The great Australian Meat Pie!! Shortcrust pastry filled with slow cooked chunky pieces of beef in a rich gravy topped with golden puff pastry, this meat pie recipe requires patience but you will be regarded as a bloody legend by everybody fortunate enough to try one!
It’s way better than your everyday bakery and will rival some of the best meat pie makers in town – Bourke Street Bakery included! Bonus: old school beef mince meat pie recipe included. For a Family Size Meat Pie – see here!
Australian meat pie recipe!!
From midnight post-pub feasting to footy games, quick lunches on the run to essential road trip pit stops, Aussies never need an excuse to get stuck into meat pies!
That moment when you bite through the buttery, flaky golden puff pastry and the molten filling comes oozing out, and you frantically fan your mouth while mumbling “hot, hot, hot!!!”, cursing yourself for not letting it cool down but on the other hand you just don’t bloody care about third degree mouth burns because the pie is SO SO SO GOOD…..
That moment is something that every (non-vegetarian) Aussie is very familiar with.
And it’s a moment that Aussies who have moved abroad miss so much.
So today’s meat pie recipe is dedicated to all Aussies living overseas. Your hunt for a meat pie fix is officially over!!
How to make meat pies
It’s not the fastest recipe in the world – truthfully, it’s quite fiddly – but I absolutely promise it’s worth it. Here’s an overview – and the video below is quite helpful. 🙂
Pie crust base – shortcrust pastry (homemade or store bought) fitted into pie tins then blind baked so they don’t go soggy once filled. Don’t have pie tins? Use large muffin tins or ramekins, or make one giant pie! I got mine from Woolies.
Meat Pie Filling – just like making a beef stew, it’s cooked long and slow so the beef becomes ultra tender and the sauce develops incredible deep, rich flavours; and
Puff pastry pie topping – the crowning glory of the Aussie meat pie experience is that flaky golden puff pastry topping! Store bought, all the way for me. 🙂
Why two types of pastry?
I use shortcrust for the base because it won’t go soggy and has the strength so you can pick the pie up with your hands. Then puff pastry for that classic flaky meat pie lid we love and know so well!
Meat Pie Filling
Here’s what goes in the meat pie filling. This is for a chunky meat pie – pieces of beef slow cooked until fall apart tender which makes an intensely deep, rich flavoured gravy.
The old school version is made with beef mince (ground beef) but the flavour of chunky beef pies is better because you can brown the pieces beautifully which forms the flavour base for the sauce.
After an old school beef mince version?
For a beef mince version, just swap the chuck beef for beef mince and read the recipe notes for how to tweak the recipe. The sauce needs a flavour bump because it will be missing the flavour boost you get from browning cubes of beef – this step is key to a really great meat pie sauce!
Meat Pie pastry
The base of meat pies is made with shortcrust pastry and the lids are made with puff pastry. For convenience, use store bought for both if you wish. In Australia, shortcrust pastry comes frozen in square sheets. If you’re in the US or Canada, use refrigerated pie crusts (the rolled up type).
I like to make the shortcrust pastry because I feel like there’s high returns for small effort (using a food processor, it’s a 5 minute job).
But I always use store bought puff pastry – I’ve made it once, and it’s probably the only time I ever will in my life!
Meat Pie recipe tips
Brown the beef VERY well – this is key to ensure your filling has a rich complex flavour and is a deep dark brown colour. Brown in small batches – don’t crowd the pot otherwise the beef will stew in its own juices and will never brown! If this happens, just take some out.
Beef mince version – use recipe tweaks in the notes to give the sauce a flavour boost (because mince doesn’t brown like using cubes of beef)
Chunky vs beef mince – no question, chunky is superior in flavour and overall eating experience! Just can’t achieve the same sauce flavour using mince (but still so SO tasty!)
Start the day before – if you can. Firstly, it’s best for the filling to be fridge cold to ensure the meat pie base doesn’t go soggy. Secondly, as with all stews, the filling is even better the next day!
Don’t reduce the sauce too much. Some liquid evaporates while the filling is cooling and liquid gets absorbed by the pie crust. When you cut open the pie, you want the filling to ooze out and be nice and saucy, not dry.
