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This is the gluten free pie crust that changed everything.
Tender, flaky, easy to handle—and it rolls out like a dream. Whether you’re baking a classic fruit pie or a savory pot pie, this crust delivers all the flavor and texture you’ve missed.
With over 1,000 five-star reviews, it’s helped thousands of bakers rediscover the joy of homemade pie.

“This pie crust is an astonishing achievement. Nicole is able to unlock secrets I didn’t believe possible and I have found a love of baking because of it.”
“I have baked pies most of my life. … I thought those days of having anything with pie crust was over. I use this recipe for pies and chicken pot pies. … Thank you for such a wonderful recipe!”
Why this recipe works
This pie crust is flaky and tender, rolling out easily and baking up light and flaky. The texture stays delicate without turning greasy or tough, so every slice of the pie you make with it holds together beautifully.
The taste is wonderfully buttery, with that classic homemade flavor that makes a pie feel special. Every bite is rich but never overwhelming, so the crust complements both sweet and savory fillings.
Best of all, it’s easy to make with just a bowl, a whisk and a spoon. There's no special equipment required. Master this crust recipe and you'll always have a go-to base for that holds up beautifully with even with the most juicy fillings.
Recipe ingredients
Here are the 6 ingredients for this recipe, and a few words about the role each plays in the perfect crust:

- Gluten free flour blend: Adds most of the structure for the crust. Use a high-quality, properly balanced all purpose blend with finely ground rice flour like Better Batter's original blend or Nicole's Best multipurpose with added xanthan gum. In such a simple recipe, any grittiness in your flour blend will be obvious, and will prevent the crust from rolling out smooth and having proper mouth feel after baking.
- Salt: Brightens the other flavors.
- Baking powder: Adds a touch of lift to help separate the flaky layers.
- Unsalted butter: Cold, flat shards of butter creates flakiness and rich flavor as it expands in the oven during baking.
- Sour cream: Adds tenderness, richness, and tangy depth of flavor without making the dough too wet. You can also use Greek-style plain yogurt in the same amount in its place.
- Ice water: Brings together any remaining dry spots in the the dough without warming the butter. Use just the water, leaving the ice behind.
How to make a flaky gluten free pie crust
Whisk the dry ingredients
In a large bowl, whisk together your gluten free flour blend, xanthan gum (if needed), salt, and baking powder.
Add the butter
Add cold, chopped butter pieces, and use a spoon to toss them around until each piece is coated in the dry ingredients. Once each piece of butter is coated in flour, it's somewhat protected from the heat of your hands in the next step.
Flatten the butter
Use the tips of your fingers to press each piece of coated butter between your thumb and forefinger to create flat shards of floured butter. This will allow you to nestle the butter between layers of the dough without letting sharp edges break through. Those edges would melt too soon and leak out of the dough.



Add the sour cream
Add the sour cream and mix to bring the dough together into a shaggy, clumpy mixture.
Add water
If dry patches remain, separate them from the rest of the dough and drizzle in ice water to just those dry spots. This will allow you to adding just enough water to moisten all the flour without making the dough sticky wet.



Chill the dough
Turn the dough out onto plastic wrap, press into a rough disk, and wrap tightly. Chill it, wrapped tightly so it doesn't dry out, for at least 30 minutes. This will ensure that the butter is firm enough to shape without melting at all yet.
Roll out the cold dough
Place the cold disk of dough on a lightly floured surface, and dust it very lightly with just enough flour so it doesn't stick to the rolling pin. Use a clean rolling pin (or one lightly dusted with flour) to roll out the dough into a rough rectangle. If you've chilled the dough for too long, it may crack as you roll it out. You can let it warm up a bit before you continue.



Laminate the dough with folds and rolling
Fold the rough rectangle of dough over on itself in thirds like you would a business letter. Roll it out the same way into a rectangle, then roll and fold once more. Repeat once more for a total of 3 folds.
This process is called lamination, and each process of rolling and folding (called a “turn”), multiplies the layers of butter encased in floury dough, similar to the process of making gluten free puff pastry.
Chill the crust as needed
If the butter starts to melt or the dough feels soft at any point, rewrap and chill again before continuing. Fold the laminated dough into a square, press to seal, and shape into a round disk. You can wrap store refrigerate or freeze the dough now to use another time.



