Learn how to make a perfect all-butter French pâte brisée with browned butter — flaky, versatile, and ideal for sweet tarts, fruit pies, quiches, and savory galettes. A master crust that works for every filling.

Below you’ll find a foolproof recipe and baking instructions for pie crust for many different kinds of pies, tarts, and savory dishes.
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Estimated reading time: 9 minutes
Table of contents
- Master Tart Crust Method (Pâte Brisée) a rustic, flaky crust with added flavor from Browned Butter and Maple Syrup
- What Is Pâte Brisée?
- Ingredients – the Key to Making a Great Tart
- Water
- Step-by-Step: How to Make the Master Tart Crust
- How to Use this Master Tart Crust — For Endless Recipes
- Storing, Freezing & Make-Ahead Tips
- Common Mistakes & How to Avoid Them
- RECIPE
- Recipes to make with this Tart Crust
Master Tart Crust Method (Pâte Brisée) a rustic, flaky crust with added flavor from Browned Butter and Maple Syrup
A great tart — sweet or savory — begins with the right crust. This classic French pâte brisée, also known as “master tart crust,” delivers a buttery, flaky, and sturdy pastry base that works for fruit tarts, quiches, galettes, custards, and more. Once you master this dough, you’ll never go back to store-bought crusts.
Below you’ll find a foolproof recipe, baking instructions, storage tips, and notes on how to use the crust for many different kinds of pies, tarts, and savory dishes. Think of this page as your central pastry hub — the foundation for every tart and pie you make.

What Is Pâte Brisée?
Pâte brisée is a classic French short pastry made with just a few simple ingredients: flour, butter, salt, alcohol, cold water and maybe sugar.
Unlike sweet pâte sucrée, pâte brisée is neutral and versatile — easily adapted to both sweet and savory fillings. Because the dough is handled gently and kept cold, the butter in the dough creates steam during baking, producing a flaky, tender crust that holds up under custards, fruit, vegetables, or creamy fillings.
Ingredients – the Key to Making a Great Tart
USE THE BEST INGREDIENTS – The brands we have listed will let you make a great pastry crust every time. They not only taste better but production of each is controlled so the product is consistent. The size of the sugar crystal, the amount of protein in the flour, the shape of the salt – all these things will affect the way the crust bakes. Little differences in the ingredients can lead to a big difference in the crust.
Butter
Very cold, cut up butter. This is an all butter crust with half of the butter browned, to give the crust a richer taste. Using browned butter, or buerre noistte as it is known in France, adds a huge amount of flavor to baked goods. We use Horizon Organic butter to make browned butter. We think Horizon products taste better than any other dairy products we have tried. This is probably because the products are organic and from family farming partners. Just as important, Horizon is a certified B corporation that has committed to becoming carbon positiveacross their entire supply chain by 2025.
This is an all butter crust with half of the butter browned, to give the crust a richer taste. I brown the butter ahead of time and then store it in the refrigerator to harden it up. Browning it removes some of the water, and the water is needed to form a little gluten in the flour to keep the crust together, so I add some liquid back by adding some maple syrup. The maple syrup adds flavor and sweetness as well as the required liquid.
Alcohol
It’s important to have a dough that is wet enough to be rolled out, but not too much or it will be tough. Adding some alcohol to the dough makes rolling the pie dough easier and then it evaporates to leave the crust crispy. We choose an alcohol that adds flavor as well, but the flavor must be appropriate for the pie. For an apple or pecan tart we use bourbon. Rum or calvados would also be a good choice, but any alcohol that is around 80 proof will work, and the choice would depend on the filling.
Flour
KING ARTHUR UNBLEACHED ALL-PURPOSE FLOUR – has a slightly higher protein amount than Gold Medal all purpose flour – 11.7 percent protein. It is good for baking crusts that are a little more hearty and need some substance, which the higher protein provides. King Arthur is an employee-owned company that responsibly sources the wheat for their flours, and it pays off in the taste and quality. They have a “never bleached” guarantee, which means their flours don’t have an off taste or unpredictable results that can be caused by bleaching. They also carefully calibrate the protein content, which means the flour gives you the same results, every time you bake.
Sugar
Wholesome organic sugar, because it is produced from sugar cane fields that are green cut and are not burned or treated with herbicides or synthetic fertilizers. Burning sugar cane fields contributes to air pollution and climate change, and is a major cause of the destruction of the rain forest. Buying sugar from fields that are green cut helps prevent this destruction. The sugar also has a better taste because of how it is produced, but mostly we use it because it is a sustainable choice. It is more expensive than buying the standard brands, but the difference is only a few cents per recipe, so it’s worth it. We also save money by buying this in bulk direct from the company and storing it in jars in the pantry. Instead of buying brown sugar, we add some molasses or sorghum syrup to a recipe, since brown sugar is just sugar with molasses added. This saves money, since brown sugar is more expensive than white sugar, and it saves storage.
Salt
Diamond Kosher salt – The weight and structure of salt varies between brands so it is important to choose a salt and stick with it to be consistent.
Water
Ice-cold water (added gradually)
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Step-by-Step: How to Make the Master Tart Crust
USE A KITCHEN SCALE AND MEASURE IN GRAMS – Use a scale to measure all the ingredients by weight. This is absolutely essential. The inaccuracies from using measuring cups can easily lead to failure when baking. Different brands of flour and sugar will be different when measured with measuring cups, and not all measuring cups are accurate either. But measuring by weight is the same every time. Measuring by weight is also much easier – just put the mixing bowl on the scale, zero the scale, add an ingredient, zero the scale again, add the next ingredient, and so on. Measuring in grams is more accurate because it is a smaller, more precise measurement than an ounce or pound. Also, grams are often easy numbers to remember, making it possible to make the pastry crust without looking at the written recipe and easy to compare recipes. Clean up is easier, since there will be fewer bowls and no measuring cups and to clean up. And cooking with children is easier because they quickly learn how to add ingredients until the scale reads the correct amount.

