Julia Child's Croissant Recipe (2024)

A note on flour. 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. Croissants made from unbleached flour are more tender in texture than those made from bleached flour; oil added to the basic dough helps to tenderize bleached flours. Measure flour by scooping cup into bag; sweep off excess with the straight edge of a knife.

The Basic Yeast Dough

For 1 dozen 5½-inch croissants

Ingredients:

  • 1 package (¼ ounce) dry active yeast
  • ¼ cup warm water (not over 110 degrees)
  • ¼ tsp salt
  • ½ Tb sugar

Sprinkle the yeast over the warm water, add the salt and sugar, and let yeast stand until it has dissolved and risen in a soft mass on top of the liquid. This will take 5 minutes or so; prepare rest of ingredients while waiting for yeast to prove itself.

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups white flour (about 9 ounces; see notes above)
  • ¾ tsp salt
  • 1 Tb sugar
  • A mixing bowl
  • For bleached flour: 4 Tb tasteless cooking oil
  • For unbleached flour: 2 Tb tasteless cooking oil
  • ⅓ to ½ cup tepid milk

Place flour, salt, sugar, and oil in mixing bowl; add the dissolved yeast and ⅓ cup of tepid milk. Blend with a rubber spatula, pressing dough into a mass, then turn out onto a board. Begin lifting dough and throwing it roughly down on the board with one hand—it should be fairly soft and somewhat sticky at first; if it seems stiff, work in more milk by droplets. Continue lifting and throwing and, as dough becomes more elastic, folding and kneading it with the heel of your hand. Be rough, rapid, and energetic; in about 3 minutes dough should have enough body so it is smooth, elastic, and does not stick to your hand. (If still sticky at this point, knead in a bit more flour.)

Rising
Place dough in a clean bowl, set in a plastic bag, and let the dough rise until doubled in bulk; it should be light, and recede slightly to the pressure of your finger. At room temperature, rising time will be 1 to 1½ hours. If room is cold, place dough in a warming oven, on a pillow over a radiator, or on an electric pad or blanket: rising temperature should be no more than 85 degrees, or yeast will overferment, and either lose its strength or impart an unpleasant taste to the dough. You can retard rising time by placing bowl in refrigerator: cover with a plate and a weight, and leave overnight. In any case, dough must rise to double, but it must not overrise, or again the yeast will overferment.

Punching Down and Chilling
When dough has risen, remove from bowl and punch down into a flat circle. Wrap in waxed paper and chill for about 20 minutes; this will make the next step easier. (Dough may be frozen at this point.)

Basic Yeast Dough Becomes Croissant Dough

(You may use frozen packaged white dough: following the thaw-and-rise directions on the package, you will have arrived at this point. Half of a 1¼-pound frozen package equals the amount of homemade dough in this recipe.)

Ingredients:

  • 1 stick (¼ lb.) chilled butter

Work the butter into a smooth consistency by beating it with a rolling pin, then pushing it out rapidly by bits with the heel of your hand; it must be entirely free of lumps, cold, and malleable, so it will roll easily with the dough. Form butter into a 5-inch square.
With palms of hands, press cold dough into a flat 9-inch circle; set the butter square on top. Fold edges of dough up over butter, pinching edges together to seal in butter completely. Flour package lightly on both sides and place on board, enclosure side up.

Turns 1 and 2
With a lightly floured rolling pin, and pushing down and away from you, rapidly roll the package into a rectangle about 15 inches long and 5 inches wide. Keep sides of rectangle as straight as possible, and remember that your object is to spread the layer of butter evenly between the two layers of dough the length and width of the rectangle. Sprinkle board and top of dough lightly with flour as necessary, to prevent sticking.
Fold the dough in three, as though folding a business letter, by lifting bottom of rectangle up over half the dough, and bringing top of rectangle down, making 3 even layers. Turn dough so top flap is to your right; roll again into a 15x5-inch rectangle, and fold again into 3 layers. Flour lightly, wrap in waxed paper, and refrigerate for 1 to 2 hours; this chills the butter and relaxes the gluten or rubbery quality in the dough so that it may be rolled and folded again.

Turns 3 and 4
Repeat the process, with 2 more rollings and foldings into three. You now have 82 layers of dough and 81 layers of butter! Wrap and chill for 2 hours before forming the croissants. (Dough may be frozen at this point.)

Forming the Croissants

Lightly butter a 12x14-inch baking sheet. Roll the chilled dough into a rectangle about 20 inches by 5 inches; cut in half crosswise and chill one half.Roll reserved dough into a 12x5-inch rectangle and cut into thirds. Refrigerate two of the thirds. Roll one of the thirds into a 5½-inch square and cut in half on the bias. You now have two triangles; roll one triangle to extend its point, making triangle about 7 inches long. With your fingers, fold top over onto itself, and continue rolling up dough toward point of triangle with the palm of your hand. Bend the two ends to make the crescent shape, and place on baking sheet, point of triangle underneath. Continue with rest of dough, making 12 croissants in all. (Keep unformed dough chilled, for easy handling.)

