All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe (2024)

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This versatile All Butter Vodka Pie Dough recipe is superior in flavor & texture, baking up with a desirably buttery, tender, flaky crust.

All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe (1)

Yes. Homemade pie dough can feel overwhelming and fickle. But, it doesn’t have to. This simple All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe makes a reliable pie dough that tastes great and bakes up beautifully, every single time. Dare we call it, the perfect pie dough? I sure do love it!

My All Butter Vodka Pie Dough indeed uses all butter. No shortening here. And, there is also some vodka mixed into the dough. Both ingredients play into the texture and flavor of the buttery baked pie crust. If you aren’t into the idea of vodka, apple cider vinegar is a great stand-in. Try my Basic All Butter Pie Dough, it uses all of the same principles without the alcohol.

Jump to:
  • Butter tastes best
  • Why vodka in pie crust?
  • Secrets ingredients for tender, flaky pie crust
  • Techniques for perfect pie dough
  • Tools for making the best pie dough
  • Additional methods and tools for making pie dough
  • Practice makes perfect pie dough
  • Comments
All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe (2)
All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe (3)

Butter tastes best

It’s really up to you on the type of fat you use in your pie dough. Shortening may be a bit easier to work with when making pie dough from scratch. But, once you have an understanding of technique, butter will be your best bud. Plus, butter tastes so much better. For me, taste trumps looks any day of the week.

The best pie dough recipe should be simple. We are all after that tender, flaky pie crust with no soggy bottom problems. A good pie dough recipe is all about quality ingredients and smart pie baking techniques.

All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe (4)
All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe (5)

Why vodka in pie crust?

Vodka

Vodka is the secret to crisp and flaky pie dough. Vodka evaporates more quickly than water during the baking process. This removes moisture from the crust quickly, creating flakiness. The result is an even, crispy pie crust. Think of it like a flaky and buttery croissant. Don’t worry, the alcohol completely bakes away, too. You won’t notice any vodka flavor.

*Pro Tip: Vodka won’t freeze, so store your vodka in the freezer so it is ready and ice cold when you need it for pie dough or co*cktails!

Secrets ingredients for tender, flaky pie crust

Real Butter

Especially something with a higher fat content like a European style butter, gives the pie dough superior flavor and an ultra flaky crumble when baked. Plus, the more fat in the butter, the better it is going to hold its structure in the oven. Higher butter fat = prettier pies. Unsalted is best, that way you as a baker can control the salt levels in your pie dough.

All Purpose Flour

Basic APF is all you need here. It’s the binder that provides structure and holds all of the ingredients together. I personally prefer Bob’s Red Mill Organic All Purpose Flour but you can use any you prefer.

Granulated Sugar

Sugar gently sweetens the pie dough, leveling out that buttery flavor with a hint of sweetness. It helps hold structure integrity too! If making a savory pie, you can omit the sugar. Or use just a scant teaspoon instead.

Salt

Salt also enhances the buttery flavor and allows the mild sweetness to come through in a balanced flavor combo. This All Butter Pie Dough recipe uses a pretty hefty amount of salt. I find it gives the pie crust a lot of character. If it feels like too much, cut down the amount. I always use fine sea salt but you can substitute simple table salt or kosher salt if you prefer.

Techniques for perfect pie dough

Keep it cool

By keeping the butter and vodka ice cold, you are ensuring a more tender pie dough. This allows the ingredients to mix up rustically, preventing over-mixing.

Don’t overwork it

Only mix the pie dough until it just starts to come together in crumbly, pea sized granules. If you completely mix the butter into the flour, you end up creating a hom*ogeneous pie dough that falls flat. You want some texture in there, creating air pockets that puff up and expand in the heat. This makes for lots of flakes and a crisp outer pie crust.

All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe (6)
All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe (7)
All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe (8)

Give it a squeeze

Once mixed together, the all butter pie dough should look mealy with pea-sized clumps of butter. Not smooth and even. It’s ok to have some dry bits of flour, they will be absorbed when you form the dough disks. The dough should just come together when you grab a fistful and gently squeeze it together. This is how you know it’s properly mixed!

All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe (9)
All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe (10)
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Gather & Pat

No need to knead pie dough. When shaping the dough into disks, you just want to gather and at the pie dough together. If you knead the dough, it'll become overworked and bake up leathery instead of tender and flaky.

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All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe (13)
All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe (14)
All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe (15)
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Give the pie dough time to age and develop

Once you’ve mixed the All Butter Vodka Pie Dough together, it needs some time on its own. By allowing the pie dough to rest in the fridge for at least 1-2 hours, up to 24 hours, it will develop more character. The dough will also be easier to work with once it’s had time to hang for a bit.

