Best Australian Meat Pie Recipe: 4 Foolproof Steps to the Perfect Pie

If there is one thing every Australian agrees on, it is the meat pie. It shows up at the footy, at the school canteen, at the servo on a long drive, and on the kitchen table on a rainy Tuesday night. It is not fancy. It does not try to be. It is just really, really good.

australian meat pie recipe golden flaky pastry
Classic Australian meat pie with a buttery shortcrust base and
golden puff pastry lid — comfort food at its best.

This Australian meat pie recipe gives you that thick, rich beef filling with a buttery shortcrust base and a flaky puff pastry lid. The kind you pick up with two hands and the gravy runs down your wrist and you do not even care. That kind.

I have been making this Australian meat pie recipe for years. Cold Saturday afternoons, birthday dinners that needed to feel like a treat, friends who swore they could not cook. It always works. The filling is deep and savoury, the pastry stays crisp on the base, and every bite tastes like proper Australian comfort food.

In this post I will walk you through everything. The filling, the pastry, how to keep the base from going soggy, and all the little things I have learned along the way. By the end you will have an Australian meat pie recipe you will come back to every single winter.

Why this Australian meat pie recipe works

A lot of Australian meat pie recipe attempts disappoint because the filling is too thin, the base goes soft, or the pastry shrinks away from the edges. I have had all of those problems and worked out how to fix every single one of them.

  • The filling is thick and stays thick. We reduce it properly and use a cornflour slurry so it holds its shape when you cut into the pie.
  • The base stays crisp. Blind baking and a hot tray make all the difference.
  • The flavour is deep. Worcestershire, beef stock, tomato paste and a good long simmer build a filling that tastes like it has been cooking all day.
  • It uses supermarket ingredients. Nothing here needs a specialty store. Just your local Woolies or Coles.

A little story from my kitchen

My dad used to stop at the servo on the way to Saturday morning sport and come back with a paper bag of meat pies. They were always slightly too hot to hold and we burnt our tongues every single time because none of us could wait. That greasy paper bag smell is one of my strongest memories of being a kid in Australia.

When my own kids started playing sport on weekends I wanted to give them that same thing, but made at home. So I started testing this Australian meat pie recipe batch after batch. My husband ate a lot of pie that winter. He did not complain once.

This is the version I landed on. It tastes like the one from the servo but better, because you made it yourself and you know exactly what went into it.

What cut of beef to use

You have two good options here depending on how much time you have.

Beef mince

Quickest option and what most Aussies use in their Australian meat pie recipe. Full-flavour mince, not extra lean. You want some fat in there for flavour. This version takes about 45 minutes start to finish and gives you that classic smooth filling texture.

Chuck steak or gravy beef

Richer and more like a chunky pub-style pie. Cut it into small cubes and slow cook it for a couple of hours until it falls apart. Takes longer but the flavour is incredible. Worth it on a Sunday when you have the time. Australian Beef has a great guide on choosing the right cut if you want to dig deeper.

Shortcrust or puff for the base

The classic Australian meat pie recipe uses shortcrust pastry for the base and puff pastry for the lid. Shortcrust holds its shape and stays firm enough to support the filling. The puff lid gives you that beautiful golden flaky top that everyone loves.

You can absolutely use store-bought pastry for both. Pampas is the one most Aussies reach for and it works perfectly. If you want to make your own shortcrust it is not hard and I will include a quick version in the notes below the recipe card.

Ingredients you will need

For the filling

  • 500g beef mince
  • 1 brown onion, finely diced
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 2 tablespoons tomato paste
  • 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce
  • 1 cup beef stock
  • 1 tablespoon soy sauce
  • 2 tablespoons cornflour mixed with 3 tablespoons cold water
  • Salt and black pepper to taste

For the pastry

  • 2 sheets shortcrust pastry, thawed
  • 2 sheets puff pastry, thawed
  • 1 egg, beaten, for egg wash

This makes 4 individual pies using standard pie tins or 1 large pie in a 23cm dish.

