Whole Wheat Croissants

February 27, 2008

Croissants - baked

Today I finally attempted croissants. I started with a recipe a friend gave me, and tweaked it a bit to use all whole wheat flour, and honey instead of sugar. They were a tad bit doughy (underdone) when I was through, but otherwise they turned out really well. I wasn’t able to roll them out quite as thin as they were supposed to be rolled out (I ran out of room; next time I will have to roll them out on the dining room table.), and I think that was the problem in their being a little underdone.

Inside of the Croissants

The recipe:

Croissants

Dough
4-1/2 c. freshly-ground pastry (soft wheat) flour
(plus extra for dusting the rolling surface, etc.)
1 Tbsp. instant yeast
1/4 c. honey
1-1/4 tsp. salt
1-2/3 c. whole milk (cold)
2 Tbsp. unsalted butter, softened
Butter Square
24 Tbsp. (3 sticks) unsalted butter, cut into 1-Tbsp. pieces and kept cold
2 Tbsp. flour
Egg Wash
1 egg, beaten

Mix all dough ingredients together to form a soft dough. Cover the bowl well with plastic wrap and refrigerate for 1 hour. Immediately after putting the dough in the refrigerator, begin the butter square. Unwrap the three sticks of butter, cut them into eighths, and sprinkle the flour on top.

butter during the kneading process

Begin squishing them, and knead the butter and dough together until you have one fairly smooth ball of greasy stuff. Spread out a piece of plastic wrap, plop your butter ball in the middle (a bench scraper works nicely to get the whole mess off of your work surface), and pat and squish to form a 7-inch square. Wrap the plastic wrap around it and refrigerate until you’re ready to use it. (This took me about fifteen minutes, leaving about forty-five minutes for it to chill in the refrigerator before the dough was ready. This was plenty of time for it to firm back up.)

When dough has chilled, place it on a well-floured surface.  Sprinkle the top with flour, and roll into an 11-inch square.  Put the butter square diagonally on top of the dough (so you have a butter diamond on a dough square).

Butter square

Fold the corners of the dough over the butter so that the sides meet.  Pinch dough together firmly to encase the butter square.

butter square, all wrapped up

Roll this into a 14-inch square, rolling out from the center and sprinkling it or your rolling surface with flour, if necessary, to prevent sticking.  Fold the square into thirds, so you have a long, narrow rectangle.  Fold it into thirds again the other direction, so you have a small square.  Each of these “into-thirds” folds is called a turn; you have now turned the dough 2 times.  Wrap it and refrigerate it again for 2 hours.

croissant dough

Repeat the rolling and folding so you have a total of 4 turns, including the earlier ones.  Then roll the dough into a 20-inch square. [This is where I didn't roll it out quite large enough.]  Cut it in half so you have two long rectangles.  Cut each rectangle into thirds.  Cut each third diagonally to form two triangles each.  A pizza cutter makes this really easy.

cutting the croissants

Roll from the wide end to the narrow, then curve the ends around to get a crescent shape as you place the croissant on a piece of parchment.

shaping the croissants

When all of them are on the parchment, brush with the egg wash and let rise for 30-40 minutes.  (They don’t rise much.)  [I recommend two baking sheets at this point, as mine were a little cramped after baking.  Also, I highly recommend baking sheets with rims.  Some of the butter melted out of my croissants during baking and ran down to burn on the bottom of the oven, filling my house up with smoke!]

croissants with egg wash

Bake at 400 degrees for about 18 minutes.

croissants

For chocolate or raspberry croissants, you can place a scant tablespoon of filling on each croissant before rolling them up.  We tried a couple of ours with a few chocolate chips, and they were good.  Jam would also work well, I think.  The rest of ours we left plain to use as “rolls.”

7 Responses to “Whole Wheat Croissants”

  1. These look awesome. I can’t wait to try this. When you measured your fresh ground flour are you using regular, even cups or are you using mounded cups? Just wondering because it makes a difference in the outcome.

  2. I just use regular even cups. These tasted great, and we have (so far) eaten them plain, with jelly, and with egg and cheese (not all together, of course!). :)

  3. I got tired just reading the recipe. I guess it will have to wait until I ‘retire’

  4. It really is not hard! It is a lot of steps, but they aren’t difficult, and the dough was not hard to roll at all. I bet they aren’t any harder to make than your English muffins. ;)

  5. Wow. Sweet. Cool. I have been perfecting my bread making skills over the last few months. And, I absolutely LOVE croissants. Only one place around here makes them fresh and they are delicious, but really not that affordable! I can’t wait to try this recipe. It is good to know ahead of time that I should start with the dining room table, and your pictures a great help. I also really like that the recipe is for whole wheat flour. BTW I found you through make-it-from scratch. Thanks for sharing this recipe!
    Alison

  6. Alison, if you have a regular countertop, you can probably roll them out on the counter. If you have enough room to roll a 20-inch square, the counter will work. I just don’t have a flat counter surface.

  7. [...] This post (the one you’re reading) only includes the recipe itself (for easy printing).  This older post includes [...]

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