  • Bench Scraper - helps for cutting or dividing the dough. And makes clean up a cinch!
  • Pastry blender - use it to cut the butter into the flour, quickly and efficiently.
  • Fork - a great tool during the last step of mixing the vodka into the dough.
  • Rolling pin - a heavy, duty rolling pin helps roll out the All Butter Vodka Pie Dough into a nice, even sheet.
All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe (18)
All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe (19)
All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe (20)

Additional methods and tools for making pie dough

  • Box Grater - instead of cutting butter cubes into the dry ingredients, try grating the butter with a box grater. This is an efficient and approachable method for mixing pie dough.
  • Food processor - for quick and efficient pie dough mixing, blend the ingredients together in a food processor. Starting with the dry ingredients and cold, cubed butter. Then slowly pour in the vodka, while gently pulsing. Careful not to over-mix the dough.
  • Two butter knives - if you don’t have a pastry blender or food processor, using 2 butter knives to cut the butter into the dry ingredients works like a champ! It just might take a little longer.
  • Hands - and if you are really in a pinch. Just pinch that butter into the dry ingredients by hand. Heat is your enemy so work fast. And if your hands run hot, run them under some cold water first!

All Butter Vodka Pie Dough can be used for traditional single or double crust pies, hand pies & galettes

Whatever your pie dough needs, this versatile All Butter Pie Crust is there for you. This foolproof pie crust recipe makes 1 double crust pie, 2 single crust pies, 2, 4, 6 or 8 galettes depending on the size or roughly 12-16 hand pies, depending on the size. Plus, the pie dough freezes very well. It will last at least a couple of months if wrapped up tightly in the freezer. So, you can make big batches of pie dough ahead of time and freeze it until you need it. Just give the pie dough about 90 minutes - 2 hours to defrost on the counter or overnight in the refrigerator.

Practice makes perfect pie dough

Pie crust can be tricky. If you add too much moisture you've got a sticky mess on your hands, literally. If you overwork the dough, you have a thick and chewy hom*ogenized crust with blah flavor and none of that flaky textured crust. It's a delicate process that takes some getting used to. But if you use my pie dough tips, techniques and tricks listed above, you’ll soon be baking perfect pies.

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All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe (22)
All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe (23)
All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe (24)
All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe (25)

There you have it. The more pie you make, the more comfortable you will get with your dough. So, this is me personally endorsing you to bake a whole bunch of pies in the name of personal development. Just keep rolling and you'll get it! Plus, you get to eat all of the yummy rewards! This All Butter Vodka Pie Dough recipe is your new baking bestie.

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All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe

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  • Author: Baking The Goods
  • Total Time: 2 hours 20 minutes
  • Yield: 2 dough disks
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Description

This versatile All Butter Vodka Pie Dough recipe is superior in flavor & texture, baking up with a buttery, tender, flaky crust. It can can be used for anything from traditional single or double crust pies to hand pies and galettes.

Ingredients

Units

  • 1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, cold & cut into ¼" cubes
  • 2.5 cups all purpose flour
  • 2 tablespoons granulated sugar
  • 1.5 - 2 teaspoons fine sea salt salt
  • ¼ cup ice cold vodka
  • 2-4 tablespoons ice cold water

Instructions

  1. Cut the butter into ¼" cubes and place in the fridge to firm back up while you prepare the other ingredients.
  2. Add the dry ingredients to a large mixing bowl and whisk to combine.
  3. Cut the cold, cubed butter into the flour mixture either a pastry blender, by scissor cutting with two butter knives or even just by squishing it between your fingers, just be careful that the butter doesn't start to melt from the warmth of your hands. Keep blending until the dough becomes mealy and crumbly, forming pea-sized granules. Alternatively, you can use a food processor to mix the pie dough together. Begin by placing the flour mixture and cold, cubed butter in food processor. Gently pulse until the flour changes from silky to mealy; this should only take a handful of pulses so watch it carefully.
  4. Hydrate the dough by pouring in the ice cold vodka, 1 tablespoon at a time. Use a fork to mix the dough together. It should start to become shaggy and hydrated. Check the hydration level of the dough by gathering a small fistful; if it just holds together, it’s ready. If it is still dry or crumbly, slowly add the ice cold water, 1 tablespoon at a time, blending with the fork until the dough is sufficiently hydrated. If using a food processor, while pulsing, gently pour the vodka through the feed tube and mix until just combined. Use the same squeeze test to check the hydration levels and adjust accordingly. Be careful to add only as much water as it takes for the dough to just hold together. The exact amount of water can vary depending upon the moisture content of the flour, the quality of the butter, and the weather. When it has the proper amount of water, the dough will come together without much effort or deliberate packing.
  5. Turn the crumbly dough out on a clean, lightly floured surface. Then use the gather and pat method to form the pie dough into a disk. Don't knead or overwork the dough. Just gather it together and pat it down gently, until it forms a disk.
  6. Cut the large disk evenly in half. Then gather and pat into 2 smaller disks. Wrap the dough disks tightly in plastic wrap or place in baggies.
  7. Chill the dough for at least 1-2 hours in the refrigerator before rolling and forming. If you don't plan on using the dough within a 12-24 hours, you can store the dough in the freezer. (If it sits in the refrigerator too long, it could start to turn a grayish color.)
  8. When ready to use, allow the dough to soften slightly on the counter before rolling. you should be able to easily make an indention when you press your thumb lightly in the top of the dough disk.