Create a round
If you're ready to use the crust, place the dough packet on a lightly floured surface and sprinkle it lightly with more flour to prevent sticking.
Use a rolling pin to roll the dough into a round about 2 inches larger than the dish you're baking it in. That will give you enough crust to press it into the bottom and sides of the dish without tearing it. It will be between 3/8-inch and 1/4-inch thick, depending on the size of the baking dish.
Transfer the crust
We roll the crust gently over the rolling pin to transfer it to the baking dish without stretching it. Flour the rolling pin lightly, hold it above one edge of the round pie crust, and roll the crust loosely onto it. Unroll the crust over a prepared pie plate, positioning the center of the crust over the center of the plate as best you can.
Shape the crust
Gently lift the edges to allow the dough to settle into the corners of the plate without pulling at all. Tuck the overhanging edge under itself and crimp as desired. Chill the shaped crust in the fridge, covered, for at least 30 minutes, and up to 3 days.



How to parbake the crust
If the pie recipe you're using calls for parbaking, or partially baking the crust before filling it, here's how you do it. Pierce the bottom of the chilled crust in the pan all over with a fork to prevent it from puffing up in spots during baking.
Line the raw crust with parchment and fill it completely with pie weights or dried beans to keep it from shrinking down the sides or forming irregular air bubbles which will cause it to bake unevenly. Bake for 10 minutes at 375°F, then remove the weights and parchment. If the crust still looks shiny, brush the bottom with egg white and return to the oven for 2–4 more minutes.



Expert tips
Keep the butter big and flat
Many recipes recommend “cutting in” the butter into the flour until you have pea-sized pieces, but those pieces melt very easily when you handle the dough to shape it. For real flakiness, keep your butter in large, flat shards throughout the dough that won't melt completely and can be firmed back up by chilling the dough periodically. They’ll create light, layered pockets as they melt during baking, releasing the water in the butter as steam, separating the layers of dough from one another.
Mix by hand
Use a bowl and spoon to keep control over butter size. Food processors and mixers tend to overwork the dough and overheat the butter, making the crust dense.
Chill often
If your dough softens or the butter starts to melt while working, wrap and chill again before continuing.
Don't stretch the dough
When fitting the crust into the pie plate, gently lift and lower it into place. Never stretch—it will shrink back in the oven.
Follow your pie recipe
This recipe is only for the pie crust, not the pie. There are plenty of recipes for gluten free pies on this website that will tell you whether or not you need to parbake the crust (or partially bake just the bottom crust), blind bake it (for no bake fillings, you'll bake another 10 to 12 minutes after parbaking), or bake it only once filled. If you're using someone else's recipe, follow their instructions for how, when and at what temperature to bake the crust.
Ingredient substitutions
This recipe is naturally egg-free, but if you also have to bake dairy-free, here are my suggestions for how to replace the dairy-containing ingredients in the recipe:
Butter
The best way to replace the flavor and moisture balance of butter is to use 3 tablespoons shortening and 3 tablespoons vegan block-style butter. I like Miyoko’s, Melt, or Trader Joe's brands. Do not use a tub-style vegan butter, which is mostly oil.
Sour Cream
Substitute with nondairy sour cream or plain Greek-style nondairy yogurt. Or, make a water-only version. Skip the sour cream completely, increase the baking powder to ½ teaspoon, and start with 3/8 cup (3 fluid ounces) ice water. Add more ice water by the teaspoon as needed to just the dry patches.

Storage instructions
For the raw dough
In the fridge: Wrap tightly in plastic and refrigerate for up to 3 days.
In the freezer: Wrap twice (plastic + zip-top bag) and freeze for up to 2 months.
- Thaw overnight in the fridge, then let sit at room temperature for 10 minutes before rolling.
For a shaped crust
Unbaked: Shape the crust in the pan, wrap tightly, and freeze for up to 2 months.
- Bake straight from frozen: add 25°F to the oven temp for the first 10 minutes, then reduce to 375°F.
For a parbaked crust
- Best used the same day you parbake it. If needed, cool completely, wrap tightly, and use within 24 hours.
Extra Flaky Gluten Free Pie Crust Recipe

