Flaky Yogurt Pie Crust Recipe: Worthy of Your Favorite Pie Filling (2024)

Last updated

61 Comments

jump to recipe jump to video

Sneak Peek: This flaky Yogurt Pie Crust recipe with butter will blow you away with its layers of flakiness. Do your next pie a favor and show it off with this crust. Use unflavored regular yogurt or Greek yogurt (aka yoghurt).

Flaky Yogurt Pie Crust Recipe: Worthy of Your Favorite Pie Filling (1)Pin

As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

Do you love to eat pie crust? Are you picky about your pie crust? Do you enjoy making pie crusts? If you said yes to any of these questions, proceed.

As a young County Extension agent, I made a guest appearance on a TV cooking show at 5:30 one Saturday morning. My topic was “How to make a perfect pie crust.” Ever since my 30-minute brush with fame, I’ve been obsessed with pie crusts.

This flaky and buttery pie crust with yogurt is my favorite crust recipe. I think you will love it, too.

Three Reasons Why You Will Enjoy Sharing This Special Pie Crust

  • The secret ingredient produces a tender and super flaky pie crust.
  • You often have unflavored yogurt in your fridge. Make yogurt yourself, if desired.
  • You have a pie filling that calls for a delicious crust.

Speaking of favorites, be sure to take a look at my favorite pecan pie, my grandma’s Magic Pumpkin Pie, and this Deep Dish Chocolate Pecan Pie.

Happy Cooks Speak Up

“Absolutely amazing! I used it for chicken pot pie and everyone loved it!”KAREN

Recipe Inspiration

Flaky Yogurt Pie Crust Recipe: Worthy of Your Favorite Pie Filling (2)Pin

A few years ago, I ran across a crust recipe in a magazine (remember those?) calling for sour cream in addition to butter.

Reading that article gave me an idea.

What if I replaced the sour cream and water withyogurt?

I tried it, and It worked.

Why Does Yogurt Make a Pie Crust Flakier?

My research revealed why sour cream is a little-known secret to flaky pie crust. The same principle seems to apply to yogurt.

The acid in the sour cream slows down the development of gluten (the structure-forming protein in flour), which makes for a more tender and flaky crust.

The America’s Test Kitchen Family Baking Book

The acidity of the yogurt acts the same way vinegar or lemon juice does in some recipes. The yogurt also replaces water as a binder. A touch of sugar and an egg yolk increases the richness and encourages browning.

I don’t understand it, but the yogurt seems to work magic. Your reward is a crust that’s full of layers and flavor.

Flaky Yogurt Pie Crust Recipe: Worthy of Your Favorite Pie Filling (3)Pin

Ingredients and Substitutions

  • FLOUR: Use all-purpose flour, bleached or unbleached. A high-protein flour may cause the crust to be tough.
  • SUGAR: You may leave this out if you prefer, but it adds flavor and helps the crust brown.
  • SALT: Salt is optional, but it enhances the flavor.
  • BAKING POWDER: I like to tweak my recipes. After experimenting with baking powder as recommended by the Kitchn, I added it to the recipe. You can’t taste it. True to what the Kitchn says, it does add the slightest lift to the crust and keeps it from shrinking.
  • BUTTER: Be sure the butter is cold. Frozen is good. If your butter is salted, there is no need to add the extra salt specified in the recipe. In a pinch, substitute shortening for the butter.
  • YOGURT: Although I use my homemade unflavored yogurt, this recipe also works with store-bought yogurt, vanilla-flavored yogurt, and Greek yogurt. If you use Greek yogurt that is VERY thick, thin it with a bit of milk before measuring.
  • EGG YOLK: If you prefer not to use an egg yolk, leave it out and increase the amount of yogurt to 1/3 cup.

How To Assemble a Buttery Pie Crust with Yogurt

Flaky Yogurt Pie Crust Recipe: Worthy of Your Favorite Pie Filling (4)Pin
Flaky Yogurt Pie Crust Recipe: Worthy of Your Favorite Pie Filling (5)Pin
Flaky Yogurt Pie Crust Recipe: Worthy of Your Favorite Pie Filling (6)Pin
Flaky Yogurt Pie Crust Recipe: Worthy of Your Favorite Pie Filling (7)Pin
Flaky Yogurt Pie Crust Recipe: Worthy of Your Favorite Pie Filling (8)Pin
Flaky Yogurt Pie Crust Recipe: Worthy of Your Favorite Pie Filling (9)Pin

How To “Smoosh” the Crumbles (Aka as Fraisage)

Don’t miss the video showing how to do this.