Notes

This All Butter Vodka Pie Dough is very versatile, it can be used for traditional single or double crust pies, hand pies or galettes. This recipe makes 1 double crust pie, 2 single crust pies, 2, 4, 6 or 8 galettes depending on the size or roughly 12-16 hand pies, depending on the size.

This pie dough will last at least a couple of months if wrapped up tightly in the freezer. Before using, defrost the frozen dough overnight in the fridge or on the counter 1.5 -2 hours.

  • Prep Time: 20 minutes
  • Chill Time: 90-120 minutes
All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe All Butter Vodka Pie Dough Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What are 2 disadvantages of using all butter in pie crust? ›

The additional moisture in butter contributes to tough pastry dough if overworked during mixing, and the low melting point of 94°F allows the fat to melt into the flour as it is worked, changing the texture of the finished crust.

What does adding vodka to dough do? ›

Adding vodka to the dough makes it more forgiving. The dough is moist and easy to work without developing too much gluten.

Why do you put vodka instead of water in a pie crust? ›

So adding vodka adds liquid that helps to make the dough more workable and pliable without developing tougher gluten."

Why is my all butter pie crust tough? ›

There are several reasons why pie crust can become hard.
  • You don't have a great recipe. ...
  • Using the wrong type of flour. ...
  • Butter needs to be ice cold, and should be rubber into the flour with our fingers to form thin flakes, not the pea size lumps mentioned in so many recipes. ...
  • Don't add all the water at once.
Nov 27, 2022

What is one thing you should not do when making pie crust? ›

A: First, don't just reach for more flour—too much extra flour will make the crust tough, and won't treat the real problem, which is that your butter is too soft. I recently read in Weller's cookbook A Good Bake that it should take no more than one to two minutes to roll out a pie crust.

Should you use cold or frozen butter for pie crust? ›

In order to ensure that the finished crust is super flaky, pie crust always starts with cold butter. That way, the butter will remain in solid chunks in the dough that evaporate into layers during baking. Good!

Is water or vodka better for pie crust? ›

Vodka allows you to wet the dry ingredients enough so it forms a dough that is easy to roll out and use, but has less water in it, so less gluten will form.”

Does adding sugar to vodka make it stronger? ›

Adding sugar to alcohol does not make it stronger. Adding sugar before or during fermentation will produce a stronger beverage (one with more alcohol), up to a point, since fermentation (in this context) is the conversion of sugar to alcohol.

What does adding vinegar to pie crust do? ›

But there are two much more important perks to using vinegar: it provides a little insurance against overworking the dough. And, that splash of vinegar will keep your dough from oxidizing and turning gray. Fresh All-Butter Pie Dough with vinegar (right) and without (left).

What happens if you use milk instead of water in pie crust? ›

Some bakers use milk or buttermilk in their pie crust. Thanks to their milk solids, both will help crust brown and add a bit of tenderness. But the classic liquid in pie crust is water — ice water, to be precise.

Why do you put milk on a pie crust? ›

Whole Milk: For a crispy crust with a matte appearance, use just milk. Many biscuits and dinner rolls are brushed with milk or buttermilk for a finishing touch. Heavy Cream: For a little more shine than an all-milk wash, but not as much as an egg wash, use heavy cream or half-and-half.

Why is pie dough so difficult? ›

Tough pie crusts are typically the result of working the dough too much (again, gluten). You don't need to make sure it's a perfectly uniform ball. “As long as the dough is mostly holding together, you don't need to spend a lot of time kneading it,” Susan Reid wrote for King Arthur Baking.

Which flour is best for pie crust? ›

Flour: For a tender crust, choose a low-protein flour. Pastry flour, with a protein content of about 8-10%, ranks between all-purpose flour and cake flour. All-purpose flour works just fine for pie crusts, while cake flour might lack enough protein to form a workable, elastic dough.

Which type of dough is most often used for pies? ›

Most commonly, pies are made using shortcrust pastry dough. This is the most durable type of dough for pie making due to its extensibility and cohesiveness. Most recipes for shortcrust pastry dough use two parts flour to one part fat. Traditionally, the best tasting and fully flavored pie crust was made with lard.

What are the disadvantages of using butter on the dough? ›

The cons: Butter can be harder to work with than lard or shortening because of its lower melting point, so the dough temperature has to be just right. If it gets too warm, it will be too soft to handle and will tear easily. Butter is a firmer fat, so if it's too cold, your dough will be more difficult to roll out.

What are the disadvantages of using butter in baking? ›

However, since butter has a lower melting point than margarine, baked goods made with butter may spread more during baking.

How does butter affect pie crust? ›

Butter pie crust has the most flavor out of the three fats. This pie crust bakes up nice and golden brown, with plenty of flaky layers. Butter pie crust is the most sturdy and will support the weight of your favorite pie fillings.

What are some advantages and disadvantages of using butter in pie dough? ›

Advantages: Butter contributes excellent flavor to pie pastry Disadvantages: It is expensive, and it melts easily, making the dough difficult to work. If butter is used, water quantity needs to be adjusted because butter contains higher moisture than shortening.

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