different butter crust, but it just wasn't as good as it could have been and if I am going to go to the trouble to make a pie crust it should be really good. Â My husband who really should be a food critic, determined that the crust recipe I had been using was industrial and lacked flakiness. Â He was right.Â
So I decided to try my hand at my Aunt Carol's Never Fail Pie Crust again with a few tweaks. Â I had abandoned this recipe because it calls for shortening which I avoid buying since it is such an unhealthy fat. Â I used real butter in place of shortening. Â To make the dough easier to handle, I freeze the butter ahead of time and use ice water. Â
The result: Â A delicious, flaky pie crust made with butter instead of shortening.
3 cups flour
1 1/4 cup cold butter, cubed (2 1/2 sticks)
1 tsp. salt
1 egg, well beaten
5 Tbsp. ice water
1 Tbsp. vinegar
1. Â Cut up butter and put it in the freezer for a while before starting. Â
2. Â Cut butter, flour, and salt into coarse crumbs with a pastry blender. Â This takes a little of work since the butter is frozen. Â You can also process this step in a food processor.
3. Â Combine egg, vinegar, and water. Â Pour liquid into flour mixture all at one time.
4. Â Blend with a spoon just until all the flour is moistened. Â
5. Â Roll 1/2 of the dough out on a lightly floured surface. Â Fold flattened dough in half and then in half again so that it can be easily lifted into the pie pan. Â Lift the dough into the pan and unfold so that it covers the pie pan.
6. Â Press the dough into the pan and trim and shape the edges for a one crust pie. Â For a two crust pie, pour filling into the pie. Â Then cover with top crust, seal and shape the edges. Â Â
7. Â To bake without filling, generously prick sides and bottom of pie crust with a fork to prevent the crust from collapsing into the pan. Â Or line with foil and pour pie weights or dry beans onto the foil to weigh the crust down and prevent it from shrinking into the pan. Â
8. Â Bake for 15 to 20 minutes or until golden brown at 425 degrees. Â If I use pie weights, I bake for 15 minutes and then bake for another 5 to 7 minutes after removing the foil and pie weights. Â If making a two crust pie, follow baking instructions in the filling recipe. Â
You can freeze extra dough for future use. Â This recipe makes enough dough for two pie crusts. Â
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