Flaky Yogurt Pie Crust Recipe: Worthy of Your Favorite Pie Filling (10)Pin

There should be no significant, visible pieces of butter. If the butter pieces are too large, they may melt as the crust bakes and drip onto the oven floor. Not good.

Flaky Yogurt Pie Crust Recipe: Worthy of Your Favorite Pie Filling (11)Pin

How To Roll Out a Buttery Pie Dough

Flaky Yogurt Pie Crust Recipe: Worthy of Your Favorite Pie Filling (12)Pin

Note: I’ve learned to put the crust back into the fridge for about fifteen minutes after I place the crust into a pie plate and before I crimp the edges. This allows the crust to relax and makes it easier to make a decorative edge. It also helps to keep the crust from shrinking as it bakes.

Flaky Yogurt Pie Crust Recipe: Worthy of Your Favorite Pie Filling (13)Pin

How To Blind-Bake a Yogurt Pie Crust

Addendum 11/12/21: After getting my hands on the fabulous “The Book on Pie” by Erin McDowell, I have changed the instructions for par-baking this crust. She recommends NOT freezing a rolled-out pie crust. It’s better to chill it in the refrigerator. You can freeze the dough (up to three months) before rolling it out. But don’t freeze a rolled-out crust or bake it straight from the freezer.

Flaky Yogurt Pie Crust Recipe: Worthy of Your Favorite Pie Filling (14)

Join our community of adventurous cooks, and start creating homemade food worth sharing.

If you want inspiration and exclusive tips, add your email and press the button. (Don't worry. I won't sell your email.)

The other thing Erin suggests is to heat the oven to 425˚F. The bake is faster and helps to prevent the crust from shrinking. Of course, you still need to dock the crust and put some weights inside the pie shell, as shown below.

I tried her suggestions, and sure enough, my pie crust improved. The directions are revised accordingly.

Chill a prepared pie crust while you preheat the oven to 425˚ F.

Flaky Yogurt Pie Crust Recipe: Worthy of Your Favorite Pie Filling (15)Pin

After docking the pie crust with a fork:

  • Cover the pie crust with non-stick aluminum foil or parchment paper.
  • Use two pieces of foil, if necessary, to cover the entire crust.
  • Press it snugly into the shape of the pie shell.

Kitchen Secret for Cheap and Handy Pie Weights

My favorite is a heavy chain, which you can purchase by the foot at your local hardware store. There’s no reason to chase beans or pie weights around the kitchen.

Flaky Yogurt Pie Crust Recipe: Worthy of Your Favorite Pie Filling (16)Pin
Flaky Yogurt Pie Crust Recipe: Worthy of Your Favorite Pie Filling (17)Pin

Parting thoughts: If you need some ideas for a pie to fill this crust, check out my entire collection of pies and mini-tarts here.

Help at Your Fingertips: For questions or suggestions, email Paula at saladinajar.com. If you need help, I’m happy to troubleshoot via email (faster than leaving a comment). Attach pictures and as many details as possible for the best advice.

Flaky Yogurt Pie Crust Recipe: Worthy of Your Favorite Pie Filling (19)Pin

Yield: 8 slices

Flaky Yogurt Pie Crust Recipe

This recipe for an all-butter pie crust with unflavored yogurt produces an incredibly tasty, flaky, and tender crust that bakes up beautifully, even without a filling.