Don’t make the pie crust too thin – if making your own shortcrust pastry, don’t make the base too thin otherwise it will break when the pie is picked up. Still tasty – but very messy!
To smear or not to smear?? To this day, I cannot believe there are people who eat meat pies without tomato sauce. I really try to respect personal preferences….. but I will never understand! 😂
Hands – or knife and fork? Knife and fork?? Shame on you! The Aussie meat pie is made for eating with your hands!!!🤣
Worth the effort!
It will take you the better part of a day to make homemade meat pies. It’s quite involved and they’re especially fiddly because we’re making individual pies rather than one large pie.
But you will be regarded as a bloody legend by everybody fortunate enough to put one of these pies in their pie-hole!
Are they as good as what you can buy? YES. Better than your everyday bakery by a long shot, even using store bought pastry. Way WAY better than the average frozen meat pies from the supermarket.
That moment when you pull these golden beauties out of the oven – you’ll feel both excited AND smug (as you should……)
But then, you smear the still-hot-from-the-oven meat pie with some tomato sauce, and take a huge bite….
O.M.G.
There are no words. (But I shall try)
You’ve got a mouthful of buttery shortcrust pastry that literally melts in your mouth, juicy fall apart beef smothered in a rich gravy with flavour money can’t buy, and the flaky crispy puff pastry…..
Be still my beating heart.
There is simply no question. It’s one of the best food experiences in the world! – Nagi x
🇦🇺More Aussie fare🇦🇺
Family Size Aussie Meat Pie – The giant form of these hand held meat pies!
Party Pies (Aussie Mini Beef Pies) – Mini meat pies!
Sausage Rolls – Seasoned pork mixture rolled up in puff pastry. We believe this rivals Bourke St Bakery too!😂
Lamingtons – Vanilla sponge cubes dipped in chocolate and coated with coconut
Anzac biscuits – Crispy, buttery, toffee flavoured oatmeal cookies
Pavlova!! – Crispy meringue on the outside, marshmallow on the inside, piled high with cream and fruit
Scones – Plus magic 3 ingredient Lemonade Scones (3 ingredients)
Watch how to make it
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Aussie Meat Pie recipe
Ingredients
Pie Base – Choose ONE (Note 1):
- 1 1/2 batches homemade shortcrust pastry
- 3 frozen shortcrust pastry sheets, thawed (300g/10oz)
- 2 refrigerated pie crusts (US/Can)
Pie Lid:
- 3 frozen puff pastry sheets, just thawed (300g/10oz) (Note 2)
- 1 egg , lightly whisked
Filling:
- 1.25 kg / 2.5lb beef chuck , 2.5cm/1″ cubes (Note 3)
- 1/2 tsp each salt & pepper
- 2 – 3 tbsp olive oil
- 1 onion , diced
- 4 garlic cloves , minced
- 5 tbsp flour , plain/all purpose
- 1 1/4 cups (315 ml) beef stock, low sodium (Note 4)
- 3 cups (750 ml) red wine , dry full bodied (Note 5)
- 2 tbsp tomato paste
- 1 tsp Worcestershire sauce
- 2 tsp black pepper , coarsely ground
- 2 bay leaves
Instructions
Filling:
- Sprinkle beef with 1/2 tsp salt and pepper.
- Heat 1 tbsp oil in a large heavy based pot over high heat. Add 1/3 of the beef and brown aggressively all over, then remove. Repeat with remaining beef, adding more oil if needed.
- Turn stove down to medium high. Add garlic and onion, cook 3 minutes.
- Add flour, stir through.
- Slowly add beef stock while stirring constantly. Once flour is dissolved, add wine, tomato paste, Worcestershire, pepper and bay leaves.
- Return beef into pot, cover with lid, adjust heat so it’s simmering gently.
- Simmer 1 hr 45 minutes. Remove lid, increase heat slightly and simmer 30 – 45 minutes, stirring regularly, or until beef is fork tender and liquid reduces down to a thickish gravy, just about covering beef (see video). Do not reduce liquid too much – thickens more as it cools & in pie.
