Flaky Cream Cheese Dough – Hand Pie Dough
Cream Cheese Dough is super simple to make and a great recipe to have in your repertoire. It’s tender, flaky and rolls beautifully. This is my go-to hand pie dough because it is tasty yet sturdy.

Have I ever told you about my love affair with all things pie? Ha, ha! Of course I have.
I believe that a really great pie is impossible without a really great crust. Of course, once you master the Perfect Pie Crust you could use it for every pie you make.
Me? I like to choose a specific crust for the type of pie I’m baking. That super tender and super flaky Perfect Pie Crust is exactly what I want for Glazed Maple Apple Pie.
But if I’m making a savory galette or pasties I prefer to use an awesomely delicious Rye Pie Crust .
This dough is made with cream cheese and butter and it’s my go-to hand pie dough. I use it to make Glazed Blueberry Hand Pies, Sour Cherry Almond Hand Pies, Roasted Strawberry Hand Pies and Fried Tequila Peach Hand Pies.
Why Cream Cheese Dough is a great hand pie dough:
Why is cream cheese dough the perfect dough for hand pies? Because this recipe makes a crust that is not too tender or too flaky.
Yes, Yes, tender and flaky is generally exactly what we want in a pie dough. But hand pies are, you know, “handled” a bit more.
- A super tender crust might crumble apart as you pick up and eat a hand pie.
- A super flaky crust can be a bit brittle and break apart when rolling. This can be a problem when you need to roll, cut and shape individual pies.
- Instead of a mixture of all purpose and cake flour, this recipe uses only all purpose flour. This makes a dough with a more sturdy structure that can stand up to the rolling, cutting and shaping required for hand pies.
- A little sugar is added for flavor, browning and tenderizing
- Instead of all butter, or 1/2 butter and 1/2 shortening, this recipe uses 1/2 cream cheese and 1/2 butter.
- The cream cheese adds flavor from the milk solids.
- The cream cheese has protein so the crust will brown better. Since hands pies are in the oven for much less time than regular pie, faster browning is needed for a golden crust.
- Because cream cheese is less brittle than butter, the dough rolls easily without cracking.
- There is some butter in the dough for flavor and flakiness.
Scroll through the step by step photos to see how to make Flaky Cream Cheese Dough:









If you love this recipe as much as I do, I’d really appreciate a 5-star review.
Flaky Cream Cheese Dough
Ingredients
- 13 ¾ oz all purpose flour (2 ¾ cups, see note)
- 1 tablespoon granulated sugar
- 1 teaspoon table salt
- 4 oz cream cheese (cut into 1" chunks)
- 4 oz unsalted butter (cold and cut into ¼" thin slices)
- 4 oz cold water (½ cup)
Instructions
- Whisk together 13 ¾ oz all purpose flour, 1 tablespoon granulated sugar1 teaspoon table salt in a mixing bowl.
- Toss in 4 oz cream cheese. Using your fingers, mix the cream cheese into the flour until it resembles coarse corn meal.
- Toss 4 oz unsalted butter into the flour and use your fingers to work it in. Allow the flakes to break up into slightly smaller pieces. Work quickly so the butter doesn't get warm. Don't break the butter down completely. There should be some large flakes remaining.
- Pour 4 oz cold water onto the flour all at once and toss to combine. Gently work the dough just until it comes together. Form the dough into a rectangle or square, wrap and refrigerate for at least 2-3 hours, or make it the day before and let it rest overnight.
- The dough can be frozen for up to 3 months.
Would you like to save this recipe?
As an Amazon Associate and member of other affiliate programs, I earn from qualifying purchases.
Great recipe for dough!! Thank you
Could I make this in a stand mixer as long as I didn’t beat it too much?
Yes! Just be sure to stop the mixer before the water is completely mixed in. Finish it by hand.
What temp do you bake these and for how long?
That would depend on how you’re using the dough, what the filling is, etc. Generally I would bake at 350 for approximately 20 minutes. Again, the time will depend on the filling.
Dough not as soft or flaky as imexpested
Do you have a question?
@Eileen Gray, Doesn’t it say “write a comment”. Not sure that that means “ask a question”
I honestly wasn’t trying to be rude. My point was that I could try to help if there was a problem with the recipe. I can’t control someone’s expectation of what the recipe might be, but if they explain the result they got I can try to troubleshoot or explain how the recipe should work to adjust the expectation.
The dough worked out well for my apple pie fry hand pies. Will keep as a favorite!
Wonderful!