Easy Gluten Free Pie Crust Recipe (2024)

With the holidays here, the quest to turn grandma’s pie crust gluten free was on.It came together beautifully, rolled out well and baked up great! The taste is amazing and none of my guests are going to know that gluten free hit them. So, grandma’s old fashioned pie crust went gluten free and here is my homemade, Easy Gluten Free Pie Crust Recipe! It is a double-crust pie recipe.

Homemade Gluten Free Pie Crust

When I first moved out on my own and began making pie to bring to family dinners I learned how to make my grandmother’s homemade pie crust. I remember my then mother-in-law telling me not to waste my time on making homemade pie crust, that the stuff in the box would be just fine. My grandma’s recipe was so good though and it wasn’t that hard to make. Now that we are a gluten free family, a homemade pie crust is even more important to me. Gluten free pies or just the pie crust are nearly impossible to find in the store and if you do find them, what they taste like is another story. This homemade gluten-free pie crust is the perfect pie crust.

Easy Gluten Free Pie Crust Recipe (1)

Gluten Free Pie Crust Ingredients:

Yields 1 double crust pie or 2 single crust pies

  • 2 1/2 cups Gluten Free Flour – I used 2 cups Pamela’s All-Purpose Flour Artisan Blend and 1/2 cup Pamela’s Baking Mix
  • 1 cup Real Butter, chilled
  • one teaspoon salt
  • 1 large egg (cold)
  • 1/4 cup very cold water
  • 1 tbsp apple cider vinegar
Easy Gluten Free Pie Crust Recipe (2)

If you can’t find Pamela’s and you are looking for the best gluten-free flour, my other two suggestions are:

  1. Bob’s Red Mill Gluten-Free 1-to-1 Baking Flour: This blend is designed to substitute wheat flour in baking recipes without the need for additional ingredients or custom recipes.
  2. King Arthur Gluten-Free All-Purpose Flour: Another versatile blend that works well in many recipes, including cookies, cakes, and bread.

How To Make Gluten Free Pie Crust Recipe

In a medium bowl blend the two flours together with the salt.

Cut the cold butter into small pieces and stir into your gluten-free flour blend.

Easy Gluten Free Pie Crust Recipe (3)

Using a pastry cutter or a fork, cut the butter into the flour mixture. Do NOT over mix the butter into the dry ingredients. It should be crumbly with small chunks of butter here and there.

Easy Gluten Free Pie Crust Recipe (4)

Whisk the egg and add the egg, cold water, and vinegar to the flour and butter mixture. Stir well until a nice dough forms. Use your hands to blend the gluten-free pie dough the rest of the way.

Separate in two. Form two discs and wrap in plastic wrap. Chill for 30 minutes or so.

Easy Gluten Free Pie Crust Recipe (5)

For the final steps of this Easy Gluten Free Pie Crust Recipe, remove the discs one at a time from the refrigerator when ready to roll dough out. Place disk on a piece of parchment paper and place another sheet of parchment on top. Rolling between two sheets of parchment paper will limit how much the dough sticks. Use a rolling pin to roll out the chilled dough until it’s just over an 1/8 inch thick.

Lift the top sheet of paper off and flip the bottom sheet over your pie plate with the dough in place. Carefully pull the parchment paper off and press the dough into the pie plate.

Easy Gluten Free Pie Crust Recipe (6)

You may have to use your fingers to press small tears back together but the crust stays together very well.

Trim extra crust away and crimp the edges around your pie plate using your fingers.

Easy Gluten Free Pie Crust Recipe (7)

If you’re using a single crust recipe, bake as instructed now. I made an apple pie with a double crust so at this point I filled it with my apple pie filling.

Easy Gluten Free Pie Crust Recipe (8)

Then topped it with my top crust and cut vents in the top crust.

With the little bit of dough I had left I made a few cut outs and added them to the top of my pie.

Easy Gluten Free Pie Crust Recipe (10)

Bake your double crust pie according to instructions for your pie (usually about 45 minutes in an oven preheated to 400 degrees Fahrenheit).

Easy Gluten Free Pie Crust Recipe (11)

Or if you want to pre-bake a single crust for a no bake pie recipe, preheat oven to 400 degrees F. Then line the pie pan with one pie crust and cover with foil. Fill the foil with dried beans or other pie weights to keep pie crust from bubbling up. Bake for 25 minutes or until the crust is just turning golden brown.

Printable Recipe Card

Easy Gluten Free Pie Crust Recipe

November 20, 2016

byScarlet Paolicchi

Cuisine Gluten Free

Category Family Food Ideas And Recipes

This gluten free pie crust is easy to work with and comes out buttery and nicely flaky.

