Indian Food Recipes | Indian Cooking | Veg & Non Veg Recipes

Tips and Tricks to Bake the Perfect Croissant

 

One of the popular staples in Austria and France, Croissant (meaning, a crescent) surely makes a great accompaniment with beverages. Croissant is a great continental breakfast staple too!

It is believed that Croissant originated in Vienna, Austria. Croissant evolved from the Austrian bread called Kipferl. It is a buttery, flaky, super-light pastry that is now popular all over the world. In cities like Mumbai, croissants are available at many places, although not cheap (and not always light). Baking croissants is fun, and when these come out of the oven, it is definitely difficult to restrict yourself to eating just one, unless you are a saint!

Baking a croissant needs a lot of patience and technique, but at the same time, it is not rocket science.The flakiness of a croissant is extremely important. This flakiness makes the croissant light. A croissant is made up of layers or sheets of yeast-treated dough, and each of these sheets have to be rolled super-thin. If the sheets are thicker, the resulting croissant is denser. To make the croissant flaky, the dough should be layered with butter and this should be rolled, folded and re-rolled several times. A croissant can have different kinds of fillings, such as custard, cream, chocolate or jam. It can also have toppings like a sprinkling of powdered sugar, crushed peanuts, chocolate sauce or any sweet glaze. However, people do like eating croissants plain and buttery, and they often like eating it with an extra mop of good-quality butter!

Making good croissants is a challenge. It is for those who can follow the recipe strictly and do their work with precision. To make things easier, you can divide the process over three days, as refrigerating is needed frequently. So on the first day, make the dough, prepare the butter and chill separately overnight. On the second day, carry out the “lamination” and refrigerate overnight. On the third day, shape the dough into croissants and bake. This makes things easier and workable even for people with a hectic work schedule.

Right kinds of flour and butter

Making croissants requires practice and attention to detail. So don’t be deterred if your first set of croissants don’t come out as expected. Try, till you succeed! Even if you are following the same recipe, but using a different brand of flour and/or butter, your croissant can be of different texture, flakiness and lightness than that of mine. So use the best quality products, please! Soft butter or homemade butter doesn’t work for this recipe. Butter that has good amount of butterfat, works well. So use butter and stay away from low-fat versions and margarine, atleast for this recipe. Butter makes the difference, and hence goes the saying, “Anything is better with butter!”

Right temperature of butter

In Indian climate, it is best if you use chilled butter. Your butter must be firm and in no circumstance, soft. If your butter has softened, getting a flaky croissant will be a distant dream.

Dusting

And yes, while you roll the dough for making croissants, don’t use too much flour for dusting.

Laminating

This is a very important step. This is the process of incorporating solid butter into the dough in such a way that you get thin layers of the dough at the end. Proper laminating ensures that you get good, light and flaky croissants. The process of laminating is simple, but time-consuming. The dough has to be rolled and chilled several times. The rolling has to be fast, or the butter incorporated would start softening.

The Perfect Croissant

Ingredients:

Ingredients for laminating:

Method:

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