Taco Pie


This taco pie slices clean and holds like a proper pie. That didn’t happen by accident. I’ve made enough taco pies to know exactly where they usually fall apart.
It looks right in the pan. Then you cut into it and everything shifts. The filling slides, the bottom turns soft, and what should be a slice ends up something you have to scoop.
This one doesn’t do that. You can cut into it, lift it out, and it stays together the way a pie should. The filling holds, the crust isn’t soggy, and it lands on the plate intact.
What Decides Whether It Holds Together or Falls Apart
Most taco pies fall apart because the filling goes into the crust too loose or the pie gets cut too soon. You can’t mess up either one.
- In the pan, this is what you’re watching for:
- The filling should look thick and stay where it is. If it’s still loose or you see liquid collecting around it, it’s not ready yet.
- I’ve skipped this step before and learned that liquid goes into the crust, it doesn’t cook off in the oven. It goes straight into the bottom and softens it, which is where things start to fall apart.



2. Out of the pan, it’s about what you do next:
- It comes out looking ready, but it hasn’t fully firmed up yet. Cut into it right away and you’ll have something that resembles sloppy joes instead of taco pie. (Coincidentally, I do have a sloppy joe pie recipe!)
- Generally, you should wait 10 minutes before cutting and you’ll see the difference when you lift that first slice. It holds together instead of shifting.

Recipe Test Notes – March 2026
How to Keep The Crust From Turning Soggy
I tried a full blind bake thinking it would fix the bottom. But it wasn’t worth the extra time and effort it takes.
What actually made the difference was brushing the crust with a light egg wash before adding the filling. It creates a barrier so the moisture doesn’t soak straight into the dough.

A pre-made refrigerated pie crust was used for its convenience; however, you can substitute your favorite 9-inch homemade butter pie crust.
When I cut into it, the difference was obvious. The bottom held instead of going soft underneath. If the bottom turns soft, it’s almost always because the filling went in too wet.

That only works because the filling isn’t carrying extra liquid with it. Once both of those are in place, the crust bakes through without turning soggy.
Ingredient Decisions That Actually Change the Outcome

This isn’t about adding more ingredients, it’s about choosing the ones that keep the filling under control:
- I use a full packet of taco seasoning because it gives you consistent flavor and color without having to adjust it each time. If you’re using a homemade, or bulk jar of taco seasoning, you will need approximately 2 tablespoons.
- The salsa matters more than you’d think. A thicker, chunky salsa cooks down properly, while a thinner one leaves too much liquid behind, which is where things start to fall apart.
- The cheese is where texture can go wrong fast. I don’t use straight cheddar. It melts well at first but firms up as it cools. Colby jack stays softer and melts more evenly, important when it goes directly into the filling. That’s what helps everything hold together when you slice it.