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    Everyday Pie ยป Recipes ยป Pie Crust

    Chocolate Pie Crust

    Published: Jan 19, 2024 ยท Modified: May 8, 2024 by Kelli Avila ยท This post may contain affiliate links ยท This blog generates income via ads ยท 11 Comments

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    Jump to Recipe·5 from 1 review
    An unbaked chocolate pie crust.

    This Chocolate Pie Crust is made in a food processor using only five ingredients and results in a cookie-like chocolate pastry crust perfect for sweet pies.

    Chocolate Pie Crust

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    Sometimes it's fun to switch up the typical standard pie crust and use something a bit more unique, like this chocolate pie crust. It's more elegant than an Oreo Pie Crust, but just as equally delicious. It's also much sturdier, making this more versatile with a wider variety of pies filling options.

    This chocolate crust is basically a chocolate cookie (a bit like these Chocolate Shortbread Cookies) baked in a pie tin. It also comes together quickly in a food processor and requires only 5 ingredients. Doesn't get any easier than that!

    So, let's get to making it, shall we? The article below is jam packed full of useful information. You can jump around using the menu below, or skip to the end of the article for the full recipe.

    Jump to:
    • Ingredients Needed and Substitutions
    • Step-By-Step Recipe Overview
    • Tips for Rolling Out Chocolate Pie Crust
    • How to Use It
    • Tips for Blind Baking a Chocolate Crust
    • Recipes to Use with a Chocolate Pie Crust
    • More Pie Crust Recipes
    • Full Recipe

    Ingredients Needed and Substitutions

    Here is a brief overview of the ingredients needed for this recipe. The full recipe with quantities is listed below this text in the recipe card.

    Ingredients for chocolate pie crust.
    • all-purpose flour 
    • cocoa powder (either dutch or natural is fine)
    • powdered sugar
    • unsalted butter
    • egg

    Step-By-Step Recipe Overview

    I find making this recipe in the food processor to be the easiest method. It's done in a matter of minutes and the clean-up is minimal since it's all made in one bowl.

    Here is a quick visual overview of the steps needed to make this recipe. This is not the actual recipe, which is located at the end of this article and has much greater details to ensure success.

    The dry ingredients in a food processor for a chocolate pie crust.

    Step 1: Add the dry ingredients to the food processor. Pulse until they are well combined.

    Making chocolate pie crust in a food processor with chunks of butter.

    Step 2: Add the butter and pulse until it’s broken down into small pieces, no bigger than the size of a pea.

    Making chocolate pie crust in a food processor.

    Step 3: Be careful not to over-process at this point, the dough should not be cohesive at all. It should look like crumbly dry powder.

    Making chocolate pie crust in a food processor.

    Step 4: With the machine, add the egg and process until the dough comes together. Then stop! Processing it beyond this point will overwork the dough.

    I know many people are afraid of making pie crust (especially pie crust by hand), but please trust me when I say it is a very simple task, especially when the recipe calls for making it in the food processor. You can do it!

    The longest and most difficult part of making this recipe is simply measuring out the ingredients. Everything else is just a simple push of a button with the food processor.

    A ball of chocolate pie crust.

    Making it Without a Food Processor

    If you don't have a food processor, it can be made in an electric stand mixer (like this Stand Mixer Pie Crust). To make it:

    1. Blend the dry ingredients first with the paddle attachment.
    2. Then add the butter, and mix on medium-low until the butter is mostly blended in. It should look somewhat sandy.
    3. Add in the egg and mix on low speed until it's completely combined, and then immediately stop. Do not overwork the dough.

    Tips for Rolling Out Chocolate Pie Crust

    Unlike a traditional butter pie crust made in a food processor, you’ll want the chocolate dough at the end of the process to be one cohesive ball, without any large butter pieces remaining. If you do have a large piece of butter, it can create problems when rolling it out and baking. If by chance you happen to see any large pieces of butter after you’ve made it, you can fix it by gently working the butter into the dough, so no large chunks remain.

    • Chocolate pie crust has more sugar than traditional Flaky Pie Crust, so it tends to stick a bit more. You can roll it out between two pieces of plastic wrap (I wouldn't recommend parchment). Or you can flour it enough so it doesn't stick, but not so much that it's covered in excess flour. This is my preferred method.
    • Do make sure to brush off any excess flour so the chocolate pie crust doesn't bake up with splotches of white on it!
    • You could roll it out in cocoa powder if you were afraid of the white splotches, but I find this unnecessary so long as you don't excessively flour the dough and neglect to brush it off.
    Rolling out chocolate pie crust.
    Rolling out chocolate pie crust.
    Rolling out chocolate pie crust.
    Chocolate pie crust in a pie plate.

