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 (and no xanthan gum!). It's extra flaky and easy to work with thanks to a couple of classical pastry techniques: fraisage and turning the dough.I'll show you how to use these ingredients and techniques to get the flakiest GF pie crust, plus how to shape and blind bake it for all your pie needs. Use it in sweet and savory pies, tarts, galettes, quiches and turnovers.Adapted from my award-winning cookbook Alternative Baker: Reinventing Dessert with Gluten-Free Grains and Flours.
Prep Time: 45 minutesminutes
Cook Time: 45 minutesminutes
Chilling time: 2 hourshours
Total: 3 hourshours30 minutesminutes
Servings: 8servings (one 9-inch pie crust)
Ingredients
6-8tablespoonsice water (from 1 cup ice cubes filled with cool water)
½cup(78 g) sweet white rice flour (preferably Mochiko brand)*
¼cup(35 g) millet flour (preferably Bob's Red Mill)*
¼cup(30 g) cornstarch*
2tablespoons(15 g) tapioca starch/flour*
2 ½tablespoons(15 g) finely ground golden flax seed or white chia seed (I grind mine in a coffee grinder)
1tablespoon(15 g) sugar (granulated, maple, or coconut)
½teaspoonfine sea salt
8tablespoons(115 g) cold, unsalted butter (preferably European-style such as Straus, Kerrygold, or Vermont Creamery), sliced ¼-inch thick
1teaspoonapple cider vinegar or lemon juice**
Instructions
Make the dough (by hand):
In a large bowl, combine the sweet rice, oat, and millet flours with the cornstarch, tapioca flour, ground flax or chia seed, sugar, and salt.
Scatter the butter pieces over the top, and work in the butter with a pastry blender or your fingers until the mixture resembles gravel, with lots of butter chunks the size of almonds or large peas.
Stir together 6 tablespoons of the ice water, drained, with the apple cider vinegar or lemon juice. Sprinkle the water into the flour mixture 1 tablespoon at a time, tossing the dough with a flexible silicone spatula to moisten it evenly.
Give the dough a sueeze: it should hold together easily without feeling overly wet or sticky. Toss in more ice water by the teaspoon until this texture is achieved, adding it directly to the dry floury bits that like to hang out on the bottom of the bowl. You may need up to 8 tablespoons of ice water, total (I always need the full amount but you may need more or less depending on how cold your butter is!). Note that this dough should feel more moist than a wheat flour dough. These GF flours perform better with more hydration and we don't have to worry about making it too moist because there are no glutens to turn tough.
Fraisage the dough: dump the crumbly dough out onto a clean counter or work surface. Working quickly in order to keep the butter cold, use the heel of your hand to scrape portions of dough across the counter.
Use a metal bench scraper to scrape up the dough and gather it into a ball. Flatten it into a disk and wrap the dough in plastic wrap, a plastic bag, or beeswax wrap. Chill until firm, 30-60 minutes or up to 24 hours.
Make the dough (in a food processor):
If using a food processor, combine the flours and starches, sugar, salt, and ground chia / flax seed in the bowl of a food processor. Scatter the butter pieces over the flours but don't pulse just yet! Stir together 6 tablespoons of the ice water, drained, with the vinegar or lemon juice.
Open the feed tube and pour in the ice water in a slow and steady stream as you pulse the mixer. Squeeze the dough; it should hold together easily without feeling overly wet or sticky, and there should be large pea-sized butter pieces throughout. Gently pulse in more ice water by the teaspoon until this texture is achieved. Note that the dough should feel more moist than a wheat flour dough.
Gather the dough into a ball, flatten it into a disk, wrap in plastic wrap, a plastic bag, or beeswax wrap and chill until firm, 30-60 minutes or up to 24 hours. It's not necessary to fraisage the dough if using this method since the butter gets broken down into smaller pieces.
Turn the Dough:
Whichever method you've used (by hand or in a food processor), remove the dough from the fridge, unwrap, and place it on clean work surface dusted lightly with oat flour. If the dough is very cold, it may need to soften for 5-10 minutes to make it easier to roll. (Note that if you don't have a metal bench scraper to move the dough around, it's best to roll out the dough on a sheet of parchment paper.)
Using a rolling pin, begin to press and roll the dough out into a large ¼-inch thick oval. The dough will crack and tear at first and that's ok, just smush it back together. Periodically dust the dough with oat flour, sweeping excess flour away with a dry pastry brush. Use the bench scraper to flip the dough over occasionally, dusting the dough with flour to keep it from sticking.
