Thank you!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! It took me 2 months to finally have a croissant I could be proud off. In Mexico flour is different, I had to use a high protein flour (13% protein), Osmotolerant dry instant yeast (golden package) and use 60% water and 40% milk of the total hydration of this recipe. Everything else on this recipe was the same. I saw at least 200 Hours of video material and another 100 hours of reading about dough, croissant, butter, yeast, laminating technique, proofing, flour properties and temperatures and over 20 failures (each one with different flour, or butter, or percentages, or kneading or yeast) to have it right. There were times in which I was so discouraged that I did not wanted to know anything about bread or butter. But I will say everything in the process is key (lol XD) and everything you need IS in this video. Do not go anywhere else just find the right materials and keep practicing. I tried full recipe and half of it and results are the same. You just need to find the right flour for you (this is a journey by itself), once you do, basically any butter not too soft (you can check it at the store by pressing it) will do it, flavor will definitely will be affected by the butter but with the right flour and right dough temperature, and right laminating technique and right proofing will do it. Here is always hot, so boiling water in the over, wait for 5-10 min to put in the croissants and a little spring of water over the shaped croissants will do it (it tried egg wash, milk, no moisture) for the 2-2.5 hours proofing). And yes, go for the expensive butter, cheap butter tastes cheap.
¡Hermano mexicano! Bro, I'm on the same path as you. I'm struggling so much. It's midnight and I'm the middle of another (hopefully not failed) batch. If you have any tips, please, aiudaaa.
@@ronyoichi331 tried making croissant days ago. The weather was hot. The croissant was literally delicious ( I think because of the butter😁, it was lurpak) but it didn't gave me the result I needed. So I am going to try it again but when the weather cools down, maybe in oct. or nov.
@@erikledezmaguevara7247 Sorry for taking too long to answer, how it went with your croissants batch? Believe me, the struggle is real and you will struggle with a different factor and/or step each time XD . Tell me if you continue to struggle with the process (and on what) and I will try to help as much as I can.
after years of practice, i’ve never had a result like yours. after seeing your recipe , i tried it with all the tips you gave and it literally worked !!
That has to be one of the most perfect interiors of a croissant I've ever seen. your technique is not only obviously pro culinary grade, it is also profoundly great. Truly bravo. you are the real deal. my dough is in the fridge for tomorrow. my belly, and those of those around me thank you, Professor Ben!
As a Pastry Chef in training… croissants are currently my nemesis. I want to perfect them. I cannot wait to try these at home. So many useful tips. Thank you!
I have made them 2 times now First time- I got a bit like a honeycomb structure but it was under proof hence raw in middle. Second time- did proofing right but due to my temperature rise in my country I think butter and flour got incorporated and hence I got a baked properly proofed but bready croissant. Hope third time the charm
@@Bennysbaked I live in a hot country should I wait till winter to make it because the new batch I made turns out to be bready I guess butter and flour got incorporated. Any advice on how to bake them in given climatic conditions?
@@suanneali but in all fairness, this amount of work when a traditional croissant is completely handmade from scratch explains why they are priced so high at an artisan bakery. I wish I had the time and patience to do this but some things are just more convenient to buy ready to go.
Pastry chef apprentice here! having my final exam in january, you just make me to understand so many things that my master couldn't. Love how you explain with a funny touch
@@Bennysbaked Hi again! i'm looking to save minutes in my pastry exam (we have to make 7 differents pastries, one of them, croissants in 7 hours), so here my question. When you do the last fold 1x3 and the dough has to chill, you chill the dough in the fridge for 45 minutes. Could it be shortened if the dough is left in the freezer for an x time and then in the fridge? or has to chill only in the fridge for 45 minutes? :) (your croissants made my wifes boss ate them, when she normally does not eat croissants xD)
Wow. Just wow. Absolutely the best all around corissant video I ever saw. All the info and the final product are just amazing. Gonna try this method soon
I can't believe that I just baked my first croissants that taste better than the bakeries!! I used this recipe and followed your instructions. I made some mistakes at the lamination stage and I thought it's going to be a big fail, but after proofing they looked pillowy and they jiggled! And when I baked them they didn't look perfect but they turned out very flaky and taste amazing!! My family loved them too and finished the whole batch! Thank you so much chef! 🥰
I was STUNNED by how amazing and even the honeycomb cross-section is! I watched Dominique Ansel (James Beard award-winning pastry chef!) talk about the internal structure of a perfect croissant, and it's pretty darn strict: not too tight on the bottom, no condensed layer on the top... etc. I found all other recipes, such as NYT cooking and many other million-sub channels to be sub-par per that standard. This is AMAZING. please accept my STANDING OVATION + slow clap
One day I finally decided to try the Ansel “Cronut” when the usual line of tourists wasn’t too long. I was stunned by how bad it was. Just way, way too sweet and gross tasting. My friend hated it too. We threw most of it out. Good marketing > good pastry.
