This Best Classic Apple Pie starts with macerated apples cooked gently with butter, sugar and warm spices before baking in a flaky all-butter crust. The filling turns rich and caramel-like, and the crust stays crisp and golden. It’s simple, old-fashioned, and exactly what you want a homemade apple pie to taste like.

This is the apple pie from my childhood, and still the one I make for every holiday. It’s the classic apple pie recipe everyone asks for, with buttery crust and a perfectly spiced filling. It continues to be a crowd-pleaser at every gathering, from Thanksgiving to Christmas to any weekend when you want a comforting apple pie that feels special.
Why You’ll Love It
Made with love: The filling is rich and caramel-y from cooking the apples with butter.
No soggy crust: pre-cooking the apples helps release and thicken their juices.
Classic flavor that’s sweet, tart, and warm with spice.
Ingredients

Apples: A mix of tart and sweet apples works best. I use half Gala and half Honeycrisp (or pink ladies). When you combine the two, you get the best of both worlds. A pie with balanced sweetness, juicy filling, and perfect texture.
Sugar: I use a mix of cane sugar and brown sugar. The white sugar sweetens cleanly and helps the apples release their juices. The brown sugar adds depth and warmth from the molasses, creating that rich flavor that complements the baked apples perfectly
Spices: Using cinnamon and nutmeg together gives the apple pie that classic warm spice flavor without overpowering the fruit. A pinch of salt ties it all together
Lemon juice: Using lemon juice does two things in this apple pie. First, it helps macerate the apples, drawing out their natural juices so the filling thickens evenly as it bakes. Second, it adds just enough acidity to balance the sweetness
Flour: A few spoonfuls of flour is going to help thicken the apple pie filling as it cooks, so that the apples aren’t swimming in liquid
Butter: Adds richness and rounds out the flavor. Just a small cube of butter makes a big difference in the flavor.
All-butter pie crust (bottom and top): Using an all-butter pie crust makes all the difference. The flavor is richer, the texture is flakier, and it complemenmts the apple filling perfectly. If you have time homemade is absolutely worth it, nothing beats that fresh buttery flavor. But if you’re short on time (and who isn’t sometimes!), a good store-bough crust works just fine. Make sure you use a 9-inchg pie dish or else this pie will be rather flat and you won’t get that beautiful mounded apple pie,
Egg + water (for egg wash): Brushing the crust with egg wash before baking gives it that beautiful, golden sheen and just the right amount of crispness. A light hand is key, roo much and it can pool in the creases instead of baking easily. Lightly brush the egg wash of the entire pie

Instructions
Prepare the crusts: Get your pie dough ready and refrigerate it while you make the filling. The dough will need to sit in the fridge for at least an hour before the filling goes in (hello flaky crust!).
Prepare fruit: Peel and slice the apples into thin slices.

Macerate the fruit: In a large bowl, combine the sliced apples with sugar, brown sugar, cinnamon, nutmeg, lemon juice, and salt. Let sit for 30 minutes to 1 hour to draw out the juices. (See FAQ’s on the importance of this step).

Preheat the oven to 400°F and line a baking sheet with aluminum foil.
Cook the filling: Pour the apple mixture and its juices into a large skillet. Cook over medium heat for about 7 minutes, until the apples begin to soften and the liquid starts to thicken. Stir in the flour and butter and cook for another 3 minutes, until the mixture looks glossy and lightly thickened. Remove from heat and let cool for about 15 minutes.
Assemble the pie: Place one crust in your 9-inch pie dish. Pour in the apple filling with all its juices. Top with the second crust or a lattice, and crimp the edges. Cut a few small slits for steam if using a full top crust.
Brush and bake: Brush the top crust with egg wash. Place on lined baking sheet and bake at 400°F for 25 minutes, then reduce the heat to 375°F and bake for another 35 minutes, until the crust is golden and the filling is bubbling.
Cool before slicing: Let the pie rest for at least an hour so the filling can set.

