Preventing Pastry Shrinkage | Ask Nigella.com (2024)

Full question

How do you prevent pastry from shrinking when cooked? I refrigerated the pastry before rolling it out. I refrigerated it again after rolling it out and putting it in the pie tin but it still shrank when cooked. It happened to my savoury shortcrust and my sweet shortcrust pastry.

Our answer

Shortcrust pastry (pie crust) shrinks when baked as the glutens in the flour tend to contract in the heat of the oven. These glutens are protiens in the flour which form into strands when the flour is mixed with liquid. Whilst you cannot get away from some gluten formation when making shortcrust pastry, liquid and kneading will tend to strengthen the glutens in the dough and you can to some extent control these.

Butter contains more water than lard or vegetable shortening so you will tend to get a flakier pastry if you can use half butter and half vegetable shortening and only rub the fats into the flour until the mixture looks like fine breadcrumbs (whether by hand or in a food processor). Most recipes state the amount of liquid to add to form the pastry dough but we suggest that you don't add all of the liquid at one go - add half to three-quarters first and see if the pastry binds together with this amount, if not then add the remainder a little at a time, checking the dough between each addition. When you add the liquid mix it in quickly with a palette knife (metal spatula), or pulse the dough a few times in a food processor, until clumps form then press a few of these clumps together with your fingers - if they hold together easily then you should have added enough liquid, if there are slill dry patches then add a little more liquid. Turn the dough clumps out on to a worktop and bring them together gently to form a smooth dough (try to avoid kneading the dough). If using a food processor try not to process the dough into a ball as this will tend to toughen the glutens.

Resting the dough after mixing is a good idea but it is more important to rest and chill the dough after rolling and before baking, as rolling out the dough will again tend to toughen the glutens and resting after rolling will gibe them a chance to relax slightly. If you are baking the pastry case "blind" (without a filling) then line it with greaseproof paper or parchment paper and fill it with baking beans, pie weights or rice as these will tend to support the edges of the pie crust and reduce shrinking. Remove the weights and paper for the last few minutes of baking to allow the base of the crust to dry out properly.

Most chefs also like to leave a small pastry "overhang" above the top of the pie tin, particularly if baking blind, as any excess can then be trimmed off with a sharp knife after baking, leaving a perfectly-sized crust.

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Preventing Pastry Shrinkage | Ask Nigella.com (2024)

FAQs

Preventing Pastry Shrinkage | Ask Nigella.com? ›

When blind baking, line the pastry with baking paper and fill to the brim with baking beans/uncooked rice, which will support the sides of the pastry and help prevent shrinkage. Start shortcrust off at 190°C/170°C fan/gas 5 to quickly set the pastry. If the oven temperature is too low, the pastry will shrink.

How do I stop my pastry from shrinking? ›

When blind baking, line the pastry with baking paper and fill to the brim with baking beans/uncooked rice, which will support the sides of the pastry and help prevent shrinkage. Start shortcrust off at 190°C/170°C fan/gas 5 to quickly set the pastry. If the oven temperature is too low, the pastry will shrink.

How do you let pastry dough set to prevent shrinkage? ›

  1. Chilling your wrapped disk of pastry for 30 minutes before rolling it out is key to keeping it shrink-free. 2) Let the pastry rest and chill before rolling it out. ...
  2. Gently settling a generously sized crust into its pan — no stretching to fit, please! ...
  3. "Do I really have to let it chill again?" Yes, you do.
May 17, 2023

What is a possible cause of the pastry shrunk when baking your pie? ›

The main reason pie crusts shrink is because the dough has not been given enough time to rest. The resting time allows the gluten to literally “relax” at critical points in the pie-dough process.

How do you keep dough from shrinking? ›

Add extra time for dough to rest

To really allow gluten to relax, you can refrigerate preshaped dough overnight, then stretch and shape the next day. This extended rest not only builds flavor but also ensures you have ready-to-shape dough balls in the fridge at a moment's notice.

Why do you put vinegar in a pie crust? ›

Though the science is sketchy, a few professional pie bakers swear that it improves the texture of the crust, and they wouldn't dream of making pie dough without it. (Others swear by similarly acidic ingredients like lemon juice.) The acidic properties of vinegar inhibit gluten, some will say.

What can you use instead of pie weights? ›

What Can You Use Instead of Pie Weights? Instead of pie weights, you can use dried beans or rice, granulated sugar, popcorn kernels or steel ball bearings. If you are not using pie weights, the idea is to mimic what the pie weight does and to make sure that the alternative is oven-safe.

How do you keep pie crust firm? ›

How to Prevent a Soggy Bottom Pie Crust
  1. Blind Bake the Crust.
  2. Choose the Right Rack in the Oven.
  3. Brush the Bottom with Corn Syrup or Egg White.
  4. Put the Pie on a Hot Cookie Sheet.
  5. Make a Thicker Crust.
  6. Add a Layer.
  7. Consider a Metal Pie Pan.
Mar 18, 2024

Should I bake the bottom pie crust first? ›

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.

Why did my pie crust shrink when pre baked it? ›

Here's our problem: As the pie dough bakes, the fat melts. This causes the pie crust to shrink down the sides of the pie dish. And as the fat melts, it creates steam.

Do you trim pastry when hot or cold? ›

Trimming the edge of the flan after cooking gives you a neater edge with less shrinkage.

Why does pastry sink into pie? ›

The pastry will also shrink back if your oven is too cool during baking. Once again, this will happen if the water evaporates out of the pastry before the heat can set it in shape. This will result in the all-too-common side collapses for blind baked tarts.

How do you keep pastry flat? ›

Line the base and sides of an uncooked pastry case with non-stick baking paper. Fill with rice, dried beans, or metal or ceramic baking weights. (This stops the pastry base rising during cooking.) Place on a baking tray and cook in an oven preheated to 220C for 8-10 minutes.

Why did my puff pastry deflate? ›

Troubleshooting Cream Puffs and other Pastries

There's still steam inside, and when you let it all escape before the pastry has cooled your dough might deflate. Boiled the water, butter, and sugar for too long. If there is too little water in your choux, there won't be enough steam to help the puffs inflate.

How do you keep puff pastry flat when baking? ›

For a flatter pastry without much puff—like a Napoleon—prick the dough all over with a fork, place parchment paper on top, then place 1-2 cookie sheets on top of that to weigh it down. If you're making a tart or filled Puff Pastry, place it on the baking sheet before adding toppings or fillings.

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