Rate this recipe

(5 stars if you loved it)

5 from 45 votes

PRINT RECIPE PIN RECIPE SEND EMAIL

Video

Prep time: 15 minutes minutes

Cook time: 25 minutes minutes

Chill time: 1 hour hour 30 minutes minutes

Total time: 2 hours hours 10 minutes minutes

Ingredients

  • cup (150 g) all-purpose, unbleached flour
  • 1 teaspoon granulated sugar
  • ¼ teaspoon salt
  • teaspoon baking powder
  • ½ cup (114 g) unsalted butter, cold
  • ¼ cup (70 g) unflavored regular yogurt or Greek yogurt
  • 1 (18 g) egg yolk

Instructions

  • Using a stand mixer with a paddle attachment, combine 1¼ cup (150 g) all-purpose, unbleached flour, 1 teaspoon granulated sugar, ¼ teaspoon salt, and ⅛ teaspoon baking powder at low speed for 5 seconds.

  • Cut ½ cup (114 g) unsalted butter, cold into 16 pieces, and add to the flour mixture. Mix on low speed for about 45 seconds. (I count it off).

  • Combine ¼ cup (70 g) unflavored regular yogurt or Greek yogurt and 1 (18 g) egg yolk. Add all at once to the flour.

  • Mix on low speed for 12-15 seconds. All particles should be barely moistened but not yet coming into a ball. You’re going for a shaggy mess that will hold together if you squeeze it between your fingers.

  • Dump the dough onto a big piece of plastic wrap or a floured tea towel.

  • Take the palm of your hand and slide it face-down from the middle toward the side of the pile to smoosh the crumbs together and flatten out the big pieces of butter. Work around the pile as you gently press the dough into one big flat clump. There should not be any large and visible pieces of butter. If the butter pieces are too large, they may melt as the crust bakes and drip onto the oven floor. Not good.

  • Fold plastic wrap up around the dough, pressing gently to form a smooth round patty approximately an inch thick.

  • Wrap and chill the dough at this point for at least 1-4 hours. When ready to roll out, allow to sit at room temperature for about 10 minutes.

  • Using a well-floured pastry cloth or a silicone pastry mat and a pastry sock-covered rolling pin, roll out pie dough to a diameter about 1-1/2 inch larger than your pie plate.

  • Place a 9-inch pie plate upside down on the dough and flip the dough into your pie pan using a pastry cloth to hold on as you invert dough.

  • Peel the pastry cloth off the dough and carefully fit the dough inside the pan being careful not to stretch it. If dough sticks to the cloth, use a knife to loosen it carefully and lightly dab it with flour to repair.

  • Trim crust about a half-inch past the rim of your pie plate. Turn under any excess dough, so it is even with the side of the plate. Form decorative edge as desired. (If the dough seems too soft to work with, refrigerate until firm.)

  • Place the shaped pie crust back into the refrigerator until ready to bake. It should be well-chilled (not frozen) when it goes into the oven.

Notes

How To Blind-Bake (no filling) a Flaky Pie Crust with Yogurt

When ready to bake, remove from the refrigerator and use a fork to dock the crust. Press a piece (or two) of non-stick aluminum foil or parchment paper to the inside of the pie crust. Fold the edges of the foil carefully over the decorative edge to protect it from over-browning. Although you could fill the pie crust with beans, rice, or pie weights, I prefer to use chain-link sold by the foot at hardware stores.

Bake in a preheated 425˚F (220˚C) oven for 15-17 minutes. For a partially baked crust, carefully remove foil and weights, and let bake another 2-3 minutes until the crust is light brown.

If you need a fully baked crust, continue baking the crust (uncovered) for 8-10 minutes longer or until golden brown.

If you have trouble with the butter leaking out of the crust when baking

Freeze the butter, then grate it. Add to the flour mixture and continue with the recipe as written.

Nutrition

Serving: 1slice | Calories: 129kcal | Carbohydrates: 4g | Protein: 2g | Fat: 12g | Saturated Fat: 8g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 3g | Trans Fat: 1g | Cholesterol: 55mg | Sodium: 84mg | Potassium: 19mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 1g | Vitamin A: 387IU | Calcium: 17mg | Iron: 1mg

All images and text ©️ Paula Rhodes for Salad in a Jar.com

5-Star Ratings Are My Favorite!Help others find this recipe in search results on the web.

My Amazon Store

Flaky Yogurt Pie Crust Recipe: Worthy of Your Favorite Pie Filling (2024)

FAQs

What is the best flour to use in flaky pie crust? ›

Flour: I use all-purpose flour in this pie crust recipe and get consistently great results. Cold Butter: You want to use very cold butter when making pie crust.