How to make the Australian meat pie filling

  1. Heat olive oil in a large heavy pan over medium-high heat. Add onion and cook for 3 minutes until soft and starting to turn golden.
  2. Add garlic and cook for another 30 seconds until fragrant.
  3. Add beef mince. Break it up with a spoon and leave it for a full minute before stirring. You want it to brown properly, not steam. Cook until no pink remains and you have some golden bits in the pan.
  4. Stir in tomato paste and cook for 1 minute. It will darken slightly and smell amazing.
  5. Add Worcestershire sauce, soy sauce and beef stock. Stir everything together and bring to a simmer.
  6. Reduce heat to low and simmer for 15 minutes until the liquid reduces by about half.
  7. Give the cornflour slurry a quick stir and pour it into the pan while stirring. The filling will thicken up quickly. Cook for another 2 minutes.
  8. Season with salt and pepper. Taste it. Adjust if needed. The filling should be thick, glossy and deeply savoury.
  9. Take it off the heat and let it cool completely before filling the pies. This is the most important step in any Australian meat pie recipe. Hot filling in cold pastry makes the base go soggy.

How to assemble and bake

  1. Preheat your oven to 200 degrees Celsius fan-forced. Put a flat baking tray in the oven while it heats up. That hot tray under the pie tin is what crisps the base.
  2. Grease your pie tins lightly with butter.
  3. Cut the shortcrust pastry to fit your tins and press it in gently, making sure it goes up the sides with no gaps or cracks. Trim any overhang.
  4. Prick the base a few times with a fork. This stops it puffing up.
  5. Blind bake the bases for 10 minutes. You can use baking paper and baking weights, or just keep an eye on them and press them back down if they puff up.
  6. Spoon the cooled filling into each base. Fill them generously but leave a small border around the edge.
  7. Cut puff pastry lids to size and lay them over the filling. Press the edges to seal with a fork or your fingers.
  8. Brush the tops with egg wash. Cut a small slit in the centre of each lid to let steam escape.
  9. Place the pie tins on the hot baking tray and bake for 25 to 30 minutes until the tops are deep golden brown.
  10. Rest for 5 minutes before serving. The filling is lava-hot straight from the oven.

How to stop the base going soggy

This is the number one thing people get wrong with an Australian meat pie recipe. Here is everything that helps.

  • Cool the filling completely before it goes into the pastry. Warm filling steams the base from the inside.
  • Blind bake the base before adding the filling. Even 10 minutes makes a big difference.
  • Use a hot tray. Put your baking tray in the oven while it preheats and put the pie tin directly on it. The instant heat from below crisps the base before the filling has a chance to soak in.
  • Make the filling thick. Runny filling equals a soggy base. The cornflour slurry is not optional.
  • Do not overfill. Too much filling pushes moisture into the pastry edges.

Australian Meat Pie Recipe

Recipe by Ella McKenzieCourse: MainCuisine: AustralianDifficulty: Easy
Servings

4

pies
Prep time

20

minutes
Cooking time

45

minutes
Calories

580

kcal
Total time

65

minutes

1

hour 

5

minutes

A classic Australian meat pie recipe with a rich, thick beef filling, buttery shortcrust base and a golden puff pastry lid. The kind that drips down your wrist and tastes like Saturday at the footy. Works as 4 individual pies or one large pie.

Ingredients

  • Filling
  • 500 g beef mince

  • 1 brown onion, finely diced

  • 2 cloves garlic, minced

  • 1 tablespoon olive oil

  • 2 tablespoons tomato paste

  • 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce

  • 1 tablespoon soy sauce

  • 1 cup beef stock

  • 2 tablespoons cornflour mixed with 3 tablespoons cold water

  • Salt and black pepper to taste

  • Pastry
  • 2 sheets shortcrust pastry, thawed

  • 2 sheets puff pastry, thawed

  • 1 egg, beaten

Directions

  • Heat olive oil in a large pan over medium-high heat. Cook onion for 3 minutes until soft and golden.
  • Add garlic and cook 30 seconds until fragrant.
  • Add beef mince. Leave for 1 minute to brown before breaking up. Cook until no pink remains and edges are golden.
  • Stir in tomato paste and cook 1 minute until it darkens slightly.
  • Add Worcestershire sauce, soy sauce and beef stock. Bring to a simmer and cook 15 minutes until reduced by half.
  • Stir in cornflour slurry and cook 2 minutes until thick and glossy. Season with salt and pepper. Cool completely.
  • Preheat oven to 200 degrees Celsius fan-forced. Place a flat baking tray inside to heat up.
  • Line greased pie tins with shortcrust pastry. Prick bases with a fork. Blind bake 10 minutes.
  • Fill each base with cooled filling. Top with puff pastry lids, seal edges and brush with egg wash. Cut a small slit in each lid.
  • Place tins on the hot baking tray and bake 25 to 30 minutes until deep golden. Rest 5 minutes before serving.