    How to Use It

    This chocolate pie crust goes pretty well with most styles of pies. It works equally well for a cream pie (as in, Chocolate Cream Pie) and as a baked custard (like this Coffee Custard Pie.)

    You can use it as a blind-baked pie shell, or you can bake a pie directly in the raw pastry. Reference the recipe of the pie (filling) you are planning to make to decide on how to bake it.

    Chocolate pie crust crimped in a pie plate.

    Tips for Blind Baking a Chocolate Crust

    Speaking of blind baking...Blind baking a chocolate pie crust is essentially the same as blind baking a regular flaky pie crust.

    If you are completely new to blind baking, check out this Blind Baking Guide I've created to teach you more about it.

    There are a few reasons you would need to blind-bake a crust, but the main one is that the pie has a no-bake filling (like this French Silk Pie). In that case, you’ll need to fully bake the pie crust before adding in the filling.

    How to Blind Bake Chocolate Crust:

    1. Start by rolling out the pie dough. Dock the pie crust with a fork all over the bottom so the steam escapes while baking (unless the recipe you are using for the pie filling does not instruct you to do this).
    2. Place the rolled-out pie crust in the freezer for 30 minutes while the oven preheats to 375ºF. To prevent the pie dough from slipping into the tin before it's fully baked, you’ll want to weigh it down. Place a round piece of parchment inside of the crust. Add in some pie weights. I use dried rice and lentils that I reuse for a few years! This weighs it down just enough to prevent the pie dough from slipping or puffing up while baking.
    3. Because there is sugar and cocoa inside the dough, it needs to be baked at a lower temperature than traditional flaky pie dough. Bake at 375ºF for 20 minutes.
    4. Remove from the oven, and remove the weights and parchment. Return it to the oven to finish baking, another 5 minutes or so for a par-baked crust, or 10 minutes for a fully baked crust.The baked pie crust should be fully matte looking and dry to the touch.
    A coffee custard pie with whipped cream on top.

    Recipes to Use with a Chocolate Pie Crust

    • Hot Cocoa Pie
    • Malted Milk Chocolate Pie
    • Mint Chocolate Chip Pie
    • Chocolate Chip Cookie Pie
    • Candy Cane Pie

    More Pie Crust Recipes

    • A shaped but unbaked gluten free pie crust.
      Gluten Free Pie Crust
    • Two hands holding a ball of pie dough over a bowl with more flour and butter in it
      How to Make Pie Crust By Hand
    • A baked pie made with a butter pie crust.
      All Butter Pie Crust
    • Flaky Pie Crust
      Flaky Pie Crust

    I am so honored when you make a recipe from my site! If you make this Chocolate Pie Crust, please leave a star ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ rating with your experience! If you have any questions about this recipe, feel free to comment here, and tag me on instagram!

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    Full Recipe

    Chocolate Pie Crust

    Chocolate Pie Crust
    Print Recipe

    5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star

    5 from 1 review

    This Chocolate Pie Crust is made in a food processor using only five ingredients and results in a cookie-like chocolate pastry crust perfect for sweet pies.

    • Author: Kelli Avila
    • Prep Time: 00:10
    • Total Time: 00:10
    • Yield: 1-9" pie
    • Category: Pie Crusts
    • Method: Food Processor
    • Cuisine: American

    Ingredients

    • 1 cup (120) all-purpose flour 
    • ยผ cup (28 grams)  unsweetened cocoa powder
    • ยฝ cup (56 grams) powdered sugar
    • pinch salt
    • ยฝ cup (113 grams) cold unsalted butter, cubed
    • 1 large egg

    Instructions

    1. Add the flour, cocoa powder, powdered sugar and salt to the bowl of a food processor.
    2. Pulse until combined.
    3. Add in butter and pulse 7 times.
    4. With the motor running add in the egg and let process until the dough forms together into a cohesive ball.
    5. Scrape the dough from the bowl and place in a piece of plastic wrap and form into a disk and wrap tightly.
    6. Using a rolling pin roll the dough out until it stretches to the corner of the plastic wrap to ensure a tight seal.
    7. Refrigerate for at least 2 hours, but preferably overnight.

