Croissants Recipe | Zen Can Cook (2024)

Croissants

Posted on Sunday, April 8, 2012

One word. Butter. And lots of it. One of the thing I miss the most about living in Paris is the smell of freshly baked breads and pastries coming out of bakeries early in the morning. For a long time the smell of toasted butter from the boulangerie downstairs was my alarm clock right around 7 am. I would rush down the stairs (and almost tumbled a few times in my butter induced frenzy) and pick up a croissant or pain au chocolat for my commute to school.

On my days off I would have a croissant with café au lait for breakfast, sitting at a sidewalk table at the Café de la Paix near Opera, sipping a cafécrème and eating a croissant with confiture, watching the morning bustle and hustle of Parisian life. Those are hard to tame habits and as a result I think I’m forever doomed to a life of random cravings for warm buttery croissant. It’s not always that easy to find great ones here in the US unless you live in big cities so let’s make some, shall we?

Croissants aren’t as difficult to make as they seem. If you have experience making puff pastry from scratch you’ll find that the process is quite similar, the big difference is that it’s a yeast dough that requires a lot of rest in between turns. After shaping and proofing, the croissant are brushed with an egg wash and baked until puffed and golden, and believe me, the smell in your kitchen alone will be worth all the efforts. Give yourself plenty of time. Make the dough on one day and shape, proof and bake them on the next. They will be even better.

Croissants are made from layered dough that is made by encasing butter in a yeast dough, and taking it through a series of turns to produce many layers of butter in between sheets of dough. A perfectly rolled croissant dough has 81 layers. The key to success in this process is maintaining the integrity of each layer. If the lamination is successful and the layers are maintained the croissants will be light and flaky.

The leavening in croissant dough is derived mainly from the steam generated by the moisture in the butter and dough during baking. The laminated fat acts as a barrier to trap the water vapor formed during baking. As the steam expands in the oven it lifts and separates the individual layers to create a lot of deliciousness.

The only problem with this recipe is that you’ll end up with about twenty rich and buttery croissants and they will be right on your kitchen counter taunting you. And nobody, and I mean nobody, has enough restrain and self-control to resist this kind of torture. You better have an exit strategy to get rid of them. Call your neighbors, friends or family ahead of time and get-them-out-of-the-house while they’re still warm.

Or eat them all and spend a week on the treadmill. Enjoy!

  • Croissant Recipe

  • Makes 20 croissants
  • Adapted from ‘Pastries’ by Pierre Herme except for rolling technique.
    • For the croissants:
    • 1 tablespoon active dry yeast
    • 7 tablespoons whole milk (68’F)
    • 2 cups all-purpose flour
    • 1 tablespoon fleur de sel
    • 6 tablespoons superfine sugar
    • 2 1/4 tablespoons unsalted butter, very soft
    • 1 tablespoon dry milk powder
    • 1/2 cup mineral water (68’F)
    • 3 sticks (12 ounces) French butter
    • 1 large egg yolk
    • 1 whole egg
    • dash of fine sea salt
    • For the croissants:
    • Dissolve the yeast in the warm milk. Sift the all-purpose flour, then incorporate the sea salt, sugar, very soft butter, dry milk powder, water and yeast dissolved in warm milk. Knead the mixture briefly. Transfer the dough to a bowl, cover it with plastic wrap, and keep it at room temperature (ideally at 72’F) for 1 1/2 hours, or until the dough has doubled in volume.
    • Punch down the dough to its initial volume and cover it with plastic wrap again. Refrigerate for 1 hour. Punch it down again and place in the freezer for 30 minutes.
    • Remove the dough from the freezer. Pound the cold butter in between sheets of parchment paper with a rolling pin to soften, then knead butter with hands forming a rectangle. Place it in the refrigerator while you roll the dough.
    • Sprinkle a work surface with flour and roll out a long rectangle of dough; it should be three times longer than it is wide. Place the pad of butter on one half of the dough rectangle. Fold the other half of the dough rectangle over the butter pad and pinch the edges shut around it.
    • To make the croissants you will need to put 3 double turns into the dough. To make your first double turn, dust your counter surface with flour and roll out the dough into a rectangle three times longer than it is wide.
    • Visually divide the dough lengthwise into quarters. Fold the two outer quarters over the center axis, or spine, of the rectangle of dough, so they meet in the center. Then close the book, bringing one edge to meet the other. Double turn complete. Wrap the dough in plastic and refrigerate for 1 hour. Repeat the operation twice more for a total of 3 double turns with one hour of rest in between. Make sure you start each turn with the center axis, the spine of the book, on your left.
    • Roll out the dough to a rectangle about 8 inches wide and 1/8 inch thick.
    • Cut out long triangles, each 8 inches long from the pointiest tip to the center of the side across it and 4 inches wide at the bottom. Roll each triangle tightly from the wide bottom to the tip of the triangle and give them a crescent shape.
    • Transfer the croissants to two baking trays lined with silpat or parchment paper. Cover lightly with plastic and leave at room temperature to double in size, about one hour.
    • Heat the oven to 450’F.
    • Whisk the egg, egg yolk and salt together in a small bowl and brush the top of the croissant generously.
    • Place the trays in the oven and immediately lower the temperature to 350’F.
    • Bake the croissants for 20 to 25 minutes, or until they double in size, caramelize on the edges, and have a crusty outer layer. Eat them right out of the oven or at room temperature.