USE AN OVEN THERMOMETER – Use an oven thermometer to check the oven temperature before putting the cookies in. The temperature of ovens vary, and may not be the temperature on the dial.
Preparing the dough can make or break your recipe. It’s important to follow the instructions closely and use the right ingredients in the right proportions. The most crucial aspect is to work with cold butter and ice-cold water so that the dough doesn’t become too soft or sticky. Make sure to chill the dough in the refrigerator for at least an hour before rolling it out to achieve a tender and flaky texture. You want to handle the dough as little as possible while rolling it out. With the right method, you can expect a flaky, melt-in-your-mouth crust to be the perfect base for your juicy, cinnamon-laced apple filling.
- Combine dry ingredients. Mix flour and salt in a bowl or food processor.
- Add cold butter. Cut the butter into small cubes and add to flour. Using a pastry cutter “cut in” until mixture resembles coarse crumbs with visible bits of butter.
- Add ice water gradually. Drizzle in cold water and alcohol mixture a tablespoon at a time until dough just holds together. Avoid over-wetting.
- Form dough & chill. Gently bring dough together into a flat disc, wrap tightly, and refrigerate for at least one hour. Cold dough rolls more easily and yields flakier crust.
- Roll out & line pan. Roll between parchment or lightly floured surface to ~⅛ inch thickness. Ease into tart or pie pan without stretching. Trim edges.
- Dock & chill again. Prick base with fork, then chill crust again to prevent shrinkage.
- Blind bake (if needed). For custard tarts or wet fillings, line with parchment, add weights (beans, rice), bake until edges begin to brown, then remove weights and bake a few more minutes to finish.
- Cool before filling. Wait until fully cooled before pouring custard or liquid fillings — this keeps the crust crisp and prevents sogginess.
How to Use this Master Tart Crust — For Endless Recipes
This pâte brisée is your base for making all kinds of tarts. Here are some ideas:
Change the alcohol to vodka for a neutral taste.
- Fruit and nut tarts: American apple tart, pear, blueberry pie, pecan pie
- Custard tarts: Classic French crème tarts, lemon curd tarts, lemon cheesecake
- Quiches & Savory Tarts: Spinach and goat cheese, mushroom and thyme, vegetable galettes, tomato tart
- Galettes & Free-form Tarts: Rustic open-faced pies, seasonal fruit or vegetable galettes
Because the crust is neutral and sturdy, you can customize it for sweet or savory — even add herbs or spices if desired.
Storing, Freezing & Make-Ahead Tips
- Make-ahead dough: After mixing, form into a disc, wrap tightly, and refrigerate (up to 3 days). When ready, roll out and bake.
- Freezing: Dough freezes well — either as a disc or already shaped in a pan. Thaw overnight in fridge before use.
- Pre-baked crusts: You can blind-bake crusts, cool, wrap, and store 2–3 days before filling. Great for meal prep or early holiday baking.
Common Mistakes & How to Avoid Them
| Mistake | What Happens | How to Avoid |
|---|---|---|
| Butter too warm / dough too soft | Dense, greasy crust — no flakiness | Always chill butter & dough; work quickly |
| Too much water | Sticky, tough dough | Add water slowly; stop when dough just holds |
| Overworking dough | Tough, chewy pastry | Mix only until combined — leave butter visible |
| Skipping chilling steps | Shrinking sides, misshapen crust | Chill after mixing and after lining the pan |
| Not blind baking wet fillings | Soggy bottom crust | Always pre-bake for custards, fruit, or wet fillings |
RECIPE
Recipes to make with this Tart Crust
True to The Master Pantry philosophy, this recipe combines the best seasonal ingredients and quality brands with homemade methods to maximize both flavor and sustainability. It was inspired by our travels and works well as a holiday recipe.
Photos by Tony Fitzgerald Photography
Recipes created by Lisa LeCoump — Food Photographer, Agricultural Expert, and Home Baker. Sharing master recipes, chef secrets, and sustainable baking for every kitchen. Featured on various publications.