Equipment
- Rolling Pin
- Pie weights enough to fill your pie crust
Ingredients
- 1 ½ cups (210 g) all purpose gluten free flour blend, (See Recipe Notes) plus more for sprinkling
- ¾ teaspoon xanthan gum, omit if your blend already contains it (use a heaping 3/4 teaspoon)
- ¼ teaspoon baking powder
- ½ teaspoon kosher salt
- 6 tablespoons (84 g) unsalted butter, roughly chopped and chilled
- ½ cup (120 g) sour cream, full fat, preferably, chilled
- Ice water by the teaspoonful, as necessary
- Egg white, for brushing (optional)
Instructions
Make the pie crust dough
- In a large bowl, place the flour, xanthan gum, baking powder and salt, and whisk to combine well.
- Add the chopped and chilled butter, and use a spoon to toss to coat the flour in the dry ingredients.
- Press each chunk of floured butter between your thumb and forefinger to make flat shards of butter, coated fully in flour.
- Create a well in the center of the dry ingredients with the butter shards, add the sour cream, and mix to moisten the dry ingredients with the sour cream. The dough should be shaggy and still somewhat crumbly.
- If there are any portions of the dough that are especially dry, try to isolate them in the mixing bowl, drizzle ice water by the teaspoon on only those parts and then mix to moisten them.
- Drizzle in more ice water only as necessary to moisten lightly all of the dry ingredients. Knead the dough together with clean hands until it begins to come together.
- Turn the dough out onto a sheet of plastic wrap, and press into a disk as you close the plastic wrap around the dough. It will still seem rough.
- Place the dough in the refrigerator to chill for 30 minutes. You can wrap the dough now and store it in the refrigerator for up to 3 days, or shape and bake it next.
- Preheat your oven to 375°F. Grease a 9-inch to 10-inch pie plate generously and set aside.
Roll out the chilled dough
- Once the dough has chilled, turn it out onto a lightly floured surface, and sprinkle the top lightly with more flour.
- Roll the dough out into a rough rectangle that is about 1 inch thick, moving the dough frequently and sprinkling it lightly with flour if it begins to stick.
Laminate the dough
- Fold the dough over on itself in thirds like you would a business letter. This is called one "turn."
- Sprinkle the dough again lightly with flour, and roll out the dough once again into a rough rectangle about 1 inch thick. Fold again in thirds.
- Working quickly, sprinkle the dough lightly with flour, and roll out once more into a rough rectangle, for a total of 3 times.
- Fold the dough in thirds again, then fold in the sides to make a square packet of dough. Press the dough together, and try to round the sides into a disk.
- If the dough feels warm at all, or like the butter is melting, cover it with plastic wrap and chill it until the butter is firm again.
Shape the dough in the pie plate
- Roll the dough out into a round about 2 inches larger than the diameter of the baking dish you're using. It will be between 1/4-inch and 3/8-inch thick. Roll from the middle to the edges in every direction to help create a round. If the dough splits on the edges, pinch them together.
- Roll the pie crust loosely onto the rolling pin and then unroll it over a greased pie plate.
- Trim any especially rough edges of the crust with kitchen shears or a sharp knife. Lift up the edges of the pie crust gently to create slack in the crust, and place the crust neatly on the bottom and up the sides of the pie plate.
- Tuck the excess pie crust under itself along the perimeter of the crust, where it overhangs the pie plate. Crimp the edge gently all the way around the crust by pinching the dough at regular intervals with one hand, and creating a crimped impression with the forefinger of the other hand.
- Cover the pie crust with plastic wrap and place it in the refrigerator to chill until firm, at least 30 minutes (and up to 3 days).
Parbake the crust (See Recipe Notes)
- Remove the pie crust from the refrigerator and unwrap and discard the plastic. Pierce the bottom of the pie crust all over with the tines of a fork.
- Place a sheet of parchment paper on top of the raw crust and fill the crust with pie weights or dried beans. Filling the pie crust will help keep the bottom from expanding and the edges from falling down into the pie dish.
- Place the plate in the center of the preheated oven and bake for about 10 minutes, or until the crust is just beginning to turn very lightly golden brown on some edges.
- Remove the pie weights and parchment. The bottom of the crust should be less shiny but not browned. If it's still shiny, brush the bottom of the crust with the optional egg white, and return the pie crust to the oven and bake for another 2 to 4 minutes.
- Allow the parbaked crust to cool before proceeding with your recipe.
Video
Notes
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes—glass works well and helps you see when the bottom crust is browned. Just keep an eye on it, since glass warms slowly but retains heat very well and can cause over-baking if left too long.
You can, but it's not ideal. These tools can overmix and melt the butter. If you do use one, use large pieces of cold butter and pulse briefly to avoid losing flakiness.
Simply double the recipe or use the 2[X] option in the recipe card. Divide the dough into two disks, chill, and roll separately.