- Remove from stove, cover and cool filling (I usually leave overnight).
Pastry:
- Preheat oven to 180C/350F.
- Cut out 6 rounds from the shortcrust pastry, then drape pastry into pie tins – don’t stretch and pull pastry, causes shrinkage. (Notes 1 & 6)
- Place pies on tray. Top each pie with large sheets of parchment / baking paper and fill with pie weights (Note 7).
- Bake 20 minutes, remove, then use paper overhang to carefully remove pie weights.
- Return crusts into oven for 5 minutes or until base is light golden and dry (can skip, Note 8). Remove from oven.
Assemble pies:
- Fill pies with cooled filling, push down to fill. Should be slightly mounded.
- Cut rounds from partially thawed puff pastry – cut them slightly larger than the edge of the cooked pastry bases.
- Brush edge of pie crusts with egg, then place lid on filling, pressing edges to seal puff pastry to the shortcrust pastry.
- Brush lids with egg, then cut a 1cm / 0.5″ incision in the middle using a small knife.
- Bake 30 minutes or until deep golden and puffed.
- Devour hot and fresh, topped with tomato sauce or ketchup if desired!
Recipe Notes:
- Brush with melted butter, sprinkle with cinnamon and sugar, cut sticks/shapes bake until golden. Try garlic butter, sprinkle with parmesan and pepper, or dukkdah or zaatar. Or just bake sticks plain and use as dippers with soups or stews.
- Cook onion and garlic, then add 1.3 kg / 2.6lb beef mince (ground beef) and brown
- Add flour and remaining ingredients per recipe including pepper but DO NOT ADD SALT
- Add 1 beef cube, crumbled
- Simmer gently, covered, for 1 hr 20 minutes
- Uncover and reduce for 20 minutes
- Add up to 1 tsp dark soy sauce to make the sauce colour a nice brown and add flavour (soy has more flavour than plain salt), simmer for 5 min. Add normal salt if you want it saltier.
- Cool then use as filling per recipe.
Nutrition Information:
Life of Dozer
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Jen says
Awesome. Loved the richness of the red wine… kids ate every bit. I cooked the beef in a covered pot in the oven at 200c for about 1 hour and it was very tender.
Nagi says
That’s great Jen, I’m so happy you loved it!
Beth says
Just divine. Yum, yum, yum
Thank you Nagi for another great way out of the cooking doldrums.
I tried this as a change from the 3rd generation meat pies recipe I’ve been making. Grandad was a baker and the whole family has stuck to his recipe since the end of WWII.
The addition of the red wine makes this an upper crust kind of pie.
I divided it into 3 batches – one as per the recipe, one with mushrooms added, and the 3rd with lots & lots of pepper plus green peppercorns. All 3 were a hit.
Baker’s tips for the bases 1- prick the pastry all over before adding the paper and weights, this stops the pastry delaminating and puffing up. 2- if you are making your own shortcrust pastry, replace half the butter with lard (or even better, dripping if you’ve got it). The lard makes the pastry stronger and more flexible so it’s less likely to crack/break during baking and eating. Dripping also adds another layer of flavour to the pie.
More yums please
Nagi says
Thanks for the tips Beth!!
Esther S says
Nagi, this is THE best ever meat pie filling, superb flavour. Used your suggested pastry recipe for the base which worked well too. Next time think I’ll forego the blind bake, not sure it’s needed for a small pie. Thanks for another great recipe.
Nagi says
I’m so glad you loved it Esther! I do blind bake otherwise I find the base get’s soggy and is undercooked – N x
Ping Ling says
Nagi,
I need help! I think I might have simmered the beef in too high heat as the liquid kinda dried out before 1 hour 45 mins. Fortunately the meat is already fork tender but there is no gravy left. What do I do now?😰
Esther says
Hi Nagi, I’m wanting to attempt this over the weekend as I am now a happy owner of a pie maker! 🙂
What could I use instead of the red wine? Any good non-alcoholic substitutes?