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Sunday, April 8th, 2012Bread, Brunch, Pastry

Croissants Recipe | Zen Can Cook (2024)

FAQs

How many turns does the croissant dough get? ›

More than 3x3 turns is not recommended for croissants. For example: 2x3 and 1x4 turns = 36 layers of butter = only suitable for cream pastries due to the tight honeycomb texture. ROLL OUT THE DOUGH IN VARIOUS STAGES. Slice the thicker side after each fold, not just at the beginning.

How do you know when croissants are done? ›

Bake the croissants until they are, puffed up, golden brown and crisp, about 22 to 25 minutes. Remove the baking sheet from the over and let the croissants cool completely on it. They need to cool for another 15 minutes on the baking sheet so the steam and residual heat will finish baking the inner layers.

How long to bake croissants at 375? ›

Preheat the oven to 375 F.
  1. While the oven is preheating, whisk one egg and add a splash of milk in a small bowl. Brush it onto the croissants for extra flakiness. ...
  2. When the oven is up to temperature, bake the croissants for 12-15 minutes.
  3. Enjoy! TIP: After baking, butterfly the croissant and make a sandwich out of it!

How many folds for a perfect croissant? ›

A classic French croissant has 55 layers (27 layers of butter), achieved with a French fold followed by 3 letter folds. Less layers will mean a different texture (less tender, more chewy, with more defined layers). Too many layers bring a risk of the butter getting too thin and melting into the dough.

What happens if croissants don't rise? ›

Your croissants were probably under-proofed. Just let them proof a bit longer so they get wobbly and increase visually in size. When under-proofed the butter tends to leak out from in between the layers and you end up with a butter puddle.

Does croissant dough have to sit overnight? ›

After shaping leave your croissants to proof for one hour at room temperature to kick start the proofing process. Then place them in the fridge overnight. Make sure no air can reach the croissants, otherwise they will dry out! It is best to place them in an airtight container on a piece of baking paper.

Are croissants supposed to be doughy inside? ›

We want our croissants to rise, be flaky and crisp on the outside and wonderfully light, soft and airy inside with lots of buttery layers. But don't worry if yours come out a little more rustic and doughy inside to start with. They are homemade after all.

How long should croissant dough proof? ›

The proofing should take about 2 hours. You should be able to tell if they are ready by carefully shaking the baking sheet and see if the croissants slightly wiggle. You should also be able to see the layers of dough when looking at your croissants from the side.

What is the rule for croissant? ›

Indeed, according to French law, straight croissants must be made with 100% butter, while their curved cousins may contain other fats, such as margarine or even lard.

What kind of butter is best for croissants? ›

First and foremost, you should use European or European-style butter which consists of 83% to 84% of butterfat. It should be 68° Fahrenheit and in the consistency of cream cheese, spreadable with a spatula.

What makes a good croissant? ›

"A perfect croissant, it's a very crispy croissant with a lot of puff pastry, and it smells a good taste of butter inside," Duchêne says. "A bad croissant is very soft, like a brioche, and you can't have a very good smell of butter, it's not creamy inside. "It takes a lot of time and process to make a good croissant."

What flour to use for croissants? ›

Although you can produce excellent croissants from all-purpose flour, bread flour, or frozen packaged white dough, the high gluten content makes for hard and rubbery rolling out. A mixture of 2 parts unbleached pastry flour and 1 part unbleached all-purpose flour gives a dough that is much easier to handle.

Why is the butter leaking out of my croissants when baking? ›

Under or over-proofing the croissants

Failing to proof your croissant dough for long enough is a common mistake that most commonly results in croissants leaking butter while baking, a tight crumb, and a flat, undeveloped flavor.

Why do croissants collapse? ›

However, proofing your croissants for too long or too short can also ruin your croissant results. Overproofing your croissants can make them lose their structure and layers, and cause them to collapse or explode in the oven.

How thick should croissant dough be? ›

Of course this size will depend though on the amount of dough you have depending on the recipe you use, so follow rule #1 of rolling the dough to be about 3-5mm thick.

How many trifold turns does a typical croissant dough receive? ›

Croissants are not made with puff pastry. Puff pastry and croissant pastry are very similar – layers of pastry and butter folded – but they differ in the number of turns and folds. For croissant pastry three tri-folds are perfect.

How many turns for laminated dough? ›

The number of “turns” a laminated dough goes through really depends on the desired end result. For instance, when making puff pastry you could go through a series 6 “turns” to create 729 layers within the dough OR it could go through 7 “turns” and end up with 2187 layers in the dough.

How many times will a dough rise? ›

Most bread recipes have two rises, a first rise (also called bulk fermentation), and a second or final rise. You can chill your dough during either the first or second rise. Your yeast won't give you much love if it's asked to do both rises in the fridge, so it's best to do one or the other at room temperature.

How many turns does puff pastry get? ›

If you've successfully rolled it out and folded it twice, you've completed two turns. Classic puff pastry gets six. Continue refrigerating it after each two turns (or more often if necessary) until all six turns are completed.

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