Twice-Baked Sour Cherry Pie

Updated Nov. 3, 2022

Twice-Baked Sour Cherry Pie
Andrew Scrivani for The New York Times
Total Time
1 hour 45 minutes
Rating
5(842)
Comments
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Here is an intensely buttery, crispy-crust pie that exudes loads of syrupy cherry nectar when you plunge in the knife. In a quirk of pie-making tradition, open-faced pies, like custards, chocolate cream or pumpkin chiffon, get the best crust — pre-baked shells that are flaky, crisp and golden. But fruit pies, baked with raw dough that is often pale and soggy, get short shrift. For a fruit-pie crust that is crunchy and flaky, with a buttery texture that absorbs the fruit’s juices without turning to mush, the secret is pre-baking the bottom crust, then adding the fruit, covering it with raw dough and baking it again.

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Ingredients

Yield:8 servings
  • cups plus 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour, more for rolling out dough
  • teaspoon kosher salt
  • 15tablespoons unsalted butter, chilled and cut into pieces
  • 1cup sugar
  • 2 to 3tablespoons instant tapioca
  • ¼teaspoon cinnamon
  • 2pounds sour cherries (about 6 cups), rinsed and pitted
  • 1tablespoon kirsch or brandy
  • 3tablespoons heavy cream
  • Demerara sugar, for sprinkling
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (8 servings)

496 calories; 24 grams fat; 15 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 7 grams monounsaturated fat; 1 gram polyunsaturated fat; 67 grams carbohydrates; 3 grams dietary fiber; 38 grams sugars; 5 grams protein; 98 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    To make dough: in bowl of a food processor pulse together flour and salt just to combine. Add butter and pulse until chickpea-size pieces form. Add 3 to 6 tablespoons ice water, 1 tablespoon at a time, and pulse until mixture just comes together. Separate dough into 2 disks, one using ⅔ dough, the other using the remaining. Wrap disks in plastic and refrigerate at least 1 hour (and up to 3 days) before rolling out and baking.

  2. Step 2

    Heat oven to 425 degrees. Place larger dough disk on a lightly floured surface and roll into a 12-inch circle, about ⅜-inch thick. Transfer to a 9-inch pie plate. Line dough with foil and weigh it down with pie weights. Bake until crust is light golden brown, about 30 minutes.

  3. Step 3

    While pie crust is baking, prepare filling. In bowl of a food processor, combine sugar, tapioca and cinnamon (use more tapioca if you prefer a thicker, more solid filling, and less if you like a looser, juicier filling). Run the motor until tapioca is finely ground. Place cherries in a bowl and add sugar and tapioca mixture. Drizzle in kirsch or brandy and toss gently to combine.

  4. Step 4

    When pie crust is ready, transfer it to a wire rack to cool slightly and reduce heat to 375 degrees. Remove foil and weights. Scrape cherry filling into pie crust.

  5. Step 5

    Place smaller disk of dough on a lightly floured surface and roll it ⅜-inch thick. Use a round cookie cutter (or several round cookie cutters of different sizes) to cut out circles of dough. Arrange circles on top of cherry filling in a pattern of your choice.

  6. Step 6

    Brush top crust with cream and sprinkle generously with Demerara sugar. Bake until crust is dark golden brown and filling begins to bubble, 50 minutes to 1 hour. Transfer pie to a wire rack to cool for at least 2 hours, allowing filling to set before serving.

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Ratings

5 out of 5
842 user ratings
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Comments

This is hands down the best cherry pie recipe I've tried. The trick of twice-baking really pays off. I bake the cut-out top crusts separately on a baking sheet with heavy cream brushed and sprinkled with Demerara sugar. Then I top the filling with them after everything is cooled so cut-out crust will stay straight-flat and crisp, otherwise they become wavy over the bumpy filling.

There is a better recipe on the site, Jacques Pepin's Sour Cherry Tart, which I've made many times. There's no pretty picture, but the recipe is simpler and better than this one, which I tried. Perhaps it would have worked all right with fresh sour cherries, but mine were frozen. They bubbled up and leaked beneath the crust before the pie was done, defeating the purpose of the double baking---and I'm an experienced pie maker. In retrospect, I would defrost the cherries first.

I haven't tried this, and the crust is probably quite crunchy, but I have never had a problem with soggy crust in a fruit pie if I bake in a Pyrex plate at 425°on the bottom shelf of the oven - not convection - for 20 minutes before turning down the heat to 350°. If your convection oven has a pie setting, use that, still bottom shelf, or you can switch from conventional to convection when you turn the heat down.

I would make this again but without the cinnamon, or any other flavoring. The cherries stand for themselves.

230 grams of flour

I made this a few days ago. It has rained a lot here lately, so my cherries were very juicy. I did not have tapioca pearls, so I used tapioca starch, about 2 1/2 Tbl to start. After baking, I got cherry soup in a crust. It ended up being a great thing that the rounds on the top of the pie could be lifted off, because I picked them off, dumped all of the filling back into a pot, added more tapioca starch, and thickened it up. Then I poured it back into the crust to let it set up with the rounds on it. Loved the flavor, and it’s a fun way to top a pie. Ended at about 1/4 C tapioca starch. (4 Tbl). Used maraschino liqueur, and a dash of amaretto, because I had it.

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