Persons

8

Prep Time

20 minutes

Cook Time

45 minutes

Wait Time

30 minutes

Total Time

1 hour, 5 minutes

Rate this recipe

|

8ratings

Easy Gluten Free Pie Crust Recipe (12)

Notes

Yields 1 double pie crust or 2 single pie crusts.

Ingredients

  • 2 1/2 cups Gluten Free Flour
  • 1 cup butter, (cold)
  • 1teaspoon salt
  • 1 large egg (cold)
  • 1/4 cup very cold water
  • 1 tbsp apple cider vinegar

Instructions

  1. In a medium bowl blend the flour together with the salt.
  2. Cut the cold butter into small pieces (pea sized) and stir into your flour.
  3. Using a pastry cutter or a fork, cut the butter into the flour mixture. Do NOT over mix the butter into the flour. It should be crumbly with small chunks of butter here and there.
  4. Whisk the egg and add the egg, cold water, and vinegar to the flour and butter mixture. Stir well until a nice dough forms. Use your hands to blend the dough the rest of the way.
  5. Separate in two. Form two discs and wrap in plastic wrap. Chill for 30 minutes or so.
  6. For the final steps of this Easy Gluten Free Pie Crust Recipe, remove the discs one at a time from the refrigerator when ready to roll dough out. Place disk on a piece of parchment paper and place another sheet of parchment on top. Rolling between two sheets of parchment paper will limit how much the dough sticks.
  7. Lift the top sheet of paper off and flip the bottom sheet over your pie place with the dough in place. Carefully pull the parchment paper off and press the dough into the pie plate.
  8. You may have to use your fingers to press small tears back together but the crust stays together very well.
  9. Trim extra crust away and form an edge around your pie plate using your fingers to shape the crust edges.
  10. You pie crust is now ready to use in a recipe.
  11. If you are making a double crust recipe, you will add the filling and then top with the second rolled out crust. Smush crust edges together to seal the pie and then cut vent air holes. Bake according to pie recipe (typically 45 minutes at 400 F).
  12. If you want to pre-bake a single crust for a no bake pie recipe, preheat oven to 400 degrees F. Then line the pie pan with one pie crust and cover with foil. Fill the foil with dried beans or rice to keep pie crust from bubbling up. Bake for 25 minutes or until the crust is just turning golden.

Nutrition Facts

Easy Gluten Free Pie Crust Recipe

Serves: 8

Amount Per Serving:

1 slice

Calories 349.2 kcal
% Daily Value*
Total Fat 24.97 g 36.9%
Saturated Fat 14.77 g 70%
Trans Fat 0.93 g
Cholesterol 84.26 mg 28%
Sodium 200.91 mg 8.3%
Total Carbohydrate 30.04 g 10%
Dietary Fiber 4.08 g 16%
Sugars 1.41 g
Protein 5.11 g
Vitamin A 204.09 µg Vitamin C 0.0 mg
Calcium 38.02 mg Iron 1.75 mg

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily values may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.

Family Focus Blog

Tags

dessert recipes,

gluten-free recipes,

pie recipes

©2024 Copyright Family Focus Blog

People choose to make gluten-free pie crusts for various reasons. Some people choose a gluten-free diet for perceived health benefits. Some people simply prefer the taste or texture of gluten-free baked goods, or they may follow a gluten-free diet for personal reasons. When hosting guests who have celiac disease or gluten sensitivity, making a gluten-free pie crust ensures that everyone can enjoy the dessert without worry.

Please keep in mind, as with all of our gluten free recipes, all gluten free flours are not the same and you may need to experiment if you are using a different brand. I hope you enjoy thisEasy Gluten Free Pie Crust Recipe. This flaky crustis so good. Have you ever made a homemade pie crust before?

Happy gluten-free baking!

Related Posts:

Gluten Free Cheesecake Recipe with Cherry and Chocolate Topping

No Bake Chocolate Peanut Butter Pie Recipe

Gluten Free Muffins Recipe Chocolate Chip Peanut Butter

Easy Gluten Free Pie Crust Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Why does my gluten-free pie crust fall apart? ›

Common reasons why gluten-free pie crust fall apart include choice of flour and hydration levels.

What is gluten-free pie crust made from? ›

This gloriously flaky gluten-free pie crust recipe rivals a wheat crust! It's super flavorful thanks to whole food ingredients: sweet rice, oat, and millet flours plus flax or chia seed (no xanthan gum!). A couple of classical pastry techniques make it easy to work with and give it extra layers.

