Christmas Fruit Mince Pies Recipe: Homemade Holiday Mince Pies Guide

Crispy, buttery pastry with a juicy, spice-scented fruit filling makes these mince pies an unbeatable Christmas treat. They’re easier to make than you might think, taste wonderful fresh from the oven, and make lovely homemade gifts for the festive season.

Icing sugar dusted Christmas fruit mince pies on a small wooden board with red and gold decorations in the background.

There’s nothing like a batch of homemade Christmas mince pies to signal that the holidays are near. The aroma while baking is irresistibly festive and will fill your kitchen with warming spice notes.

This version is adapted from my grandmother’s recipe with a few of my own tweaks from years of baking. Below I’ll guide you step by step and share helpful tips to make the process simple and enjoyable.

  • We’ll make the fruit mince, prepare the pastry, and assemble the little pies.
  • They’re a delightful weekend baking project—perfect with a festive playlist on in the background.
  • Make a big batch of mince to have on hand or to package as gifts for friends and family.

Ingredients You’ll Need

There are many components to these pies, but the recipe is flexible—swap dried fruits, nuts, or spices to suit your taste while keeping quantities similar.

For the fruit mince

Ingredients for fruit mince laid out on a grey marble background and labelled.
  • Dried fruit: a mix of currants, sultanas, dried apricots and glacé cherries is classic. You can swap in raisins, dried cranberries or other dried fruit—keep the overall volume the same.
  • Almonds: or other unsalted nuts for texture (pecans, walnuts, hazelnuts, pistachios or cashews all work).
  • Desiccated coconut: optional, for texture and flavour.
  • Mixed peel: optional—replace with extra dried fruit if you prefer no peel.
  • Spices: ground cinnamon, allspice, nutmeg and cardamom (if you don’t have cardamom, use extra cinnamon).
  • Vegetarian suet: traditional recipes use beef suet, but vegetarian suet, butter or coconut oil are fine substitutes.
  • Brandy: adds depth and warmth; swap for rum, whiskey or use apple juice for an alcohol-free version.

For the pastry

Ingredients for pastry laid out on a grey marble background and labelled.
  • All-purpose (plain) flour.
  • Cold butter: cut into cubes.
  • Powdered (icing) sugar: or superfine/ caster sugar if preferred.

You’ll also need a mini muffin pan (or a regular muffin pan for larger pies), a small round cutter (or the rim of a small glass) and a small star cutter if you want pastry star tops.

How to Make Christmas Fruit Mince

Blitzed up apples in the bowl of a food processor.
  1. Peel, core and roughly chop the apples. Pulse in a food processor until they form a chunky paste, then transfer to a large mixing bowl.
Dried fruit and sugar in the bowl of a food processor.
  1. In batches, blitz the dried fruit, mixed peel, almonds and suet in the food processor until chopped and combined. Add to the bowl with the apples.
Hand holding a wooden spoon and stirring Christmas fruit mince in a large white bowl.
  1. Stir in the brandy (or swap) and mix thoroughly, then cover tightly with foil or plastic wrap.
Christmas fruit mince in a large white bowl with a wooden spoon in the bowl.
  1. Allow the mixture to macerate at room temperature for up to 3 days, stirring once a day to develop the flavour. You can use it straight away if short on time, but it tastes best after resting.

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Kate’s Top Tip

You don’t have to wait three days — the mince is usable immediately, but resting it lets the apple juices and brandy plump and soften the dried fruit, deepening the flavour.

How to Make the Pastry

Flour and butter in the bowl of a food processor.
  1. Add flour, baking powder, salt and powdered sugar to a food processor and pulse to combine. Add the cold butter and pulse until the mix resembles breadcrumbs.
Pastry blitzed in the bowl of a food processor.
  1. Whisk the egg with the milk, then with the motor running pour the liquid in until the pastry comes together into small beads. If you don’t have a food processor, rub the butter into the dry ingredients by hand and add the egg mixture slowly until it holds together.
Blitzed pastry laid out on a wooden board.
  1. Turn the pastry out onto a lightly floured surface, bring it together into a rough disk, wrap tightly and chill in the fridge for at least 30 minutes.
Hand forming a pastry circle on a wooden background.
  1. Chilling keeps the butter firm, which makes the pastry easier to roll and ensures a flakier, crisper result.

How to Make the Christmas Fruit Mince Pies

Hand peeling back baking paper to reveal rolled out pastry underneath.
  1. Preheat the oven to 350°F (180°C fan). Grease a mini muffin pan. Roll the chilled pastry between two sheets of parchment to about 3mm thick to prevent sticking.
A hand holding up small pastry circle with more pastry in the background.
  1. Cut circles slightly larger than the muffin wells and press them into the greased tin. Patch any tears with pastry scraps and re-roll scraps until used up.

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Kate’s Top Tip

If the pastry becomes sticky, chill it for 10 minutes. Firm, cold pastry is easier to work with and bakes up crispier.

Hand pressing pastry circles into a small muffin tin.
  1. Spoon a heaped teaspoon of fruit mince into each pastry case and press the filling down gently with the back of the spoon.
A spoon filling pastry case with fruit mince in a small muffin tin.
  1. Roll remaining pastry and cut small stars (or circles) to top the pies. Place these on top of each filled case.
12 cooked, star topped fruit mince pies in mini muffin tin.
  1. Bake for about 20–25 minutes until golden and fragrant. Let the pies sit in the tin for 10 minutes before removing to a wire rack to cool—this helps them keep their shape.
A hand holding a Christmas fruit mince pie dusted with icing sugar with more mince pies in the background.
  1. Cool completely, dust with icing sugar through a sieve and serve. These keep well for several days in an airtight container.

Christmas Mince Pies FAQs

How long will the mince pies keep?

Store in an airtight container at room temperature for up to one week. The pastry may soften slightly but will remain tasty.

How should I store the fruit mince?

Fruit mince stores well in sterilised jars at room temperature for months; the sugar and alcohol preserve it and the flavour deepens with time. For an alcohol-free version, use fruit juice as the liquid and refrigerate if preferred.

What can I use instead of vegetarian suet?

Use unsalted butter or coconut oil if vegetarian suet isn’t available—both give excellent results.

Can I substitute different dried fruit?

Yes—mix and match dried fruit and nuts to your liking, keeping the overall volume similar. Cranberries, raisins, mango and various nuts all work well.

Do the pies have to contain alcohol?

No—swap brandy for apple juice or another non-alcoholic liquid and the mince will still be delicious.

A hand holding up a fruit mince pie, showing the side of the pie.
A pile of icing sugar dusted Christmas mince pies on a small wooden board with Christmas deocrations in the background.

If you try the recipe, I’d love to hear about it—leave a comment or rating. Tag your photos with @DishedByKate on social media if you share your bakes.