Hot water crust breaks all the rules
The method flips everything you know about pies to make a sturdy, simple crust.

Cold, cold, cold.
It’s the mantra of making pie crust. Keep your butter cold, your kitchen cold, and your dough cold — a lesson that’s drilled into bakers since the first time they pick up a rolling pin. That’s because heat is the enemy of a crispy, tender crust, which relies on cold chunks of butter to melt in the oven and create small pockets of flakiness.
But like most rules, there’s one notable exception: hot water pastry. A crust that doesn’t depend on cold butter and uses boiling water, shattering pastry rules everywhere.
Hot water pastry dates back hundreds of years and is descended from British pie-making traditions. Historically, British pies were made in thick, sturdy crusts (referred to as “coffynes” or “coffins”) that were designed mostly as receptacles for the hearty, savory fillings within than pleasant eating experiences on their own. According to food historian Emma Kay, hot water pastry likely evolved “to make the pies which were made in the houses of royalty and nobility a considerable size, and to look striking on the table” and can be traced back to around the early medieval period.
One old mention of this pastry style can be found in The English Huswife, published in London in 1615, which called for hot water to make a “moist, thick, tough, coarse, and long lasting crust” to hold fillings like wild boar, elk, turkey, and lamb, among others. In other words, home cooks have been turning to this trusty crust for a long time!
This hot water method is similar to the Japanese bread-making technique yudane, itself a cousin to the well-known tangzhong method. In each of these baking techniques, hot water (or another liquid, like milk) is combined with flour, which pre-gelatinizes the flour’s starches so they can absorb more liquid. This leads to more moisture in the dough and makes for a softer, smoother dough that’s easy to handle. (Learn more about these methods in our blog post, A closer look at tangzhong.)
As a result, hot water pastry dough is much more pliable than typical pie crust, making it pleasant to roll. There’s little cracking or tearing in the dough, and even if it does split, you can pinch it back together or tear off a section of dough to patch the hole with little issue.
Using hot water doesn’t just affect the way the dough handles; when it bakes, this pastry is thick and sturdy. So sturdy, in fact, that it can hold its shape all by itself, standing tall and straight when it fully emerges from a pie plate or springform pan. And it has no trouble standing up to heavy fillings (hence why historical bakers loved it!). Finally, the baked crust is dense and somewhat hard, with a snappy texture unlike the large, shattering flakes of a cold-butter crust.
Though methods can differ slightly, the basic way to make a hot water crust is to bring water and fat (butter, shortening, suet, and lard all work) to a boil until the fat has melted into the water. The scalding hot mixture is poured into a bowl of flour and salt, then mixed to form a ball of dough.
At this point, you can already start to notice a difference between hot water pastry dough and traditional pie crust dough. The hot water dough has a soft, even consistency that’s a little like Play-Doh. Traditional pie dough, meanwhile, is flaky and slightly shaggy, with visible chunks of butter.
The hot water dough is kneaded a few times (yes, kneaded — another noticeable departure from traditional pie crust) then rolled out while still warm. Next, it’s fitted into your baking vessel of choice to await its ample filling.
While incredibly useful, hot water pastry isn’t something you’d want to substitute for any old pie that calls for a typical crust. That’s because its hard, thick shell is a stark departure from tender crusts and might stand out as unusual alongside traditional pie fillings like baked apples or creamy lemon meringue.
Instead, it’s best suited for pies with dense, heavy fillings — the kind that need a little extra support to hold together neatly. We first debuted a hot water crust on the King Arthur recipe site as part of this Turkey Dinner Pie, a brilliant dish in which this crust becomes a vessel for all the leftovers of a Thanksgiving feast. Now with Christmas around the corner, you can take this as inspiration and pile in your holiday dinner leftovers.
It doesn’t have to be a celebratory meal to use this formula, either. If you have ample leftovers from any meal, try sandwiching them in a hot water crust and invent an entirely new entrée.
Do you bake with hot water pastry? We’d love to hear about it in the comments, below.
Cover photo by Rick Holbrook.