How do you keep gluten-free pastry from crumbling? ›

Add xanthan gum to gluten-free flour. It enhances elastic qualities that gluten-free flours lack, making it easier to work with and less likely to crumble. Add plenty of water to the gluten-free flour to prevent the pastry from becoming too dry when rolling out.

Does gluten-free pie crust taste different? ›

The best gluten free pie crust shouldn't taste gluten free. It should be flaky, delicate, and buttery, like a normal, gluten-full pie crust!

Does gluten-free crust take longer to bake? ›

Bake gluten free pizza for longer than you would bake a regular pizza of the same size. For the pizza in the video above, the bake time is about 13 minutes on a hot baking stone. (A dough with gluten would be about 8 minutes.)

How do you fix crumbly gluten-free dough? ›

If your cookie dough is too dry and crumbly, just add back to the mixing bowl and stir in a couple tablespoons of your favorite milk or an egg. Add more if needed – the dough needs to hold together, but most cookie doughs shouldn't be sticky.

Is Cool Whip gluten-free? ›

YES, Cool Whip is gluten-free!

Although it does not carry a gluten-free certification on the label, Cool Whip doesn't contain any sources of gluten. In addition, Kraft Heinz states that cross-contamination with gluten has not occurred during the manufacturing of Cool Whip products.

Does adding vinegar to pie crust stop gluten? ›

What does that vinegar do? The most common answer — that it affects gluten development — isn't actually that useful. If you had a mass spectrometer at home, you could measure the teensy difference vinegar makes in the tensile strength of gluten strands in the dough, which in theory makes it a bit more tender.

Is phyllo dough gluten-free? ›

This gluten free filo pastry (phyllo dough) is the real deal: it's paper-thin (so much so that you can actually read through it!), it bakes up beautifully crisp and tender, and it's surprisingly easy to make. You can use it to make everything from gluten free apple strudel to baklava and spanakopita.

What is the trick to baking with gluten free flour? ›

Gluten-free flours often contain fine starches, so they absorb more liquid than conventional flour. To address this, gluten-free recipes usually call for more liquid and produce looser batters. They may also call for a larger quantity of leavening, like baking powder, to help add volume and lighten the texture.

Can I use baking powder instead of xanthan gum? ›

In any case, xanthan gum and baking powder/baking soda fulfil completely different roles in gluten free baking: xanthan gum is a binder (acting as a “glue” that holds your bakes together), and baking powder and baking soda are raising or leavening agents, making your bakes nice and fluffy.

Is xanthan gum necessary for gluten free baking? ›

Xanthan Gum adds thickness and viscosity to gluten-free breads and other baked goods. Without xanthan gum, your gluten-free baked goods would be dry, crumbly and flat. Because xanthan gum is gluten-free and vegan, it's the preferred thickener for those home bakers with food allergies.

Why is my gluten free pie crust so hard? ›

Too much water makes pie crusts tough, ESPECIALLY gluten-free crusts. An extra tablespoon or two can make your crust rock hard. Try to use the least amount of water listed.

What is the best substitute for pie crust? ›

  • Crispy Rice Cereal. A little peanut butter is all it takes to morph crunchy cereal into a moldable mix for a playful pie crust. ...
  • Waffle Cones. Scooping ice cream cones for a crowd might leave you wiping sweat (and ice cream drippings) off your brow. ...
  • Brownies. ...
  • Butter Crackers. ...
  • Shredded Coconut. ...
  • Puff Pastry.

Is cream cheese gluten-free? ›

Cream cheese is gluten-free. Feta cheese is gluten-free. Goat cheese is gluten-free. Mozzarella cheese is gluten-free.

Why does my gluten free pastry crumble? ›

Gluten-free pastry is much more fragile than regular pastry, so it is likely to tear and crumble as you transfer it to the tart shell. Just patch it up and push the pastry into the mould of the tin, making sure there is an even thickness and there are no cracks.

Why is gluten free baking crumbly? ›

Gluten's elasticity allows batters and doughs to trap air released by leavening agents (yeast, baking powder, or baking soda), which is how they're able to rise. Without this protein, gluten-free baked goods have the potential to be grainy, dense, and crumbly, but they don't have to be!

Why does gluten free pastry crack? ›

While gluten-free pastry is more delicate to handle, the most frequent reason for cracking is that there is insuffi cient moisture in the pastry. When making shortcrust pastry you mix the fat into the flour until it has the appearance of breadcrumbs, then add the liquid to bring together the dough.

How do you fix a pie crust that keeps falling apart? ›

If it's too crumbly, add a little more water. Once your pastry has come together, don't then ruin it when rolling it out. It's always tempting to shovel loads of flour onto a work surface when rolling out pastry.

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