Mom's Best Recipes
Recipe

Croissant Recipe

Classic French style croissants with crisp, shattery layers and a soft honeycomb center. Clear timing, simple ingredients, and the little tricks that make laminated dough feel doable at home.

Author By Matt Campbell
4.8
A tray of freshly baked golden brown croissants with crisp flaky layers on parchment paper in a home kitchen

Homemade croissants are one of those foods that feel like a flex, but they are really just butter + patience + a cold kitchen. When you nail it, you get that crisp, shattery outside and the dreamy honeycomb interior that makes you stop mid bite and do a little audit of your life choices. Like, why have we not been doing this more often?

This is a classic laminated dough method, but written for real people with real fridges. We keep ingredients accessible, instructions clear, and timing realistic. You will chill a lot. You will fold a lot. You will also end up with croissants that make your kitchen smell like a Paris bakery and your family suddenly appear “just to see what’s cooking.”

A close up photo of a croissant cut open showing a honeycomb interior crumb and crisp flaky crust

Why It Works

  • Big butter flavor without greasiness: Using a proper butter block and keeping everything cold helps the butter stay in thin sheets, not melt into the dough.
  • Flaky layers that actually separate: Three simple folds build dozens of layers, which bake into that crisp, pull apart texture.
  • Light, airy centers: The final proof is where the magic happens. You are looking for jiggly, puffy dough, not speed.
  • Make ahead friendly: Most of the work can happen the day before. Morning bake, hero status.

Pairs Well With

Storage Tips

Same day: Croissants are best within a few hours, when the exterior is crisp and the inside is soft.

Room temperature (1 to 2 days): Store in a paper bag or a loosely closed container. If you seal them airtight, they soften faster.

Recrisp: Bake at 325°F for 6 to 10 minutes until warm and lightly crisp again. If they are already pretty browned, tent with foil for the first few minutes.

Freeze baked croissants (up to 2 months): Cool completely, wrap individually, then freeze. Reheat from frozen at 325°F for 12 to 18 minutes.

Freeze shaped, unbaked croissants (best move): Freeze on a tray until solid, then bag. To bake, thaw overnight in the fridge, then proof at room temperature until puffy and jiggly, egg wash, and bake.

Common Questions

Do I need bread flour?

No. Bread flour can make croissants a little chewier. I like all purpose flour for a tender bite. If you only have bread flour, you can use it, just do not overwork the dough.

What butter works best?

Use unsalted butter, preferably European style if you can find it (higher butterfat, easier laminating). Regular unsalted butter still makes excellent croissants, just keep everything extra cold.

Why is my butter leaking out while rolling?

The dough is usually too warm or the butter block is too hard compared to the dough. Chill 15 minutes, then continue. You want dough and butter to feel similar in firmness, like cool modeling clay. The butter should bend without snapping, not smear like frosting.

Why did I lose my layers?

Common causes: butter broke through the dough, dough was overfloured between folds (layers cannot bond), or the dough got warm and the butter melted into it. Brush off excess flour and chill whenever things feel soft.

How do I know the croissants are proofed?

They should look puffy, feel lighter, and jiggle slightly when you nudge the tray. If you bake too early, you get dense centers and butter leakage.

Can I make these without a stand mixer?

Yes. Mix by hand with a spoon, then knead briefly until smooth. The dough should be soft and slightly tacky, not wet.

The first time I tried croissants at home, I treated the dough like it was on my schedule. Spoiler: it was not. The butter fought me, the dough warmed up, and my “croissants” came out shaped like tired little commas.

But the next round, I leaned into the process. I chilled when the dough told me to chill. I measured. I stopped trying to win an argument with butter. And when I pulled those golden, flaky spirals out of the oven, it felt like the kitchen itself was clapping. Now, whenever I want a weekend project that ends in a brag-worthy breakfast, this is the one.