How to make a traditional Dutch Apple Pie with a buttery, flaky pie crust, topped with cinnamon-sugar apples, with a brown sugar streusel topping.
This is the Best Dutch Apple Pie and has the best of both worlds — a handcrafted buttery crust and a homemade brown sugar streusel crumble. Two different crusts make it even better. Trust me on this one.
I have been tweaking this recipe to get it just right. It needs just the right amount of sweetness without being cloyingly sweet. A touch of cinnamon is essential without being too overpowering. You need enough thickener so the apples come together when baked without too much or it will become gummy. This pie is all about balance!
The base of this Dutch Apple Pie is a homemade all-butter pie crust. It is super simple to put together and homemade is just so much better. If you want to ensure that your pie crust has a flaky bottom, I suggest doing a quick pre-bake on the crust.
The only difficult part of this is that you need to use pie weights to keep the pie crust in place. If you skip the crust pre-baking part, then you just fill it with the sweetened sliced apples and you don’t have to worry about the crust keeping its shape.
I recipe tested it both ways — pre-baking the crust for about 12 minutes and also just baking the crust after it is filled with the apple filling. The crust was flaky both ways but slightly flakier on the bottom if you slightly pre-bake the crust.
One thing to take into consideration is that when you do partially pre-bake the crust, is that the sides of the crust will brown more quickly once you bake the crust with the apple filling. So I suggest covering the pie with foil halfway through the baking time to avoid over-browning.
There are so many apples to choose from and it may be difficult to narrow it down. I found that if you like a tart apple that is crunchy and not very sweet, reach for Granny Smith. If you want a sweet and crisp apple, reach for an Envy, Gala, or Fuji apple. A classic baking apple is a Golden Delicious, Jonagold or Braeburn Apples.
LEMON Cream Pie
Triple BERRY Pie
STRAWBERRY Cream Cheese Pie
RASPBERRY Almond Cream Cheese Pie
COCONUT Cream Pie
LEMON Sour Cream Pie
Caramel APPLE Pie
White Chocolate MACADAMIA Chocolate Ganache Pie
Double CHOCOLATE Marble Pie
The BEST PUMPKIN Pie
Mini PUMPKIN Pie Bites
Old-Fashioned PECAN Pie
Sweet CHERRY Pie
Traditional Perfect Pumpkin Pie
Caramel BANANA Cream Pie
As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Thank you for your support!
I love to hear from you! If you make this recipe, please be sure to leave a comment and give this recipe a rating. Sign up for my newsletter below so you never miss a recipe. Thank you for following along! I truly do have the greatest readers. FOLLOW ME ON: INSTAGRAM — FACEBOOK— PINTEREST
Pin this now to find it later
Pin ItPeel and slice the apples and place in a large bowl. Toss with fresh lemon juice. Sprinkle with sugar, flour, and cinnamon. Toss to coat.
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
In a small bowl, cut butter into brown sugar and flour until coarse crumbs form.
Pour apples into pie crust. Press the apples down to fit into the pie plate. Top with the brown sugar crumble.
Place apple pie onto a baking sheet. Bake for 45-55 minutes or until apples are completely tender and cooked through. I suggest placing aluminum foil over the pie halfway through baking time to ensure the crumble and the crust doesn't become too brown.
Let cool for at least 2 hours to allow the apples to set-up. Serve with vanilla ice cream.
*I found that if you like a tart apple that is crunchy and not very sweet, reach for Granny Smith. If you want a sweet and crisp apple, reach for an Envy, Gala, or Fuji apple. A classic baking apple is a Golden Delicious, Jonagold, or Braeburn Apples.
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7rrvDnqmnoJ%2Bjsrp6wqikaJylqbCpecCpp6WdXaW2pns%3D