Croissants

One of my favorite pastries is the croissant.  They can be found at any coffee shop and pretty much any bakery.  I love the buttery, flaky layers that wrap around and around, but many croissants end up disappointing me.  They are either stale, not done in the middle, or not done enough on the outside.  I like the browned exterior bits the best, tasting almost like a crunchy version of a really richly browned pie crust.

I’ve only made croissants a few times, since it’s a lot of preparation.  The process itself isn’t difficult, just time-consuming.  As I learned this time, it really shouldn’t be rushed.  The recipe I follow is the small-batch version from the Professional Pastry Chef cookbook.  I highly recommend this book as a tome of great knowledge on just about any dessert from meringue to pastry cream, truffles to napoleons.

This batch of croissants didn’t turn out as well as I would have liked, but the basic idea is there, and despite their appearance they are delicious.  These are definitely not the best croissants I’ve made, but they meet what I like in a croissant.  They have a buttery and crispy flaky crust on the outside with just enough soft center to give a contrast.

First you knead butter with a little flour and lemon juice to soften it and give it a chance to stand up to the heat before melting out all over the place.

Butter

Next, make a pretty typical yeast dough.  It’s a softer dough than that for bread, and not kneaded as much so it stays much more tender.

Dough

Then you roll the dough out a bit bigger than the butter and place the butter on top with the corners of the butter square aligned with the sides of the dough square.  Note how my butter and dough are nowhere near square.

Place Butter

Enclose the butter in dough by bringing up the dough corners and pinching.  This is the first important part.  I always feel like if I don’t close it up right here that all the butter will run out at the slightest increase in temperature.  I think this is one of my first screw-ups, since I left some air pockets in there that ended up forming defects in the finished product.

Enclose Butter

Now roll it out into a “rectangle”.

Roll It Out

Then you do a series of “turns” where you fold it like a brochure.  One third folds in from the left, then one third folds in from the right.  Bring it all together and turn it 90 degrees.  You’ll then roll it out and “turn” it a couple more times.

A Turn

We’ve now created a laminated (layered) dough.  You start with 3 layers (dough, butter, dough), but in making the turns you create many.  After the first, you have 9.  After the second, 27, then 81, then 243, then 729.  The butter separates the layers of dough and the water within the butter creates steam which puffs it up.  This is how puff pastry gets its puff.

Once we’ve made the dough, it needs to rest in the fridge, but needs to be wrapped tightly, because if the dough dries out, things will crack and break and our butter will escape.

Wrap It Up

Once it’s rested, you’ll let it come up in temperature a bit, then roll it out, cut strips, then triangles for croissants or rectangles for pain au chocolat.  Roll them up, brush with a beaten egg, bake in a hot oven and try to wait until they’re cool to enjoy any time of day.

Croissants

My problem was in rushing the process.  There are supposed to be more waiting periods of chilling and/or resting the dough.  I think it would have helped my croissants get bigger.  I also cut them too small, but that just means it’s easier to have more than one!

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5 Responses to “Croissants”

  1. Lisa Says:

    Why am I reading this when I’m so insanely hungry?? Those croissants look so tasty; more than one sounds like a good idea!

  2. Padma Says:

    Love croissants… nice step by step pictures….thanks for dropping by at my blog…. have also added u in my blogroll… keep visiting.. me too will drop in often…

  3. Jason Says:

    Lisa – I will definitely be making these again some time. I’ll make sure to get you some.

    Padma – Thanks for stopping in and adding me to your blogroll. I look forward to trying out some of your recipes.

  4. Andrea Says:

    Gorgeous…there is nothing like working with dough…of any type. One can almost tell the instant they start working with the dough whether or not the end product will turn out. Even though they did not turn out the way you had hoped, they are still beautiful. If they tasted great, then even better! I will have to check out the book…although, I am more of a pizza crust kind o’ gal…would be fun to try my hand at pastries.

  5. Jason Says:

    Andrea – I should mention that the book does have a wide variety of breads and other doughs. I get lost in that thing sometimes.

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