Super easy to make and delicious! The flour blend I used was White Gold, I used Greek yogurt in place of sour cream, and sprinkled a little granulated sugar into the flour before I rolled it out. I kept my glass pie pan in the fridge while I rolled the dough, and stuck it back inside the fridge for a few minutes before blind baking it. For dairy free, I like Miyoko’s butter and violife sour cream. I haven’t tried with dairy free yogurt yet.
Glad to know that your dairy free subs worked out so well, Eva. Thanks for sharing!
I’m wondering about using this recipe for chicken pot pie. Do I need to par bake it?
Yes, you can use this recipe anywhere you’d use a pie crust, Martha, but I can only direct you to my recipe for gluten free chicken pot pie. If you’re following someone else’s recipe, I recommend you use their instructions.
I have baked pies most of my life. My husband and daughter have Celiac and I thought those days of having anything with pie crust was over. I use this recipe for pies and chicken pot pies. When I do the savory, I replace a bit of the flour with Asiago cheese. Thank you for such a wonderful recipe.
I’m so glad you love the pie crust recipe, Holly! Over 15 years ago, I committed to bringing back every single type of baked good that I could dream up so my celiac son didn’t have to miss a thing. None of those days are over, for him or for you! Thank you for sharing that.
I follow your recipes, and they are always very good!
Can I do this recipe for your pie crust in a food processor?
I’m afraid not, Barb. If you read through the recipe, you’ll see that the secret to the flakiness of this pie crust is keeping larger pieces of butter in the crust.
I use the food processor and it comes out great!
I first made pumpkin pie with this recipe and my family, which is highly suspicious of anything GF, didn’t know the difference. The dough is very easy to work with, and freezes well. I’ve since used it for a bunch of things including quiche, apple slices and empanadas. Another winner Nicole! Thank you so much.
Thank you so much for sharing that, Mary. We’ll win them over at this rate. :)
Pie newbie here. How do you handle adding a top crust using this dough for a chicken pot pie with both a bottom and top crust? Thanks!
Hi, Kelly, you would just double the yield to double all of the ingredients, divide the dough in half, and use the instructions twice. To prepare the pie crusts, I’d follow whatever other recipe you’re using.
Thank you for this GF pie crust recipe. I used the recipe for a pot pie and it was delicious. My daughter who is gluten free and vegan was impressed. I think it was the sour cream that made the difference. (I used Violife vegan sour cream and Earth Balance stick butter)
You’re so welcome, NanaCat! I’m so glad that your dairy free substitutions worked well for you. I think you’d like the results even better if you used a vegan butter like Melt or Miyoko’s Creamery brand. Earth Balance has a lot more moisture and tends to melt slowly even before it gets hot in the oven, so it doesn’t expand and create flakiness like the other vegan butters do. Just a thought!
I’m surprised there is no mention of or question about substituting Greek yogurt for sour cream. That usually works and is so much healthier. Would it work it this recipe?
I do discuss that under the substitutions section, Lynn. Yes, it works just fine.
Holy smokes. I am not gluten-free, but have a good friend who is, so I often make treats for her. Today I made a batch of empenadas, to bring to NYE party she’ll be attending. I used this dough, filled my little babies with mixed greens (spinach, kale, chard, etc.) sauteed with garlic, raisins, and toasted pine nuts, with a little Manchego cheese to help bind), and baked for 17 minutesat 375.
These are INCREDIBLY good. Like, I would very happily feed them to “normies” without apology or explanation. The crust is just wonderful — it is indeed flaky, as promised, but it’s also crisp and flavorful…it tastes like really good pie crust. I have been making gluten-free pies for years, now, and this is by far the best I’ve ever found.
Like all gluten-free piecrust, it’s ….let’s say “challenging” to handle. It’ just doesn’t stretch. My empenadas looked like hell when they went into the oven — all patched, with holes and wonky shapes — but once cooked and browned, they look just fine (and taste a lot better than that). I did figure out one trick: I’m used to cutting out shapes for empenadas or dumplings, putting a ball of filling in the middle, and pulling the top over to meet the bottom. Fail. That just doesn’t work here (see above re stretch). After about 15 empenadas this afternoon, I figured out that I need to shape the filling not into a ball, but instead into a fairly flat “smile” (mimicking the shape of the triangular empenadas) AND that it needs to be off-center, closer to the bottom, so that the top can cover it without stretching(which it…can’t do). I have 16 empenadas (ok….17. One was quality-control :) ), and only one of them looks really good, but now I’ve learned the trick. Anyway, the crust is FAAAAABULOUS. Thank you so much!
Could I use buttermilk (the same amount as ice water)instead of sour cream? Thank you.
No, I’m afraid not, Edda. Buttermilk and sour cream have very different moisture contents.