Tips
Use a mix of apple varieties for balance: mild ones ike gala, with something sweeter like Honeycrisp or Fuji.
If the edges brown too quickly, loosely cover them with foil for the last part of baking.
That little bit of butter in the filling makes all the difference, don’t skip it!
Make sure to use a 9-inch pie dish so that you get the beautiful mounded apple pie. If you use a larger pie dish the pie will be very flat.
FAQ
Do I have to macerate and cook the apples first?
You don’t have to, there are plenty of apple pie recipes that use raw apples. However, macerating and cooking them first gives you better control over texture and flavor. When I macerate and cook the apples first, it leads to perfectly cooked apples, and the crust doesn’t burn because the apples are done in the time it takes to cook the crust. Letting the apples sit with sugar and lemon draws out excess liquid, and cooking them briefly on the stove thickens the juices so the filling isn’t runny. It also deepens the flavor and helps the apples bake up perfectly tender inside the crust.
What are the best apples for apple pie?
A mix of mild and sweet apples works best. Galas are milder and softer, adding natural sweetness, while Honeycrisp apples are juicy, crisp, and hold their shape beautifully when baked. Using more than one type of apple gives the filling a fuller, more complex flavor.
How do I keep the bottom crust from getting soggy?
A few tricks help: make sure your filling isn’t too wet (that’s where cooking the apples first helps), and start with a hot oven. You can also sprinkle 1/2 tsp granulated sugar and 1/2 tsp on the bottom crust before adding the filling to absorb extra moisture.
Can I make apple pie ahead of time?
Yes. You can prep the filling a day in advance and refrigerate it, or assemble the full pie and chill it unbaked overnight. Baked pie also keeps beautifully, just reheat slices in the oven at 325°F until warm.
How to Store
Let the pie cool completely before covering. Store at room temperature for up to 2 days, or refrigerate for up to 5. To reheat, warm slices in the oven at 325°F until just heated through.
Other Recipes Like This
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Classic Apple Pie
- Total Time: 2 hours 45 minutes
- Yield: 1 pie
Description
This homemade apple pie starts with macerated apples cooked gently with butter, sugar, and spices before baking in an all-butter crust. The result is a rich, flavorful filling and a perfectly flaky crust every time.
Ingredients
8 small apples, peeled, cored, and sliced
½ cup sugar
¼ cup brown sugar
1 teaspoon cinnamon
¼ teaspoon nutmeg
Juice of ½ lemon
2 tablespoons flour
1 tablespoon butter
Pinch of salt
Double crust, all-butter pie dough
1 egg + 1 tablespoon milk or water (for egg wash)
Instructions
Prepare the crusts: Get your pie dough ready and refrigerate it while you make the filling.
Prepare fruit: Peel and slice the apples into thin slices.
Macerate the fruit: In a large bowl, combine the sliced apples with sugar, brown sugar, cinnamon, nutmeg, lemon juice, and salt. Let sit for 30 minutes to 1 hour to draw out the juices.
Preheat the oven to 400°F and line a baking sheet with aluminum foil.
Cook the filling: Pour the apple mixture and its juices into a large skillet. Cook over medium heat for about 7 minutes, until the apples begin to soften and the liquid starts to thicken. Stir in the flour and butter and cook for another 3 minutes, until the mixture looks glossy and lightly thickened. Remove from heat and let cool for about 15 minutes.
Assemble the pie: Place one crust in your 9-inch pie dish. Pour in the apple filling with all its juices. Top with the second crust or a lattice, and crimp the edges. Cut a few small slits for steam if using a full top crust.
Brush and bake: Brush the top crust with egg wash. Place on lined baking sheet and bake at 400°F for 25 minutes, then reduce the heat to 375°F and bake for another 35 minutes, until the crust is golden and the filling is bubbling.
Cool before slicing: Let the pie rest for at least an hour so the filling can set.
Notes
You must bake on a rimmed baking sheet to catch those delicious bubbling juices.
To tell if the pie is done, look for the juices to be bubbling throughout, and the crust to be a nice golden brown. If you did not macerate and prebake your apples, you’ll want to test for doneness with a skewer; the apples should be soft but not mushy.
If the pie crust is browning too quickly, you can use a pie shield or aluminum foil to cover the rim.
- Prep Time: 1 hour 45
- Cook Time: 1 hour
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