eHow launches Android app: Get the best of eHow on the go.

How To

How to Cut in Shortening

Contributor
By eHow Contributing Writer
(19 Ratings)

Cutting in shortening is a crucial step in many baking recipes, especially pie dough - it's the technique that helps ensure flakiness. Cutting in is easy, but some ways are better than others.

From Quick Guide: Baking Techniques
Difficulty: Easy
Instructions

Things You'll Need:

  • Flour
  • Shortenings
  • Flour
  • Flour
  1. Step 1

    Make sure the shortening is chilled but not too cold. You should be able to mold it with your fingers.

  2. Step 2

    Mix the dry ingredients, including flour, according to your recipe.

  3. Step 3

    Cut the shortening into large chunks.

  4. Step 4

    Add the shortening all at once to the dry ingredients.

  5. Step 5

    Mix the shortening with your fingers so that each piece gets coated with dry ingredients.

  6. Step 6

    Scoop up some of the coated pieces and loose flour. Rub the shortening pieces through your fingers, breaking them into smaller pieces.

  7. Step 7

    Repeat step 6 until the mixture is loose and crumbly and resembles coarse meal. Different-sized pieces of shortening, plus a small amount of loose flour, create the ideal texture, especially for piecrust.

  8. Step 8

    Continue with your recipe.

Tips & Warnings
  • The coarse meal appearance is key to this technique. When pressed together and rolled flat, the pieces of shortening will eventually become individual flakes in the finished crust (or biscuit, or what have you).
  • It's important that the pieces be of different sizes - from olive- to pea-sized.
  • You can mix in shortening with a large fork, two knives that you draw toward each other or a tool called a pastry cutter or pastry mixer. These tools work well, but the human touch yields better results.
  • Most people use butter, lard or solid vegetable shortening, but shortening can be any edible fat. It's called "shortening" because of what it does to the flour. When moistened and mixed, flour develops gluten, strands of protein that give baked goods their structure. When fat is cut in, it shortens the gluten strands, making the food more crumbly, hence the name.

Comments  

joasmi said

Flag This Comment

on 10/3/2008 Good job!five stars!

ehowmum said

Flag This Comment

on 1/18/2008 I didn't know this before, thanks!!!

Post a Comment

Post a Comment

eHow Article: How to Cut in Shortening

  • Have you done this? Click here to let us know.
I Did This

Related Ads

Food & Drink
Bethenny Frankel,

Meet Bethenny Frankel eHow's Food & Drink Expert.

Get Free Food & Drink Newsletters

Copyright © 1999-2009 eHow, Inc. Use of this web site constitutes acceptance of the eHow Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.   en-US Portions of this page are modifications based on work created and shared by Google and used according to terms described in the Creative Commons 3.0 Attribution License.

eHow Food and Drink
eHow_eHow Food and Drink