Notes

  • Chunky version: Replace mince with 500g diced chuck steak. Brown in batches, then slow cook in the filling liquid for 1.5 to 2 hours until tender.
  • Mushroom addition: Add 150g finely chopped mushrooms with the onion for extra depth.
  • Quick shortcrust: Rub 125g cold butter into 250g plain flour with a pinch of salt until it looks like breadcrumbs. Add 2 to 3 tablespoons ice cold water and bring together into a dough. Rest 30 minutes in the fridge before rolling.
  • Freezer friendly: Freeze baked pies individually wrapped. Reheat from frozen at 180 degrees for 20 minutes.

Variations to try

Chunky steak pie

Use diced chuck steak instead of mince. Brown the pieces in batches so they get colour on all sides, then slow cook in the filling liquid for a good hour and a half until the beef is tender enough to break apart with a spoon. This is the pub-style Australian meat pie recipe and it is worth the extra time.

Cheese and bacon pie

Cook two rashers of bacon with the onion. Add a handful of grated cheddar into the filling right before it goes into the pastry. The cheese melts through and makes the filling even richer.

Mushroom and beef pie

Add 150g of finely chopped mushrooms when you cook the onion. They cook down a lot so do not worry about there being too many. They add a deep earthy flavour that works really well with the beef.

Pepper steak pie

Add a teaspoon of cracked black pepper and a splash of cream to the filling at the end. Rich, peppery and very satisfying on a cold night.

What to serve with your meat pie

The classic is tomato sauce. Full stop. Squirt it straight on top from the bottle. That is the Australian way and there is no shame in it whatsoever.

  • Mashed potato with butter and a bit of gravy poured over
  • Mushy peas or steamed green peas
  • A simple green salad if you want to feel slightly virtuous
  • Coleslaw for a footy-day spread
  • Sauce on the side for the kids to dip

If you are serving these at a party or a kids event, make mini versions in a muffin tin. Use the same filling and cut smaller circles of pastry. They bake in about 15 to 18 minutes and disappear in about three seconds.

Make ahead and freezing

One of the best things about this Australian meat pie recipe is how well it suits batch cooking. Here is how to make it work.

Make the filling ahead

The filling keeps in the fridge for 3 days. Make it on Sunday and assemble and bake the pies on Tuesday night for a very easy weeknight dinner.

Freeze unbaked pies

Assemble the pies completely, wrap each one well in cling wrap and freeze before baking. When you want to cook them, unwrap and bake from frozen at 180 degrees for 35 to 40 minutes.

Freeze baked pies

Cool completely, wrap individually and freeze. Reheat in the oven at 180 degrees for 20 minutes straight from frozen. They come out almost as good as fresh.

Frequently asked questions

Can I use store-bought pastry for an Australian meat pie recipe?

Yes and most Australians do. Pampas shortcrust for the base and Pampas puff pastry for the lid is the standard combination and it works really well. Thaw both in the fridge overnight before using.

Why is my Australian meat pie recipe base soggy?

Either the filling was too hot when it went in, the filling was too runny, or the base was not pre-baked. Make sure your filling is completely cool, thick enough to hold its shape, and always blind bake the base for at least 10 minutes before adding the filling.

Can I make this Australian meat pie recipe in a muffin tin?

Absolutely. Use the same filling and cut pastry circles to fit your muffin tin cups. Bake at 200 degrees for 15 to 18 minutes. They are brilliant for parties and kids lunches.

How long does a homemade Australian meat pie last in the fridge?

Up to 3 days in the fridge in an airtight container. Reheat in the oven at 180 degrees for 10 to 12 minutes so the pastry crisps back up. The microwave works in a pinch but the pastry goes soft.

Can I freeze this Australian meat pie recipe?

Yes. Freeze them baked or unbaked. Baked pies reheat from frozen at 180 degrees for 20 minutes. Unbaked pies bake from frozen at 180 degrees for 35 to 40 minutes. Always wrap them well before freezing.

There is something really satisfying about pulling a tray of homemade Australian meat pie recipe results out of the oven and seeing those golden lids. The smell alone is worth it. Thick savoury filling, a squirt of tomato sauce on top. That is Australian comfort food at its best.

Happy cooking from my Newcastle kitchen.

Ella x

Ella McKenzie Avatar

AUTHOR


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