Strawberry Rhubarb Pie Recipe (2024)

By Florence Fabricant

Strawberry Rhubarb Pie Recipe (1)

Total Time
1 hour 20 minutes
Rating
5(1,440)
Notes
Read community notes

This rave-worthy pie showcases perfectly the classic combination of sweet strawberries with tart rhubarb. The pie dough can be made ahead and refrigerated for up to three days before rolling and filling it. The whole baked pie can be cooled completely and refrigerated overnight to help the filling set and slice more neatly. Be sure to top slices of pie with vanilla ice cream, either store-bought or homemade .

Featured in: FOOD; MAKING A STATEMENT WITH SPRING'S STRAWBERRIES

Learn: How to Make a Pie Crust

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Ingredients

Yield:6 to 8 servings

    For the Filling

    • 2cups rhubarb in one-inch pieces, about one pound
    • 3cups strawberry halves
    • 1cup sugar
    • 3tablespoons ''minute'' tapioca
    • 3tablespoons unsalted butter

    For the Crust

    • 2½ cups all-purpose flour, plus more for dusting
    • ½ teaspoon salt
    • ¾ teaspoon sugar, plus extra for sprinkling
    • 15tablespoons unsalted butter (almost 2 sticks), very cold and cut into ¼-inch cubes
    • ½ cup ice-cold water
    • 1tablespoons milk

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (8 servings)

508 calories; 27 grams fat; 16 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 8 grams monounsaturated fat; 1 gram polyunsaturated fat; 64 grams carbohydrates; 3 grams dietary fiber; 29 grams sugars; 5 grams protein; 153 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Strawberry Rhubarb Pie Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. Step

    1

    Prepare the pastry: combine the flour, salt and sugar in a large mixing bowl. Using a fork or pastry cutter, work half of the butter into the flour until it resembles coarse meal. Quickly work the remaining butter into the dough until the biggest pieces are the size of lima beans. Drizzle in the water in several additions, tossing and mixing between each. (It should look rather ropy and rough.) Stop adding water when a few bits of dry flour remain in the bottom of the bowl; do not overwork the dough or it will become tough. Gather two-thirds of the dough and wrap tightly with plastic wrap. Do the same with the remaining third. Flatten into disks. Refrigerate for at least 30 minutes. When the dough is chilled, roll out the larger piece and line a nine-inch pie pan.

  2. If rhubarb is thick, peel it. Combine rhubarb and strawberries in a bowl. Mix sugar and tapioca together and fold gently into the strawberries and rhubarb. Allow to macerate for 15 minutes.

  3. Step

    3

    Preheat oven to 425.

  4. Step

    4

    Spoon fruit into pastry shell and dot with butter. Roll out remaining pastry, cut into strips three-quarters of an inch wide and weave a lattice to cover the pie. You can simply lay the strips on top in criss-cross fashion if weaving is not one of your skills. Seal, trim and crimp the edges. Brush the lattice with milk and sprinkle with a bit of sugar.

  5. Step

    5

    Bake in preheated oven for 15 minutes. Lower heat to 350 degrees and bake 40 minutes longer, until pastry has browned and filling begins to bubble. Let pie cool completely before serving, at least 3 hours and up to overnight to set the filling.

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1,440

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Private Notes

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Cooking Notes

Nina Poole

When I was a child back in the '50's, we always had rhubarb growing along the creek outside the kitchen door, strawberries growing in the berry patch.My dad taught me to make Strawberry Rhubarb Pie.He told me the biggest mistake people made when preparing the fruit for this pie was to use the wrong ratio of rhubarb to strawberries.That's the case here.The ratio should be reversed: 3 cups rhubarb to 2 cups strawberries.Try it and see if you don't agree.

Genny

Made June 4, 2016 as directed. It was good but we prefer straight rhubarb. Adding a cup of sugar pushed this into the "too sweet" category. Consider cutting sugar by half. Definitely better flavor and consistency after a day sitting.