As you work, if the butter starts to soften or stick to the surface, pop it back in the fridge to firm up for 5-10 minutes.
Once the dough is rolled out to ¼-inch thickness, fold it in thirds like folding a letter. Then fold it in thirds the other way. Flatten the folded dough slightly, re-wrap, and chill until firm, 30-60 minutes or up to 24 hours.
Repeat the turning process one more time. The dough will become more and more cohesive and pliable as you work with it, which will make it easier to shape and help it bake up tender and flaky.
Wrap the dough and chill it again until firm, 30-60 minutes and up to 2 days. Or freeze the dough for up to 1 year until ready to use.
Shape the crust:
Remove the dough from the fridge, unwrap, and place on a lightly floured surface. Roll out the dough into a 12-inch circle, dusting the dough lightly with oat flour flour as needed, rotating and flipping it to prevent it from sticking.
Ease the dough into a 9-inch glass pie plate, fit it into the corners, and trim it to a 1-inch overhang. (Save the scraps to patch any tears in the dough post-parbaking.) Fold the overhang of the crust under itself, and flute the crust by pressing it between the thumb of one hand and the index finger and thumb of the other hand.
Prick the bottom of the crust all over with the tines of a fork (this is called "docking"). Chill the crust until firm, 30-60 minutes (or cover and chill for up to 24 hours, or freeze for up to several months.)
Blind-Bake:
Position a rack in the lower third of the oven and preheat to 400ºF.
Place the chilled crust on a rimmed baking sheet. Line it with a piece of parchment paper, and fill to the top with pie weights, dry beans, or clean pennies, gently pressing the weights into the sides and corners of the crust.
Bake the crust for 15-30 minutes (shorter for a metal pan, longer for a glass pan), until the edges are golden and the dough will hold its shape when you lift off the parchment. Carefully remove the weights and parchment and bake until the bottom is dry and lightly golden, about 8-12 minutes longer (for a parbaked crust) or until deeply golden, 15-20 minutes (for a fully baked crust). Use the saved scraps of dough to patch any holes, cracks, or tears in the dough, baking for a few more minutes post-patching.
Proceed with your pie recipe!
Notes
*Flour Substitutions (by weight):
Can sub for sweet rice flour: gluten-free all-purpose flour (such as Bob's Red Mill 1 to 1)
Can sub for oat flour: sorghum, chestnut, or light buckwheat flour
Can sub for millet flour: sorghum, teff, or buckwheat flour
Can sub for cornstarch: more tapioca flour
Can sub for tapioca flour: arrowroot flour
**Variation with buttermilk (my favorite!):Omit the vinegar. For the liquid in the recipe, stir together 4 tablespoons cold buttermilk with 4 tablespoons of ice water. Proceed with the recipe, adding more ice water if needed to moisten the dough after all the buttermilk mixture has been added.**Variation with yogurt, sour cream, or crème fraîche:Omit the vinegar. For the liquid in the recipe, stir together 2 tablespoons plain yogurt, sour cream, or crème fraîche (any kind will do – dairy or plant-based) with 6 tablespoons of ice water. Proceed with the recipe, adding more ice water if needed to moisten the dough after all the yogurt mixture has been added.Variation with sorghum flour:Omit the millet flour, using 1/4 cup (30 g) sorghum flour in its place.Variation with buckwheat flour or teff flour:Omit the millet flour, using 1/4 cup + 2 tablespoons (45 g) buckwheat flour or teff flour and decreasing the oat flour to 1/4 cup (25 g).Vegan gluten-free pie crust variation:Use vegan butter in place of the butter, and decrease the salt if the butter is salty. I like Miyoko's cultured vegan butter the best.Paleo pie crust variation:See the recipe here!A few notes on timing:Give yourself 3-4 hours to complete a parbaked crust. Most of this time is inactive. The ideal timeframe for making this crust is as follows:
10 minutes to mix and fraisage the dough
30 minutes to chill
10 minutes to do the first turn
30 minutes to chill
10 minutes to do the second turn
30 minutes to chill
10 minutes to roll out the dough, get it in the pan, shape it, and dock it
30 minutes to chill
30-40 minutes to par-bake the crust
Do ahead:I like making this crust at least 1 day ahead to ease prep on the day of baking and to allow it to absorb moisture which results in a more smooth, flaky crust.
The dough can be made ahead, wrapped, and chilled for up to 2 days or frozen for up to 1 year.
The shaped crust can be made ahead (baked or unbaked), wrapped, and chilled for up to 2 days or frozen up to 1 year.
Nutritional values are based on one of eight servings.