Classic apple pie with a brown butter twist: made with a brown butter crust and filled with thinly sliced, well-spiced apples, brown butter and brown sugar.
I always feel a bit timid entering a new recipe space. Especially when it’s something classic, and in this case the most iconic of all american desserts: apple pie…
This is my first foray into apple pie, so I’d like to preface this by saying, this is a really good pie but it’s probably not your beloved grandma’s recipe. It has it’s own unique charm to it and I hope you’ll try it. Perhaps it’ll even make its way into your annual pie making rotation…
Classic but with a twist. It’s got an all butter, flaky crust (and uses my brown butter pie crust recipe!). The filling is very flavorful, with tart granny smith apples, brown butter bits, and warm spices.
You decide how soft & spicy the apples should get: I like just a little crunch in my pie slices so I leave my apples to soften for a long while. If you like some crisp to them, you have the option to macerate them for less time. I’ll give you my recommendations for the spices but you can alter them to your liking.
The filling AND the crust have brown butter: Isn’t that awesome?! The crust will definitely taste of brown butter (and it stays flaky!) and the brown butter bits in the filling add flavor depth. It really complements those autumn spices well.
The filling will be thick! No worries about slicing into the pie only to be horrified by the amount of liquid spilling out. After softening the apples, we’ll cook down the dropped liquid so we can keep the flavor but do without the extra water. Then we’ll add it back to the filling. Also, a bit of flour/starch helps bind it all together.
Probably the first apple pie I made was Joy of Baking’s recipe (I was on that site every weekend when I was an undergrad) and from it I learned the technique of cooking off the liquid. After some two decades of making apple pie at least once a year, I find I can’t do it any other way. It makes the most sense: you can capture all the good flavor without having to worry about an overly ‘wet’ baked pie or needing to add so much flour or starch to keep the pie thick. The other recipe I consulted when creating this one was Natasha’s , hers was one of the few that used butter in her filling – I wanted to be sure I could add a decent amount of brown butter to the filling without messing up the ratios of liquid 😉
Apples: I used all granny smith apples here (seven in total) but in the past I’ve enjoyed mixing up apple varieties; so a mix of granny smith with some fuji, honey crisp or pink lady (I love the latter in a pie). I think using more than one variety adds more depth of flavor to the pie, just make sure they’re all baking apples!
Butter: I talk more about why I suggest using american style butter for the pie crust on its page. American butter is perfect in the filling. If, however, you want to use something richer (european, 83% butterfat or higher), it won’t hurt the recipe so go for it!
Spices: A combination of cinnamon, nutmeg and allspice. If you have it, freshly grated nutmeg is just wonderful here. You can skip the allspice if you prefer. To me it really brings out an apple pie flavor.
Sugar: I like using brown sugar in my apple pies, the added molasses add a deeper flavor. You can use light or dark brown.
Lemon: Juice of half a lemon. This adds a teeny bit of acid to balance out the sweetness, but for the most part helps with softening the apples without turning them brown.
Flour or starch: all purpose flour or tapioca starch. This helps thicken the filling.
Salt: Fine sea salt. If you’re using table salt, halve the amount.
Vanilla: pure vanilla extract or vanilla paste.
Make the brown butter pie crust: have this done the night before or at least 4 hours earlier. Pie crusts need to chill so the flour can hydrate.
Macerate the apples: Start by peeling the skin off then core the apples then slice thinly. I use and recommend a mandolin slicer for even slices. If you are slicing with a knife, do your best to ensure they are all the same size: too thick slices will not cook sufficiently, too thin slices will turn to bits.

Toss the slices with the sugar, lemon and spices. Then cover the bowl to seal. How long you leave them to macerate will depend on how soft you want the apples in the finished pie: I like very little crisp to the apples in the pie so I leave mine for over 4 hours. If you want some crunch, leave them for 2-3 hours.
Roll out pie crust bottom and shape: While it might seem counterintuitive, we’ll do this step before draining the apples and cooking the liquid (and before browning the butter) so we can set it to chill. Chilling helps the crust keep shape after baking.
Drain the apples & cook down the liquid: after the apples are done macerating they will have dropped lot of liquid into the bottom of the bowl. Pour the apples through a fine mesh sieve with a pan underneath to catch the liquid.
We’re going to cook off a lot of the water in this liquid. Have it on medium heat and cook it for 15 minutes or so until it’s thickened, and at least half the volume it was initially. It should have the consistency of a warm syrup.

Brown the butter: cook it in a frying pan until the milk solids separate and turn a toasty brown color. The butter will smell nutty and be foaming. As soon as its done, immediately transfer to a bowl or the butter will keep cooking and burn.
Toss the filling: if the apples have gathered any more liquid, drain them again and discard that liquid. Then toss the apples with the cooled brown butter, the reduced liquid and the starch.
Top the pie: Roll out the remainder of the crust (including the scraps cut off from the bottom) and slice into strips to weave for the top.
Chill then bake: chill the pie while the oven preheats (in the fridge) then place it on a cookie sheet lined with parchment paper (this will catch any bubbling juices). Bake uncovered at first, then cover the edges halfway and lower the temperature.
Bake the pie until the filling is bubbling and has been bubbling for at least 7-10 minutes.
Never cut into a hot pie, it needs to set. Wait an hour at least before slicing =)
Plan ahead: Both the pie crust and the apples need to chill and sit for a while before you can begin assembling the pie. The pie crust can be made up to two days ahead of time. The apples need to be sliced and tossed with the flavorings about 4-8 hours before. Before the pie goes into the oven fully assembled you’ll cook down the apple liquid (should take no more than 20 minutes) and brown the butter (5 minutes). You’ll want time to roll out the crust too!
Use help and helpful tools: for me the most tiresome part of making apple pie is all the peeling, slicing, coring and well, more slicing. I have on occasion skipped the peeling and then regretted it later because the baked skin is not very fun to chew. As for slicing, instead of doing it by hand, I use a mandolin slicer (use the grip so you don’t cut yourself!) this helps ensure the apple slices are uniform so you don’t have bigger chunks that don’t bake as much and smaller chunks that bake so much they turn to mush.
Pie crust visual guides: I have a video for you showing my process right above the recipe card.

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This was delicious! I made the brown butter crust and it is the best pie crust I have ever had! I will always use this recipe for my pies. Thank you for sharing !!