I’ve also included directions for using store bought pastry sheets because the steps are the same for the baking part.

Quiche crust recipe

This is my recipe for quiche crust which I’m publishing separately so it’s handy to reference for the quiche recipes I’ve shared and the many more I will inevitably share over the years! Use this recipe if:

you want to make a homemade quiche crust from scratch; or you have store bought shortcrust pastry – frozen or refrigerated. The steps to press the pastry into the tin and baking are the same.

If you have a store bought prepared pie shell, simply cook it per the packet directions.

Quiche crust is shortcrust pastry 

Quiche crusts are made with shortcrust pastry. The name “shortcrust” refers to the baking term “short” which means pastries that are flaky and crumble when you cut into them. They should be tender enough such that you can cut into it with little effort, and while it should be flaky, it should not disintegrate into crumbs. And a quiche crust should hold together so a slice of quiche doesn’t fall to pieces when cutting and serving.

Even if you’re new to making quiche crust from scratch, I think you’ll find it quite straight forward the way I’ve broken it down plus the recipe video below! Using a food processor, the quiche crust dough takes less than 5 minutes to make and it works 100% perfectly!

How to make quiche crust or pie crust

Blitz – place flour, butter and salt in a food processor and blitz until fine crumbs form Add ice water while the motor is running. Why ice water? Because it stops the butter from melting. Teeny tiny bits of butter in pastry = flaky pastry! Once a ball forms, take it out, pat into a disc, wrap in cling wrap and refrigerate for 1 hour+ (up to 2 to 3 days). Reason: This makes the butter in the dough firm up again = flaky pastry Roll out pastry to 3 mm / 1/8″ thick Press into quiche tin or pie dish Fill with pie weights and bake – Use baking beads, dry beans or rice. Anything that will weight down the pastry to stop it from puffing up and shrinking while it bakes. This is called Blind Baking. Remove beads carefully – Nobody wants hot beads bouncing all over the kitchen! Bake again just for 10 to 15 minutes until the base is light golden – this will really ensure your quiche crust base stays nice and crisp once filled.

Quiche Filling

Once baked, fill the quiche crust with your filling of choice – or use one of my existing Quiche recipes:

Quiche Lorraine Salmon Quiche Italian Sausage Quiche

If you want to make your own filling, use this as a guide:

Standard quiche tin (about 23cm / 9″ diameter, 2.5 – 3cm / 1 – 1.25″ deep) – use the cream, eggs, salt and cheese in the Quiche Lorraine recipe; Deeper quiche tart tin (about 23cm / 9″ diameter, 3.5 – 4 cm / 1.5 – 1.7″ deep) – use the cream, eggs, salt and cheese the Salmon Quiche recipe

Enjoy! – Nagi x

Watch how to make it

Life of Dozer

Racing for a toy!

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