Scrumptious Apple Pie

This apple pie is a classic, from the scrumptious filling to the flaky pastry crust. It is homemade goodness at its very best.

BettyCrockerRecipe by BettyCrocker

Rated 4.5 Stars
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(15)

2

45 minutes

2 hours 20 minutes

8 servings



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Nutrition Info

  • 1 Serving
  • 480
  • 29g
    (Saturated Fat 6g)
  • 0mg
  • 330mg
  • 51g
    (Dietary Fiber 3g)
  • 4g
  • Percent Daily Value*
  • 4%
  • 6%
  • 0%
  • 10%

*Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet.

Tips & Techniques

  • Special Touch

    For a pretty glazed top crust, brush this—and any other double crust pie—with milk or cream and sprinkle with sugar before baking.

  • Time Saver

    Jump-start your pie baking by using Betty Crocker® pie crust mix. Just add water and stir; the dough is ready in 5 minutes.

  • Time Saver

    Start with three 20-ounce cans of sliced apples, drained, instead of using fresh apples, and you’ll shave about half of the prep time off this recipe.

Ingredients

  • Pastry
  • 2  cups Gold Medal® all-purpose flour
  • 1  teaspoon salt
  • 2/3  cup plus 2 tablespoons shortening
  • 4  to 6 tablespoons cold water
  • Filling
  • 1/3  to 1/2 cup sugar
  • 1/4  cup Gold Medal® all-purpose flour
  • 1/2  teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1/2  teaspoon ground nutmeg
  • 1/8  teaspoon salt
  • 8  cups thinly sliced peeled tart apples (8 medium)
  • 2  tablespoons butter or margarine

Directions

  1. 1In medium bowl, mix 2 cups flour and 1 teaspoon salt. Cut in shortening, using pastry blender (or pulling 2 table knives through ingredients in opposite directions), until particles are size of small peas. Sprinkle with cold water, 1 tablespoon at a time, tossing with fork until all flour is moistened and pastry almost cleans side of bowl (1 to 2 teaspoons more water can be added if necessary).
  2. 2Gather pastry into a ball. Divide in half; shape into 2 flattened rounds on lightly floured surface. Wrap in plastic wrap; refrigerate about 45 minutes or until dough is firm and cold, yet pliable. This allows the shortening to become slightly firm, which helps make the baked pastry more flaky. If refrigerated longer, let pastry soften slightly before rolling.
  3. 3Heat oven to 425°F. With floured rolling pin, roll one pastry round into round 2 inches larger than upside-down 9-inch glass pie plate. Fold pastry into fourths; place in pie plate. Unfold and ease into plate, pressing firmly against bottom and side.
  4. 4In large bowl, mix sugar, 1/4 cup flour, the cinnamon, nutmeg and 1/8 teaspoon salt. Stir in apples until well mixed. Spoon into pastry-lined pie plate. Cut butter into small pieces; sprinkle over filling. Trim overhanging edge of pastry 1/2 inch from rim of plate.
  5. 5Roll other round of pastry into 10-inch round. Fold into fourths and cut slits so steam can escape. Unfold top pastry over filling; trim overhanging edge 1 inch from rim of plate. Fold and roll top edge under lower edge, pressing on rim to seal; flute as desired. Cover edge with 2- to 3-inch strip of foil to prevent excessive browning.
  6. 6Bake 40 to 50 minutes or until crust is brown and juice begins to bubble through slits in crust, removing foil for last 15 minutes of baking. Serve warm if desired.
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Anonymous User
Anonymous said:

I have made a crust similar to this for years (my recipe makes more dough). Everybody always raves about the crust. It is light and flaky, not the least bit powdery. I do mix it up a bit by adding a small amount of sugar or spices for sweet pies, or savory spices for meat pies or quiches. The only thing I can think of is that you need to make sure all the flour is incorporated into the shortening before you add the water. If you use too much flour or it isn't blended enough and gets wet, your dough will be pasty and the crust will not hold together well. Once you do add the water, you don't want to over work it, so it is important to make sure the flour / shortening step is done well. When they say do it until the size of small peas, you are not there yet if all the flour isn't mixed in. I just ignore that part, get it well blended, break it up a bit and sprinkle the water on, then toss and mold into a ball, trying to work it as little as possible.

12/15/2012 10:59:24 PM
Anonymous User
Anonymous said:

Great filling but the crust is not so awesome. Powdery and no sweetness or flavor. Def some different ways to go on crust.

11/14/2012 1:38:36 AM
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