Rising
Let croissants rise for an hour or more at room temperature, until almost doubled, and light in texture. (Risen croissants may be frozen, then baked while still frozen.)

Glazing and Baking

Ingredients:

  • 1 egg beaten with ½ tsp water

(Preheat oven to 475 degrees.)
Set rack in middle level. Paint croissants with the egg to glaze them. Bake for 10 to 12 minutes, until nicely browned. Cool on a rack for 10 to 15 minutes before serving. (Cooled baked croissants may be frozen; to serve, reheat for a few minutes at 400 degrees.)

Excerpted from The French Chef Cookbook by Julia Child. Copyright © 2002 by Julia Child. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.

Julia Child's Croissant Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is the best 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.

Is bleached or unbleached flour better for croissants? ›

Ultimately, the flour you choose to bake with is entirely up to you. Bleached and unbleached flours can both be used interchangeably in any recipe without a major discernable difference.

How many book turns for croissants? ›

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.

What is the strong white flour for croissants? ›

Mulino Marino Type 00 Soffiata flour (Soffiata translates as light/fluffy) is milled from selected organic wheat and perfect for many recipes including ciabatta, baguettes, brioches, croissants and is perfect for general bread recipes and of course, pasta.

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 is the name of the flour used in croissants? ›

What type of flour should I use? Most French croissant recipes use pastry flour (T45) to produce a croissant with a light, delicate texture. Bread flour or All Purpose can be used to produce a chewier, more sturdy croissant.

Why use bread flour for croissants? ›

Bread flour has a greater protein content than regular flour. This protein content is important when making croissants as it forms the basis of the croissant structure. I find that a protein content of 11-12% is best as it ensures your croissant can rise tall and stay at that height once baked.

Why use unbleached flour instead of bleached? ›

Bleached flour is whiter and has a softer texture. It produces fluffy baked goods, making it a good match for cookies, pie crusts, and pancakes. Unbleached flour is less white and has a denser consistency. It tends to be best for baked goods that require structure, like yeast breads, eclairs, and pastries.

Can you fold croissant dough too many times? ›

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 is the French law on croissants? ›

By law, only a croissant made with 100% pure butter can wear a straight shape as a badge of honor. A croissant made with any other fat, such as margarine or (sacrebleu!) oil, must disclose its impurity with a curved shape.

How thick should croissant dough be before rolling? ›

Wrap the dough tightly in plastic and this can then be either be frozen for up to 1 week, or if making same day, put in the fridge then when ready to roll out, freeze for 30 minutes before you start.. Run the croissant pastry back and forth through the sheeter until you reach a thickness of 5mm/0.19inch.

What is the best temperature to bake croissants? ›

7. Heat oven to 425 degrees. Brush the croissants again with egg wash. Bake for 7 minutes then reduce oven temperature to 375 F and bake until croissants are deep golden brown, about 10 to 15 minutes.

Why are my croissants not flaky? ›

The key is to keep the butter solid between the layers of dough, this is what gives the croissant its flakiness.

What does milk powder do in croissants? ›

Milk Powder is basically dehydrated milk. This is important for the croissants because the milk powder will help create super soft layers without adding extra moisture. European Butter has a higher fat percentage, which means the croissants will have amazing flavor and super flakey layers.

What kind of flour do pastry chefs use? ›

Pastry Flour – Pastry flour is also milled from a soft wheat and has a low gluten content. With protein levels somewhere between cake flour and all-purpose flour (8-9 %), pastry flour strikes the ideal balance between flakiness and tenderness, making it perfect for pie dough, biscuits, brownies, tarts and many cookies.

What flour is best for pastries? ›

Pastry Flour: An unbleached flour made from soft wheat, with protein levels somewhere between cake flour and all-purpose flour (8 to 9 percent). Pastry flour strikes the ideal balance between flakiness and tenderness, making it perfect for pies, tarts and many cookies.

What is the best flour for pastry crust? ›

Flour: For a tender crust, choose a low-protein flour. Pastry flour, with a protein content of about 8-10%, ranks between all-purpose flour and cake flour. All-purpose flour works just fine for pie crusts, while cake flour might lack enough protein to form a workable, elastic dough.

What is the best improver for croissant? ›

A natural improver for pastry and croissant

LB Improver enhances consistency of the puff pastry in a pleasant balance between crunchiness and softness. This enzymatic improver also intensifies the croissant taste with lactic notes.

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