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This magic crust custard pie is one of those old-fashioned recipes that never gets old. You throw everything in a blender, pour it into a pie plate, and the flour sinks to the bottom and bakes into its own crust — no rolling, no chilling, no fuss. The texture is somewhere between flan and baked custard, and it comes together in minutes.
Why You’ll Love It
- It makes its own crust — the flour settles to the bottom as it bakes, no pie dough required
- One blender, one pan — barely any cleanup and almost no prep
- Not too sweet — lightly sweetened and delicate, more like flan than a sugary pie
- Endlessly adaptable — swap in heavy cream and butter for a richer version, or sprinkle cinnamon on top instead of nutmeg
- 45 minutes start to finish — including bake time
A Few Notes on Ingredients
The original recipe uses margarine and 2% milk, and honestly, that’s how I still make it most of the time. I know margarine has fallen out of fashion and everyone has opinions about it, but I’m telling you, it works here. If you want to go richer — use butter and swap in heavy cream — the pie becomes something denser and more decadent, almost like a chess pie. Still good. Different, though. More of a special occasion version. The everyday version is the lighter one.
The vanilla is non-negotiable. Two teaspoons, real vanilla if you have it. I’ve made it with imitation vanilla exactly once, when I ran out and didn’t feel like going to the store. It was fine. I’m not going to pretend it was the same.
Nutmeg on top — this matters. I use freshly grated if I remember to buy a whole nutmeg, which is maybe half the time. Pre-ground works. Don’t skip it. It does something to the top of the pie that makes the whole thing smell like a specific kind of comfort I can’t describe except to say it smells like the 1980s in the best possible way.
Ingredients
- ¼ cup margarine (or butter if you’re feeling fancy — I’m not, usually)
- 4 eggs
- ¾ cup white sugar
- 1 pinch of salt — I probably use a generous pinch, whatever that means
- 2 cups 2% milk
- 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
- ½ cup all-purpose flour
How to Make It
First things first: preheat your oven to 350°F. Get that going before you do anything else because this batter comes together so fast you’ll feel foolish if you’re standing there waiting for the oven to catch up.
Butter a 9-inch pie plate. I use actual butter for this step even when I’m using margarine in the batter — it just feels right, and I think it helps the crust release cleanly. Grease it well, all the way up the sides.
Now here’s the part that still delights me every time: put everything — the margarine, eggs, sugar, salt, milk, vanilla, flour, all of it — into a blender. Blend for about 30 seconds. That’s it. The batter will be thin and you will question yourself. This is normal.
Pour it into your buttered pie plate. It’ll look like a lot of liquid for a pie pan and you’ll wonder if it’s going to slosh over in the oven. It won’t. Well — don’t overfill it. Leave maybe a quarter inch of space.
Sprinkle the top with nutmeg. I do this in little circles, not too heavy, not too light. More than a dusting, less than a coating.
Bake at 350°F for 45 minutes. Don’t open the oven door early. I know that sounds like the kind of instruction someone gives and everyone ignores, but here I mean it. The custard needs to set up undisturbed. At around 40 minutes you can peek through the oven window, and if the edges are set and the center has just a little wobble — barely any — it’s close. At 45, it should be done.
Let it cool on a wire rack. This is important and also the part I’m worst at because I always want to slice into it while it’s warm and you can, you absolutely can, but the slices hold together better if you give it at least twenty minutes. Forty minutes is better. I have never successfully waited forty minutes.
Variations
Like I said — butter and heavy cream make this richer. A version with a little cinnamon stirred into the batter and cinnamon on top instead of nutmeg is good too. Warmer-tasting. More holiday-ish.
I’ve also seen people add a little lemon zest to the batter and I keep meaning to try that. I think it would cut the richness nicely. Maybe this fall.
Once I tried making it in a square baking dish because I didn’t have a pie plate handy and the whole thing worked fine. It doesn’t need to be round. It doesn’t care about its shape. I appreciated that about it.
Storage
Keep leftovers covered in the fridge. It holds up well for three or four days, though I’ve never actually had it last that long in my house. Custard pie for breakfast is apparently a thing in my household, and I mostly allow it because I don’t have the energy to have that argument anymore.
It does not freeze well. The texture gets grainy and strange. Don’t do it. Just make less if you don’t want leftovers, though honestly, leftover custard pie cold out of the fridge the next morning with a cup of coffee is one of the better things in life.

Magic Crust Custard Pie
Ingredients
- 1/4 cup margarine or butter melted
- 4 eggs
- 3/4 cup granulated sugar
- 1 pinch salt
- 2 cups milk 2%
- 2 tsp vanilla extract
- 1/2 cup all-purpose flour
- nutmeg for topping
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350°F and grease a 9-inch pie plate with butter.
- Add margarine, eggs, sugar, salt, milk, vanilla, and flour to a blender. Blend for about 30 seconds until smooth.
- Pour the batter into the prepared pie plate, leaving a little space at the top.
- Sprinkle the top lightly with nutmeg.
- Bake for 45 minutes until the edges are set and the center has a slight wobble.
- Cool on a wire rack for at least 20–30 minutes before slicing.