Jeremy says
Could you do the filling in a pressure cooker/Instant pot?
Tamara says
Could this be booked in the slow cooker?
Tamara says
oops, I mean cooked not booked! sorry!
Vera G says
Nagi HELP PLEASE, WHAT DO YOU DO WITH BUDDAH HAND FRUIT? Any receipts, thank you so much.
Nagi says
Hi Vera, they are hard to get here so I don’t use them in cooking to be honest!
Krisby says
Oh My! Yum!
Cooking for one here, so made some accommodations. Made 1 batch of the short-crust pastry. Used 1/3 of the pastry to make your Salmon/Asparagus Quiche. Dee-lick-cious!!
Used the remaining short-crust dough for two meat pies. Couldn’t find my potpie tins and have only regular size muffin tins, so I made them in two mini-loaf pans.
I’m not a big fan of leftovers, so I reduced the recipe to make only enough for two (generous-sized) pies. BIG MISTAKE.
That filling is so wonderful/awesome/fierce. It’s da BOMBDIGGITY!!! With or without the tomato sauce, those pies disappeared like smoke. Will be making the filling as my beef stew base and serving over wide noodles. Soooooooooo GoooooooooD.
Thanks for ANOTHER wonderful dish. Yum! (Again.)
Nagi says
😂😂 Always make enough for leftovers!
Cheryl Fagan says
How do you stop your family from eating the beef while it is cooling!
Cheryl Fagan says
How do you stop your family from eating the beef while it is cooking !
Nagi says
😂 I have this problem myself!
Lydia Sutakowsky says
I bet Dozer spent the day dreaming about meat pies. Now I want one!
Nagi says
Do it, you won’t regret it!!
Deborah says
Has anyone tried doing this in a pie maker? I have made the filling but feeling lazy! haha!
Jenny says
Hi I’m just wondering if there is a substitute for the wine as I don’t use alcohol thanks
Bernadette says
These look so tasty I went out and bought double batch of meat and going to smash a batch for dinner and freezer today. LOVE a good homemade pie. I want to add mushrooms to the recipe just to up the veg for the kids, would you reduce the liquid amount added because mushrooms can be watery or just throw them into the meat mix? Also because I LOVE mustrooms haha
Nagi says
I’d just add them in, I love love LOVE mushroom!!
Mary Beth Rhoderick says
Where in the recipe would you add the mushrooms? I want to make this tomorrow.
Bernadette says
Tasted really nice and all the family loved them, I used a kmart piemaker to make cute little pies but I found the gravy really strong. Maybe I did something wrong or added too much wine (is there such a thing really? haha). What would be the best way to tame it down?
diana says
hit here its diana from toronto ii am soo excited to try to make this recipe I have a vegetarian dr, son can you help me with a recipe for this , love your cite love the videos you are amazing love diana
Carole Hedley says
Hi Nagi, I Always use Gravy Beef in my pies 🥧 I find it far superior to Chuck, it’s more gelatinous. What you say?
I love your recipes and having read this through I’ll rate it 5 even though I prefer & used Gravy Beef. Bewdy Bottler!
Yvonne says
Nagi, I have to share this story of my coincidence this weekend. I ordered a shirt, and the seller by mistake sent me a shirt that says “This is how I am. I bake and I know things.” I thought I would never wear a shirt so smug. Then I decided to make this meat pie recipe. When the finished pies came out of the oven, they were perfectly flaky outside, and steaming delicious inside. As I brought a hot slice of pie to my hubby, I felt so smug I repeated the line. Good times thanks to your recipe! 🙂
Kristie says
Where oh where did you find the pie tins?
Nagi says
Woolworths stocks them here!
Timothy Smith says
A little extra tip…
Put a couple of thick slices of cheddar cheese on top of the meat mixture before putting the puff pastry lid on and voilà, you’ve got the quintessential Kiwi Steak and Cheese pie 😉
Nice one Nagi, you can’t go wrong with a good pie!
Nagi says
OMG YES! That would be amazing, totally trying that!!
Dhanya Samuel says
Yes please! The best pie ever….
Nagi says
🙌🏻