    Notes

    Have a question or looking for tips? The text written above the recipe is always a great first place to start! This Chocolate Pie Crust was developed with love,  and I always include loads of explanations, tips, step-by-step photos and technical advice shared before the recipe.

    Weighing your flour is the most accurate way to measure. If you aren't going to weigh it, make sure to spoon it into the cup, and then level it off. If you scoop the flour out with the measuring cup and then level, it could change the outcome of the final product.

    This ideal temperature to bake this pie is 375ºF. The exact temperature you will need will depend on if you are blind baking the pie crust, what type of filling you are using. The best guidance on how to bake this is to follow the instructions for the pie filling recipe you are using, with the knowledge that this pie crust can't be baked at higher than 375ºF or it will burn.

    To make gluten-free, substitute in a 1-1 All-Purpose Gluten-Free Flour with xantham gum, such as 1-1 King Arthur Flour or Bob's Red Mill.

    Did you make this recipe?

    Please leave a start rating and a review, and share a photo on IG and tag @everydaypie

    Some of the links on this page may be affiliate links. Everyday Pie is a participant in the Amazon Associates Program. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases, at no extra cost to you.

    « Oreo Pie Crust
    Chocolate French Silk Pie (No Raw Eggs!) »

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    1. Rachel

      December 31, 2024 at 3:45 pm

      I made this Chocolate Pie Crust for my Thanksgiving French silk pie. I wanted to make a crust that was chocolate, but NOT an Oreo crust (because Oreos contain so many undesirable ingredients in my opinion). This Chocolate Pie Crust was AMAZING! I am not an experienced pie-crust-maker, and this was simple and turned out delicious!! I made some regular pie crusts as well for other pies that day, and this chocolate one turned out the best of all!! Thank you for this great recipe! I will be making this one whenever I want a chocolate pie crust!!

      Reply
    2. KD

      June 13, 2024 at 8:20 am

      I don't want to use 1/2 c of sugar. If I cut it down to 1/4 c, would you recommend adding more flour to balance the liquid to dry content?

      Reply
      • Kelli Avila

        June 14, 2024 at 10:05 am

        I haven't tested it, but my gut instinct tells me that you can cut it down by itself. I wouldn't recommend adding in more flour for this particular pie crust. If you try, let me know how it goes!

        Reply
    3. Sheena

      February 16, 2024 at 3:08 pm

      You say to add butter, I'm assuming you cube it up is that correct? The recipe doesn't state and looks like we should add the whole stick.

      Reply
      • Kelli Avila

        February 16, 2024 at 8:33 pm

        Yes, you are correct!

        Reply
    4. Nancy O'Leary

      February 23, 2023 at 10:30 pm

      Which type of cocoa do you recommend-regular (like Hersheys) or Dutch process? A specific brand and chocolate percentage (some fancy European ones can be as high as 70% or more)?

      Thanks!
      Nancy

      Reply
      • Kelli Avila

        February 25, 2023 at 3:01 pm

        Hi Nancy. Great question. There is no consequence for using either in this recipe since there is no leavener in it! So really any cocoa powder you like the taste of works great. Dutch process is a little bit more milder and chocolate-y tasting than natural, but again, either works!

        Reply
    5. Cheryl

      September 03, 2020 at 3:17 pm

      New at baking, what can you use as a filling?

      Reply
      • Kelli Avila

        September 03, 2020 at 4:15 pm

        Hi Cheryl, there are some recommendations for pies to bake with this pie crust right above the recipe! If you are new to baking, I'd recommend the Malted Milk Chocolate Pie or the Chocolate Cream Pie!

        Reply
    6. Lori

      February 03, 2020 at 12:56 pm

      Can you use this crust for a cheesecake I am baking?

      Reply
      • Kelli Avila

        February 04, 2020 at 10:04 pm

        Yes! It will need to be baked first though.

        Reply

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    An unbaked chocolate pie crust.
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    Hi! I'm so glad you are here!

    I’m Kelli, pie lover, mom of two, and a former professional cook and baker turned recipe developer! I'm the creator of Everydaypie.com, a baking resource dedicated to sharing recipes for pie, pastry and more! Here you'll find detailed recipes, step-by-step photos and tons of tips to make you a better baker.

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    An unbaked chocolate pie crust.

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