CraigPDX

Recommendations: Use cornstarch (3-4 tbsp) for thickening; reduce sugar by up to 1/2; try ratio of 3 c rhubarb to 2 c. strawberries; flakier crust if cook 20-22 minutes at 425.

Kevin

I prefer to use cornstarch as well - 3-4 level tablespoons is usually enough. More if you want it really thick, less if you want it juicier.

Sb

Definitely reduce sugar to between 1/2 and 2/3 cup. I use a half cup if being served with ice cream, 2/3 if with out. The crust is divine. Also cooking at 425 for 20-22 minutes ( instead of 15) gives a flakier crust. To the filling I also add a teaspoon of vanilla, a few shakes of cinnamon, a dash of ground cardamom, and a nice grind of black pepper. You won’t taste the latter two but they really deepen and tie together the flavors.

Dave Schabes

I used this recipe just for the filling (bought frozen pie crusts) and it turned out perfect. Very simple. Peeling the tougher stalks of rhubarb was an excellent tip.

Heidi Menocal

This is almost identical to the recipe from the joy of cooking. I have been using that recipe forever. It says to use cornstarch for a lattice top pie. I prefer the cornstarch.

Golem18

Not at all "unrelated" and a good idea. Too many pecksniff food police on this website. These are recipes, not federal regulations.

Joan Polzin

I've had some problems in the past with too much juice in the finished pie, using flour as the thickener. The tapioca made all the difference. I also sprinkled some bread crumbs on the bottom crust before adding the filling, for an extra precaution. The result was a perfection!

Natalie R

This is a great summer pie--it's extremely simple and will impress whoever you share it with. I made it with 1/2 cup of sugar and 4tbs of cornstarch in lieu of tapioca and it turned out perfectly tangy and sweet. Will definitely make this again!

maggie

I made this recipe and reduced sugar to 3/4 cup as I like a more tart pie but should have used less. I used farm picked strawberries so probably didn't need as much sugar. I think the store bought kind are not as sweet. Something to keep in mind when making this pie.

Condiment queen

According to the Bob's Red Mill blog, use 50% more tapioca flour. So in this recipe, use 4 1/2 tablespoons of tapioca flour instead of 3 tablespoons of pearls. https://www.bobsredmill.com/blog/healthy-living/what-is-it-wednesday-tapioca-flourstarch/

Bonnie

Yummy pie. The only change I made was to decrease the sugar by half. Everyone loved the pie, even the young grandkids. This was easy to make and delicious.

Maile

This was delicious and surprisingly easy to make. Waiting to eat was the hardest part. Took the advice of some folks to use less sugar and I only used a little over half a cup. I also added crushed Graham crackers on the bottom to absorb the juices and it turned out great. No soggy bottoms!

CRSmoochie

Follow this recipe to a T .. no cinnamon, no nutmeg ... I've made so many strawberry rhubarb pies. This is it, period.

Pat

Made this for a neighborhood dinner party. Followed advice of others with flipping strawberry/rhubarb amounts and used 1/2 cup sugar. The filling came out perfectly, and I refrigerated overnight and it firmed nicely for serving. The pie dough was less of a success-- although easy to work with, it baked a bit heavy and tough. I will stick with my usual recipe which uses 2/3 cup shortening (1/3 butter and 1/3 Crisco) to 2 cups flour.

Laurie A

I brush my bottom crust with egg white. Helps with the sogginess. Don’t eat it until the next day when filling is firmer..

Kathy Schroeder

Fantastic. I put some lemon zest into the mixture.

Sunflower

Everyone's pro-tips were super helpful: Definitely reduce sugar to 2/3 cup. 3-4tbs of cornstarch in lieu of tapioca. To the filling I also added a teaspoon of vanilla, a few shakes of cinnamon. I had extra strawberries and rhubarb so I ended up making a 2nd pie, where there was more strawberries than rhubarb and that was more my speed. Less tart, more sweet. I used a pre-made crust for both. Thank you all!

