Growing Chefs! Ontario Spooky Black Pie Dough

Spooky Black Pie Dough

This is a wonderful recipe for a sweet or savoury spooky black pie crust, perfect for creepy treats. This recipe uses an all butter crust and activated charcoal to make it black. The MOST important thing when making a pie dough is that your ingredients are all cold and stay cold.
Difficulty
Intermediate
Yield
Three pie crusts
Ingredients
1 1/4 cups unsalted butter, chilled2 1/2 cups pastry flour2 tablespoons activated charcoal1 teaspoon salt2 tablespoons sugar (optional) 1/3 -1/2 cup ice water
Equipment
Bowls various sizesMeasuring cupsMeasuring spoonsWooden spoonCutting boardPastry cutter, or knifePlastic wrapDish towel

Directions

Get Organized!

Gather your mise en place; get together all of the equipment needed for the recipe and gather your ingredients.

Get Prepped!

Cut cold butter with a pastry cutter or knife into small pieces, less than 1 cm, put into a bowl.

Measure the rest of your ingredients: water, flour, activated charcoal, and salt, plus sugar if you are using it for a sweet dough.

Get Cooking!

In a large bowl, combine flour, salt, and sugar if using for a sweet pie dough.

Put the butter into the bowl and using the tips of your fingers, begin to break down the butter into smaller pieces. The butter should be in pieces approximately the size of peas after breaking it up.

When the butter no longer has any large chunks, pour approximately â…“ cup of ice water into the flour, and stir with a wooden spoon a few times to bring the dough together. If it feels too dry, you can add a bit more water a teaspoon at a time until you can bring it all together.

When most of the flour has come together to form a shaggy dough, bring the dough out of the bowl onto a clean surface, and fold the dough upon itself 1 – 2 times to make a smoother dough. Be careful not to overwork the dough, we want it to still have nice big chunks of butter throughout it which will create a flaky crust, and very little gluten development which would make the crust chewy.

Once the dough is relatively smooth, split it into two even pieces, round and flatten them to create a disk. Wrap the dough tightly with saran wrap and place in the fridge to rest and chill for about 30 minutes. This will allow your dough time to hydrate fully and for the butter to become very cold again.

If making a pie with the dough, roll out a dough disc in a circle approximately 2 – 3 inches larger than the pie plate, about 4 mm thick. Lightly flour your pie tin, and lift your dough into the tin, pressing it down into the pan with the edges overhanging. Lift up the pan and using a butter knife, trim the edges off the pie directly against the pie plate. Dock the bottom of the pie crust by poking it with a fork a few times. Transfer back to the fridge to chill for another 20 minutes before baking.

To blind bake the pie shell, put a piece of parchment paper in the pie crust and fill with dried beans or another pie weight. Cook at 350°F for approximately 25 minutes. Remove from the oven, and take out the beans and parchment paper. Cook for another 15 – 20 minutes until golden brown.