January 2, 2022 at 5:22pm
In reply to I found your recipe for hot… by Marcia Dobrick (not verified)
YES, I HAVE MADE HOT WATER CRUST MANY TIMES. I MAKE ALMOST ALL OF MY PIES WITH HOT WATER AND HAVE WON THE STATE OF CONN. APPLE PIE CONTEST THREE TIMES OVER THE PAST FEW YEARS. I ENTER MY APPLE PIES AT LOCAL FAIRS AND ALMOST ALWAYS I WILL WIN FIRST PRIZE. IT SOUNDS LIKE A CRAZY WAY TO MAKE A PIE CRUST, ESPECIALLY WHEN MOST DIRECTIONS TELL YOU TO HAVE EXTRA COLD BUTTER OR LARD. IT IS EASY TO MAKE AND ALMOST ALWAYS TURNS OUT A GOOD LOOKING PIE.
July 17, 2024 at 11:34am
In reply to YES, I HAVE MADE HOT WATER… by JANICE PUTNAM (not verified)
Would you care to share your recipe?
December 26, 2021 at 10:20am
I have always made my traditional “tourtière” (meat pie) with hot water pastry. It’s perfect! And best for that kind of dish — I certainly would never use it for anything sweet.
December 24, 2021 at 3:28pm
We always use my mother in law's boiling water crust. Sturdy and flaky, with minimal handling and little to no extra flour when rolling between two sheets waxed paper. Boiling hot water in bowl, shortening mixed into that until soupy, flour and salt mixed into that until just blended. Covered and cooled in fridge, then rolled. Super easy, have made pie converts in the next generation
December 22, 2021 at 7:55pm
Thank you for writing about this topic. I've been intrigued with the way traditional Mexican cooks use hot water for flour tortilla dough and tamales. Through my research, I got as far as the gelatinization of the starch and it's ability to hold more moisture. Your pie dough is something that I definitely want to try. I've often wondered what other applications I may be able to use this method in. Thanks for joining me in the rabbit hole.
December 22, 2021 at 6:59pm
I have made a number of hot water crust “pies” and they have been fabulous and very easy to make. I love the idea of making meat pies and feel that hot water crust is the one crust that is substantial enough to make the pie easy to handle. A very forgiving dough to work with.
December 22, 2021 at 5:55pm
When I first began making pies, I used Spry shortening. The recipe on the can was for water whipped pastry. The boiling water was added to the shortening in a bowl. Using a fork, the two were combined into a whipped substance. The flour and salt were then added. It always worked! I still have the original recipe torn off from the outside of the can.
December 26, 2021 at 2:43pm
In reply to When I first began making… by Judy Davis (not verified)
I have used the recipe Judy Davis commented on for years. I got the recipe from a sister-in-law and have passed it on to all four of my daughters and other people also. It is so soft that it has to be rolled between two sheets of Waxed Paper to get it in the pie pan without it tearing apart. I have done everything they say, not to do, with this recipe and have never had a bad pie crust. It is always flaky and everyone loves it.
December 26, 2021 at 7:12pm
In reply to When I first began making… by Judy Davis (not verified)
Hi Judy:
My mother and both grandmothers were excellent pie makers and could whip up a crust in a matter of minutes. They all used the "Spry" method, i.e., pouring boiling hot water into the Spry, whipping the water and shortening with a fork, and then adding the dry ingredients. It's impossible to find Spry these days. I had to quit using the Spry method when I moved from Pennsylvania to California for two reasons: 1) I couldn't find Spry anywhere in the San Francisco Bay Area; and 2) My pie crusts were a disaster, even though I'd made them hundreds of times back home to great success. My mother was convinced the failures were due using another shortening. I think it may have had more to do with the lack of humidity. I wish it would work here. The "Spry" method was so much quicker and easier that the cold butter method I now use.
January 2, 2022 at 11:26am
In reply to When I first began making… by Judy Davis (not verified)
This is the Spry pie dough recipe that our family has always used. It's great for fruit/dessert pies and for savory pies like chicken pot pie. It's so much easier than butter crusts and the leftover scraps make delicious cinnamon sugar cookies! (I do like a butter crust for tarts and such.)
Pagination