Jeff

Just used this recipe, I did make a few changes as people suggested, I used 3 cup of rhubarb and 2 cups of strawberries, and cut sugar back to 2/3 of a cup sugar, simply came out excellent, Thank everybody on this recipe

Etwan Sherlew

It's in the oven, but I'll have to wait till tomorrow morning to try it...FOR BREAKFAST!!!

Fred

7/2/23. Used 1lb rhubarb and 12 oz. Strawberries with 1/2 sugar and 3 1/2 Tablespoons cornstarch

Kristen

I did the noted ratio or strawberry-rhubarb, but I used cornstarch instead of tapioca, did 3/4 cup sugar, and added fresh grated ginger to the fruit mixture. That ginger popped the flavors amazingly.

Amy J

Tried a different recipe that included cinnamon, vanilla, and lemon.

Cheryl

My family loves this pie so much! I use coarse organic cane sugar, so a cup is a little less than regular sugar. That works with my not-so-ripe grocery store fruit, which isn’t very sweet or juicy. I use the 3 cups rhubarb/2 cups strawberries others mention; also cuts the sweetness. I add 3 tbsp Grand Marnier, 1/4 cup flour (grandma always thickened pies with flour), 1/2 tsp cardamom and 1/4 tsp salt. I make the vodka pie crust detailed elsewhere on NYT.

505

Used Melissa Clark’s pie crust recipe. Realized after chopping up 3 c of rhubarb in 1 in pieces that it was only 0.66 of a lb. Measuring cups and weights can be way off. Added vanilla to the fruit. Cut sugar to 2/3 c. Used cornstarch. Had to cook it 25 min longer. Next time, I’d cook it on high heat longer before turning it down. But that’s just gilding the lily because it had to be one of my best pies of all time. Brought some to our neighbors who loved it. Husband died and went to pie heaven.

katcooks

Pie is fantastic. Could do 2.5 cups each of rhubarb and strawberries. Scant 1 cup sugar, 3.5 tbsp tapioca.

J Hansen

Strawberry Rhubarb pie is the hubby’s & my most favorite pie! We fell in love with it during our visits to MN. We rarely find the pie (or fresh rhubarb) here in, CA, so I was beyond excited to find fresh rhubarb at our local Trader Joe’s. This recipe was 5/5 from 1300+ reviewers, so, was pretty confident it would come out ok. After reading comments, I used 1/2 c sugar, 4 T cassava flour (vs tapioca), 1 t vanilla ext, dash of cinnamon & pinch of pepper. Flavor & texture was perfect! Love it!!

Regina

Could you taste the pepper? Did you use black pepper?

Margaret

Just finished making the crust and wanted to share some technical information before I forget.... Take about 1/4 C of flour from your measure and put it on a cutting board. Roll your sticks of butter around in it and begin dicing. Continue to gently dust the butter as you dice. Keep knife dusted too. When you are finished toss it all back into the bowl and cut it into the rest of the flour as you normally would. I do it in two waves as the butter starts to add up on the board...easy peasy.

Martha W.

If you want to cut back on the sugar: Made this with 3 cups each of rhubarb and strawberries. Peeled and blanched the rhubarb first. Used 1/4 cup golden lakanto sweetener and 1/4 cup organic sugar. Perfect level of sweet/tartness achieved with great consistency throughout.

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Strawberry Rhubarb Pie Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Does rhubarb need to be cooked before baking? ›

Do You Need to Cook Rhubarb Before Baking? The short answer is no, you don't need to cook rhubarb before baking a rhubarb pie.

How do you keep a rhubarb pie from being runny? ›

Thankfully the science of baking has an easy trick up its sleeve to deal with this, and all it involves is tossing your rhubarb with some sugar. Mixing your fresh fruit with sugar and letting it sit is called maceration, and it helps draw excess liquid out of your rhubarb before it cooks out and leaves your pie soggy.

