You’re baking a homemade pie, and you can’t wait to see how it turns out. After 30 minutes you open the oven just a crack to peek — oh, no! The formerly crimped crust around the pie’s edge has mysteriously shrunk into a thin, sad ribbon of pastry slumped halfway down the inside of the pan. So disappointing! 

What happened? And how can you prevent it from happening in the future? 

Two baked pumpkin pies side by side; one with crust slumped down sides, one standing up tall. PJ Hamel
The crust for both of these pumpkin pies started out nicely crimped along the rim of the pan. But the crust of the left-hand pie shrank as it baked, while the one on the right stayed in place. 

Any number of things can contribute to a slumping crust. Maybe your recipe uses an extra-high amount of shortening or butter, or you rolled the crust too vigorously, or you didn’t let it rest and chill before baking. Perhaps you used the wrong size pan, or not enough filling.

The good news is all of this is controllable. Make the right choices along the way and you’ll create a picture-perfect pie, one whose crust looks as good as it tastes. The following tips will help keep your pie crusts from slumping and shrinking — I know, because I tested every single one of them to ensure they make a difference in your pie baking. 

Pie crust shaped and in the pan, ready to fill or prebake. Photography and food styling by Liz Neily
Even a relatively fragile All-Butter Pie Crust will hold its shape while baking if you follow a few simple rules. 

How to prevent pie crust from shrinking 

1) Start with a good recipe

To maintain its shape during baking, pastry needs liquid to activate the flour’s gluten. For flaky, tender texture, it also requires fat. The balance of those two ingredients is critical. Too much fat and the crust loses its structure and shrinks; too much liquid, it’s hard and leathery. I’ve found that a fat ratio of between 60% and 80% (using baker’s percentage), with the addition of just barely enough water to make the pastry cohesive, will yield pastry that keeps its shape in the oven and has a flaky, tender texture.

Because butter has a lower melting point than vegetable shortening, pie crust made with butter is more likely to lose its structure (shrink) than one made with shortening, or with a combination of the two. Our Classic Double Pie Crust recipe gives you the best of both worlds: You get butter’s flavor and shortening’s “setting power.” This isn’t to say you can’t make a structurally sound all-butter crust; you’ll just need to be a bit more careful about following the rules below.  

Pie pastry shaped into a disk and wrapped in waxed paper prior to refrigeration. PJ Hamel
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

This step accomplishes two things: It ensures the fat is cold, which encourages pastry that’s flaky rather than crumbly. And it gives the gluten in the flour a chance to relax, making it easier to roll (and less likely to shrink later on). 

What’s the best way to chill pie pastry? Wrap it and place it in the refrigerator for 20 to 30 minutes, or until it feels cold all the way through but is still pliable. This is sufficient time to both relax the gluten and lower the temperature of the butter or shortening — both of which will help your crust stay in place as it bakes. 

Wouldn’t putting the dough in the freezer be faster and work just as well? No; by the time the innermost part of the pastry disk is cold, the outside will have become brittle and hard to handle. A slower, gentler chill in the fridge is preferable.  

3) The more gently you roll pastry, the less likely it is to shrink

Gluten responds to handling by tightening up, which can then lead to shrinkage in the oven. You respond to tight gluten (and pastry that keeps contracting) by whacking the dough even harder with the rolling pin, right? You will never win that battle. Try this instead: Once your pastry has completed its rest, use a minimum of firm, smooth strokes, rolling from the center out (rather than back and forth, which can tighten the gluten even more). 

Rolled-out pie crust settled into a pie pan, edges not yet trimmed. PJ Hamel
Gently settling a generously sized crust into its pan — no stretching to fit, please! — is critical to its final success.

4) Roll the crust large enough for your pan

Your goal is to have at least 1" of crust overhang all around the pan’s rim. A good rule of thumb is to roll your crust at least 2" wider than the pan’s inside measurement: Use a flexible measuring tape to measure the pan starting at the rim, traveling down the side, across the bottom, and up to the opposite rim. (Don’t have a measuring tape? Use a piece of string and a ruler.) This overhang allows you to gently settle the crust into the pan without stretching it. Because, gluten: Stretch it out and it’ll try to shrink back, and shrinking is exactly what you want to avoid.  

If you want to make a tall crimped edge rather than simply pressing the dough onto the rim of the pan with a fork, leave yourself even more overhang. For a 9" pie in a standard 1 1/2" deep pan, roll your crust 13" to 14" wide. 

5) Press the crust firmly onto the pan’s surface after you’ve carefully settled it in

This tip comes from our Baking School, where we teach students that this helps “anchor” the crust to the pan: just a bit of extra insurance against shrinking and sliding while the pie is baking. Just make sure not to stretch the crust while pressing. 

Pie crust in a pan, all wrapped in a plastic bag prior to refrigeration. PJ Hamel
"Do I really have to let it chill again?" Yes, you do. Chilling the crust before filling (or after filling but before baking) is an important step to ensure a picture-perfect finish.

6) Let the crust rest and chill for about 30 minutes after it’s in the pan

Again, it’s all about fat and gluten. You've just rolled out the dough, which warms the fat and "exercises" the gluten. This is your last chance before baking to make sure the fat is chilled and the gluten relaxed, both of which will help keep your crust from slumping. 

7) Use enough filling

Whether it’s a pourable custard (think pumpkin) or cupfuls of fresh fruit, your pie filling is an effective anchor for the crust beneath and around it. Without sufficient filling to keep it in place, crust may slide down the edges of the pan as the pie bakes. A good recipe will accurately specify both the amount of filling and the size of the pan. But what if it doesn’t — or you decide to use a larger pan? 

Pumpkin pie custard poured into a crimped pie shell in a pan, ready to bake. PJ Hamel
A tall crimp helps keep the filling in custard-type pies, like pumpkin, from sloshing over the edge as you place the pie in the oven. Tip: Put the pie into the oven unfilled, then pour in the filling once the pie's safely settled on the rack. 

For pies with liquid filling, use enough to just about (but not quite) reach the rim of the pan. For fresh fruit pies (where the berries, peaches, apples, etc. will shrink as they bake), make sure the fruit is mounded considerably higher than the pan’s rim. (If you’re prebaking a crust without the pie filling, you’ll still fill it to keep the pastry in place, as noted below.) 

What happens if your recipe calls for a prebaked crust? Follow the steps above up to the point where the crust is ready to bake, then fill it with the weights of your choice: dried beans, uncooked rice, pie weights, and even sugar are good options. Bake as the recipe directs. This controlled prebake will set the crust’s structure, making it impossible for it to shrink after adding the filling. For details, see Prebaking pie crust

Wondering how to make sure your pie’s crust browns perfectly — top AND bottom — or how to thicken fruit filling perfectly? Find answers to all your pastry challenges in our Pie Baking Guide

Cover photo by Mark Weinberg; food styling by Liz Neily.  

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All-Butter Pie Crust
All-Butter Pie Crust
4.5 out of 5 stars 122 Reviews
Total
15 mins
Yield
2 single crusts or 1 double crust
A headshot of PJ Hamel and her dogs
The Author

About PJ Hamel

PJ Hamel grew up in New England, graduated from Brown University, and was an award-winning Maine journalist (favorite topics: sports and food) before joining King Arthur Flour in 1990. Hired to write the newly launched Baker’s Catalogue, PJ became the small but growing company’s sixth employee.PJ wa...
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