Blind-baked pastry often has oven-proof pie weights placed inside to mimic the weight of the filling, holding the pastry in place and preventing it from shrinking away from the edges of the tin. It may also be pricked several times with a fork to prevent bubbles from forming.
Why do you need to do it?
Blind baking is a good idea for several reasons. Firstly, many fillings don’t require cooking for as long as their pastry cases. Many fruit fillings, for example, will reduce down to mush in the amount of time it takes to properly cook their pastry casings, while pumpkin pie filling can dry out and start cracking if left in the oven for too long.
Instead of choosing between raw pastry on the one hand and mushy filling on the other, it makes sense to start cooking your pastry first then add the filling later, so they’re both cooked for the perfect amount of time. Some pie fillings - fruit tarts for example - don’t need cooking at all, in which case you will need to fully blind bake the pastry before adding the filling.
In fact, even if your pastry and filling do need roughly the same amount of time in the oven, it can still be a good idea to blind bake the pastry for a short while first. Putting wet filling directly onto raw dough can weaken the structure of the pie, as the dough will soak up all the moisture, making it weak and floppy.
The filling will also give off steam as it cooks, which can weaken the pastry even more, leading to the dreaded soggy bottom. In some cases the dough will split, causing the filling to seep out and burn onto the outside of the crust.
How to blind bake