Which fat makes the flakiest pie crust? ›

This time, though, there was one very clear victor. Butter made a tastier, flakier, sturdier crust by far.

How to make a flaky bottom pie crust? ›

Put the Pie on a Hot Cookie Sheet

As pie crust heats up, the butter in the crust melts and the water in the butter turns to steam, creating the flaky layers we know and love. Before you start assembling the pie, put a cookie sheet in the oven and preheat it at whatever temperature you plan to bake the pie.

Is flour better than cornstarch for pie filling? ›

Cornstarch as Pie Filling Thickener

Cornstarch is faster-acting than flour and forms a smooth, relatively clear filling.

Should I use cornstarch or flour for pie? ›

The three most common starches used to thicken the fruit juices of a pie are flour, tapioca, and cornstarch. I prefer cornstarch because I find that it actually enhances the flavor of the fruit.

Is it better to make pie crust with butter or Crisco? ›

The pros: Butter has the best flavor. A butter pie crust forms light, lofty, flaky layers while it bakes. The flakiness comes partially from the water content of butter, which evaporates as the pie bakes and turns to steam, separating and puffing up the layers in dough.

Why do you put vinegar in a pie crust? ›

The acidic properties of vinegar inhibit gluten, some will say. This theory proposes that once the water and flour are combined, gluten starts forming, causing the dough to grow tough. Adding an acid, the theory goes, stops the gluten in its tracks and rescues the crust from toughness.

Should you Prebake bottom pie crust? ›

You do not need to pre-bake a pie crust for an apple pie or any baked fruit pie really, but we do freeze the dough to help it stay put. Pre-baking the pie crust is only required when making a custard pie OR when making a fresh fruit pie. you should probably get: Pie weights are super helpful to have for pre-baking.

Should you poke holes in the bottom of pie crust? ›

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.

What is the secret to a great pie crust? ›

Start with chilled ingredients

Butter creates a sturdy, crisp pie crust. For this, it is important to keep all ingredients cold which will inhibit the development of gluten in the flour. Use butter right out of the refrigerator and add ice-cold water to make the dough.

Why isn't my pie crust flaky? ›

In pie crust, you don't want gluten to form so you don't want to mix too much and overwork the dough. For a flaky crust, cut the butter so that chunks of butter about the size of walnut halves remain. The chunks of cold butter create the layers in the dough.

Should you refrigerate pie dough before rolling out? ›

Chill in the fridge for 30 minutes, or up to overnight. Tip: Chilling hardens the fat in the dough, which will help the crust maintain its structure as it bakes. And the short rest before rolling relaxes the dough's gluten, helping prevent a tough crust.

Why is strong flour used in flaky pastry? ›

Compared with other kinds of flour, strong flour has a significantly higher content of protein, which is in the form of gluten. The amount of gluten in strong flour helps bakers produce more chewy, light, and structured baked goods.

Why is plain flour used in flaky pastry? ›

Flour- Flour forms the structure of the pastry. Soft plain flour (low gluten content) used in shortcrust to give a short crumb. Strong plain flour (high gluten content) used in flaky/rough puff pastry to give the pastry its elasticity.

What is the best flour used for pastry? ›

Pastry Flour

Falling between all-purpose and cake flour, pastry flour is also made from soft wheat, but with a 7–9 percent protein content. It produces both the tender crumb and flaky texture that is desired in most pastries. It should not be used for baking bread because it has too little gluten.

Which flour is best for pie crust dough muffin and biscuit? ›

Pastry flour is best used for: pie crusts, cookies, muffins, pancakes, cakes, biscuits, and bread sticks.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Dan Stracke

Last Updated:

Views: 6028

Rating: 4.2 / 5 (63 voted)

Reviews: 86% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Dan Stracke

Birthday: 1992-08-25

Address: 2253 Brown Springs, East Alla, OH 38634-0309

Phone: +398735162064

Job: Investor Government Associate

Hobby: Shopping, LARPing, Scrapbooking, Surfing, Slacklining, Dance, Glassblowing

Introduction: My name is Dan Stracke, I am a homely, gleaming, glamorous, inquisitive, homely, gorgeous, light person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.