How do you keep rhubarb pie from getting soggy? ›

Often, blind-baking solves this problem. If you're making a single crust custard-filled pie, like a pumpkin pie, bake the pie dough first before adding filling to allow some of the moisture in the crust to evaporate. You can also totally blind-bake fruit pies.

Where is strawberry rhubarb pie most popular? ›

The most uniquely searched pie is the one that the state searches for more than the rest of the country, and for most of the Northwest, that's strawberry rhubarb. Fruit pies in general were big in the west — except for Nevada, which seems to like candy cane pie the most (who knew?!).

Should you soak rhubarb before baking? ›

Discard leaves and woody ends. Wash rhubarb with cool tap water, but do not soak.

Do you only eat the red part of rhubarb? ›

Only the rhubarb stalks are edible. The leaves contain oxalic acid and are highly toxic. The stalks don't contain acid and are safe to eat. Most rhubarb is sold without the leaves but if you're growing your own, make sure you remove a...

Why is my rhubarb pie so juicy? ›

Rhubarb pie fillings are often soft and runny. The rhubarb contains so much water, you either have to add too much thickener or coax the rhubarb to release its liquid before thickening it. What's the answer? To solve this problem, I mix the rhubarb with the sugar.

What is a thickening agent for rhubarb? ›

Add 1 cup of granulated sugar to the fruit, along with 3 tablespoons of cornstarch or tapioca starch. Tapioca starch is best for fruit pies, because it sets clear.

Why is my rhubarb strawberry pie runny? ›

Typically when a strawberry rhubarb pie filling (or really any fruit pie) is runny it has to do with either the pie not cooking long enough or it not cooling long enough before slicing.

Should I bake the bottom pie crust first? ›

Pre-baking is a must if you're looking for a flaky pie crust. It's especially helpful for recipes with a wet center. Recipes for most tarts, pies, and quiches call for pre-baking to ensure that the final product doesn't end up soggy.

How do you get a crispy crust on the bottom of a pie? ›

Choose the Right Rack in the Oven

Which rack you use in the oven can help ensure a crisp crust. Baking the pie on a lower rack will concentrate heat on the bottom of the pie and help the crust crisp.

Should I egg wash the bottom pie crust? ›

One of my very favorite kitchen tricks is to brush a bottom pie crust with an egg white wash before filling. This keeps the filling from seeping into the crust and creating a soggy bottom. I like to avoid soggy bottoms at all costs. Egg white and water is also perfect for sealing edges, like when making a pie.

What is the most sold pie in America? ›

The clear winner for the United States as a whole was (not surprisingly) apple pie with more than 27% of sales going to the traditional flavor.

What is the rhubarb pie capital of the world? ›

Sumner, Washington – Rhubarb Pie Capital of the World.

What is the number one favorite pie? ›

Apple pie is arguably one of the most popular pie flavors. A symbol of America, the apple pie was actually invented by the British. Apple pie is simply made with sliced apples on double-crusted pastry dough.

What happens if you don't cook rhubarb? ›

Stick to the stems if you're eating rhubarb raw—the leaves are poisonous. I repeat: Rhubarb leaves are poisonous. The leaves contain oxalic acid, which can be fatal to both people and pets if consumed in large amounts.

Can you eat undercooked rhubarb? ›

Rhubarb leaves do contain oxalic acid, which can cause issues with joint pain and in high enough doses can also cause kidney failure. Raw rhubarb stems can be eaten in small quantities (although they are very sour) but it's generally recommended that they're cooked.

What can I do with unripe rhubarb? ›

Here's my recipe for green rhubarb jam: Peel the green-fleshed parts of rhubarb stalks, cutting away any pink parts, and cut the stalks crosswise into ½-inch pieces. In a big, wide, nonreactive pot, mix 1 1/2 pounds of these rhubarb pieces with 2 cups sugar.

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