The Easiest Homemade Croissants Start With Softened Butter (2024)

If you’ve ever attempted croissants or cruffins at home, you’ve likely beaten the crap out of cold sticks of butter with a rolling pin to create a butter block. To some, it may be an aggressive arm workout, and to others, baking therapy, but if you’re the type who wants to minimize the effort in an already strenuous project, cookbook author Sarah Kieffer has a trick for you. In 100 Morning Treats, Kieffer suggests forsaking one of the key virtues of laminated doughs, urging home cooks to soften the butter to a spreadable consistency instead of keeping it cold.

Yes, you read that right. Softened butter! This alternative to the butter block might sound counterintuitive or even blasphemous to croissant purists, but after several rounds of testing, I can tell you that it’s a foolproof path to morning buns, danishes, croissants, and other flaky pastries of the like.

Fancy bakeries meticulously maintain the Goldilocks conditions required to churn out flawlessly layered laminated doughs, day after day. The kitchen temperature is kept cold, the flour has a specific hydration capacity, and the yeast is just the right level of active. Bakeries also often purchase pre-pounded butter blocks of the highest quality to streamline the process. Then there’s the dough sheeter—an industrial piece of equipment that rolls and laminates the dough to get those pristine layers without breaking the dough or melting the butter which is crucial to achieving those Insta-worthy flaky layers.

Not everyone has the room or the resources to replicate a bakery at home and that’s where Kieffer’s technique comes in. Instead of starting with ice-cold butter straight from the fridge, she simply softens the butter (plus one tablespoon of flour) to cream cheese-like consistency with the help of the stand mixer, then spreads it evenly across the surface of the dough using an offset spatula. Then, after each fold, she sticks the dough in the freezer for six minutes until the butter chills but doesn’t harden. Unlike a traditional butter block, this makes for a more malleable folding and rolling process, decreasing the chances of tears in your dough.

“This dough is inspired by many different recipes,” writes Kieffer in her book, “but specifically Dominique Ansel’s croissant MasterClass and Mandy Lee’s laminated dough in her book The Art of Escapism Cooking.” But it was Thomas Keller’s Bouchon Bakery cookbook that gave her the perspective she needed to develop her version of the pastry. In his book, Keller explains that “the temperature of your kitchen, the humidity in the air, the absorbency of the flour, the activity of the yeast—all these factors affect the dough,” and that even he has yet to master this notoriously finicky dough. His admission helped Kieffer accept that it is nearly impossible to control all these variables at home. So she set out to develop a recipe that was less temperamental, more withstanding, and perfectly imperfect.

But before you get in the throes of it all, here are some tips and findings from the several rounds of testing I did and from Kieffer herself.

The Easiest Homemade Croissants Start With Softened Butter (2024)

FAQs

What is the best butter to make croissants? ›

What butter should I use? French boulangeries use butter that has a high fat content of 85 to 87 percent. For best results use quality butter with a high fat content and no additives or extra water. European style or imported butters can often be found in specialty grocery stores.

How to soften butter for croissants? ›

Cut Up or Grate Butter

If you cut your butter into chunks instead of leaving it in one big stick, it'll warm up to room temperature much faster. First, measure the amount of butter you'll need, and then unwrap that amount. Cut the sticks into thin slices or chunks, and in around 10 minutes you'll have softened butter.

How many layers of butter should a croissant have? ›

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 rule for croissant? ›

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.

What flour is best 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.

What is the correct way to butter a croissant? ›

Cut or tear the croissant into pieces and butter them up before each bite. The salted butter will enhance the already buttery flavor of croissants. You can still dunk the croissant in coffee with butter on it if you want.

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.

Is softened butter the same as melted butter? ›

Softened butter and melted butter are not the same. Using melted butter will change the texture of whatever you're baking. If you only want the butter to soften for spreading, microwave it on the Defrost setting (30%) in 5-second increments until it's softened as desired.

What happens if the butter is too soft? ›

If used in baking recipes, overly softened butter will create frothy air bubbles that will eventually collapse. When the air bubbles collapse, you'll be left with a greasy batter that will bake into heavy, dense, and flat baked goods.

How do you keep croissants from getting hard? ›

1.Wrap them tight

Otherwise, wrap it up with aluminium foil or cling wrap to prevent them from drying up. The key here is to wrap each pastry individually so that the chances of air entering from the empty spaces between different shapes and sizes of pastries get reduced.

How thin should you roll croissant dough? ›

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.

How many times should I fold my croissant dough? ›

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 makes a delicious croissant? ›

Four qualities of the perfect croissant
  1. Layered and Puffy. The French term Feuilleté refers to folding dough several times in order to create multiple layers. ...
  2. Crisp and Crunchy. There should be a layer of crust on top that crunches ever so slightly when you bite into it. ...
  3. Buttery and Golden Brown. ...
  4. Flaky and Crumbly.
May 21, 2021

Should you chill croissants before baking? ›

Before baking, chill proofed croissants for 20 minutes. Preheat oven to 375°F.

How do you toast a perfect croissant? ›

Take a good croissant and slice it in half lengthwise (along the equator). Place the croissant halves, cut-side down on a preheated, lightly buttered griddle or heavy skillet and toast over medium-high heat. When the cut-side is toasted to a light golden brown, turn the croissants over and toast the second side.

What gives croissants their taste? ›

The overwhelming taste should be of butter rather than sugar with just a hint of salt and it should not be at all greasy. The key to a great croissant is the quality of the ingredients, especially the butter.

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