Tips to Make the Best Croissants | Go Bold With Butter (2024)

Tips to Make the Best Croissants | Go Bold With Butter (1)

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Making croissants from home is certainly an advanced baking project. Follow these expert tips for bakery-ready croissants – No matter the croissant recipe. Croissants’ layers come from laminating the dough with real butter. Throughout this step, it’s essential to keep the dough and butter chilled so the layers stay together for a perfect bake. Butter also plays an important role during baking since it melts and gives off steam, which puffs up each thin layer for buttery, flaky croissants.

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Tip 1: Make Dough

Using high-protein flour and yeast that is alive are crucial to getting the dough right. Combine ingredients – flour, yeast, sugar, salt, milk and water – in the bowl of stand mixer using a dough hook attachment. Important: Start this step 24 hours before serving, as the dough will need to ample time to chill and proof.

Tip 2: Make Butter Block

On parchment paper, place 3 sticks of cold butter side-by-side and make a packet by folding the parchment over the butter. Lightly beat and roll over the packet until the butter is an even 1/2-inch-thick layer.

Tip 3: Square Off Butter Block

Try to keep the edges sharp and the block level to make the lamination process easier, and to ensure the croissants have consistent layers.

Tip 4: Keep Dough & Butter Chilled

Throughout this process, you’ll want to keep both the dough and butter chilled. This is important to help prevent yeast from producing gases during lamination. Work quickly while laminating to prevent warming.

Tip 5: Begin Lamination

Roll out dough and place butter block in the center. Fold dough over the block and pinch dough together. Roll out further into a long rectangle and trim excess edges of the dough with pinwheel cutter where the butter doesn’t reach.

Tip 6: Roll, Fold & Chill

Take the farthest short edge of the rectangle from you and fold down to the midline of the dough. Gently press so the dough adheres together. Repeat on the other side, leaving a 1/8-inch-gap. You now have a “book” of dough that’s four layers thick. Tightly wrap in reserved plastic and freeze for 15 minutes, and then refrigerate for 1 hour. Repeat by rolling, folding and chilling for many layers.

Tip 7: Let Dough Rest & Roll Out

Once dough has been laminated and chilled, let rest at room temperature, about 5 minutes. Unwrap and place on lightly floured counter. Beat and roll out dough into long rectangle. Place on baking sheet and wrap, freezing for 20 minutes, then chilling for 8 to 12 hours.

Tip 8: Trim Edges

Remove dough from refrigerator and let rest at room temperature, about 5 minutes. Unwrap, place on lightly floured counter and roll out. Trim irregular edges using pinwheel cutter.

Tip 9: Cut Dough Into Triangles

Using the pinwheel cutter, slice dough into even rectangles. Then slice lines from opposite corners of the rectangles to form triangles.

Tip 10: Form Croissants

Working with one triangle at a time, gently tug to extend points, widen base, lengthen the triangle and thin the dough. Take the base or short end and roll up the dough, making sure it’s not too tight. Keep the point of the triangle centered and don’t stretch the dough.

Tip 11: Proof Croissants

Line two baking sheets with parchment paper, evenly spacing formed croissants on sheets and loosely covering with plastic wrap. Proof croissants in an oven with the light turned on until they have doubled in size, about 2 to 2 ½ hours. Do not rush this step.

Tip 12: Bake & Enjoy

Before baking, chill proofed croissants for 20 minutes. Preheat oven to 375°F. Using a pastry brush, gently brush egg wash on each chilled croissant, avoiding cut sides that may have exposed layers of dough. Bake for 20 minutes. Rotate sheets, switch racks and bake for another 10 to 15 minutes. Let cool and enjoy!

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Tips to Make the Best Croissants | Go Bold With 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 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 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

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 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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

What goes good inside a croissant? ›

Stuffed Croissants
  • Mascarpone, fresh berries, and a drizzle of honey.
  • Brie and jam (toasting recommended)
  • Sliced figs, honey, and sea salt.
  • Lemon curd and fresh whipped cream.
  • Nutella, mascarpone, and fruit (such as bananas or berries)
  • Ricotta, roasted red peppers, salt, and pepper.
Nov 17, 2020

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