I 💯 agree! I tried the #NYT one & it broke my butter & destroyed the hours of careful work I did for a day🤬 Note to the wise, don’t freeze your dough for 20mins & chill for an hour after freezing. It does NOT work😩😂😂
The most instructive croissant video on youtube. Especially appreciate the emphasis on temperature. Thank you so much! A few questions: Can you skip the powdered milk if you don't have it? Or replace with whey protein maybe? At what temperature is the pastry considered too warm for folding and must be chilled? To what temperature must it be chilled before continuing to laminate? Lastly, what's the best baking temperature for regular convection ovens? Thanks again!
Hi thank you so much :) If not using milk powder, decrease the milk to 255g, increase butter to 60g. When pastry temperature goes above 10c Is consider a bit warm. 11-13c is still acceptable...If you work very fast. Does your oven have a fan force setting?
You actually understand his way of presentation?! His formula doesn’t make sense at all, and why did he say “if milk has to be 35’c” what’s the reason to say “has to be”? I completely cannot follow his thought.
I struck gold when I found this video, a highly detailed, professional approach to making croissants at home - with brands I recognise (fellow Aussie)! Thank you so much x
This is the best croissant making video I have ever seen, it’s so detailed! Thank you so so much for sharing your technique! I will definite follow your video next time! 😄👍🏻
THANK YOU! I just started my croissant journey yesterday. I used a sad recipe from a “test” kitchen baking book. It wasn’t bad, the flavor was there, and kinda the shape. I’m exited I found your channel. One day, my croissants will look like yours, you are a very good teacher. 👍🏼
I baked at a supermarket chain here in the states for a few years, and you earned an upvote for the wobble test. Single handedly the easiest test for croissants.
If your are struggling to get the croissants to pass the wobble test after 4-5 hours, what could the problem be? I always seem to struggle with the final prove and getting a successful "wobble". Thanks in advance
i've been binge watching croissant recipes on youtube for a few days and urs is the most detailed oriented out of all! l'll definitely try ur tips and recipe once l got the temperature thermometer and the high protein flour that u reccommended. but l've got a few questions here, 1) is stand mixer necessary in making the pastry? ( i currently dont have one) 2) any tips on how to roll the pastry for equal thickness? 3) is there a substitue for milk powder and fresh yeast? (its kinda hard to find in my country) 4) if l use milk wash, do l need to wash the top surface and cross section or only the top surface ? thank you again for the recipe!
Hi, thank you! 1. No you can hand knead the dough, just takes a longer time. 2. Go to your local hardware store and buy 4, 4mm wooden plank roughly 40 by 2.5cm, place them down next to your pastry two on each side, and use them as a guide! 3. It can't really be substituted, but you can simply remove it from the recipe by reducing milk to 250 and increase butter to 60g. 4. Unlike eggwash, you can brush the whole croissant with milk, it's fine :)
oh man, this is true LOVE. Such a dedication and respect to the croissant! I adore croissants and brioche. I definitely will try this recipe when I have 2 days off in a row haha... Thank you so much for your elaborate explanation, all the hard work for editing this video too. Truly chapeau ;-)!! Merci infiniment!
Coming back to this recipe after a while I have one (I'd say important) takeaway for people struggling with croissants: TLDR: Pay attention to the dough texture more than to numbers. Big croissants require a strong (stretchy) dough. Long story: I decided to make 3 batches in one day, which is nice for comparison testing (was able to laminate 2 interleaving, 3rd was laminated afterwards separately). I was always puzzled by how the Benny's dough looks much more pliable and stretchy than mine and so I tried to adjust water content. For the second dough I've added 280 g of milk. The third dough was 240 g of milk + 40 g of water (but still having the milk powder in). The third dough had the nicest gluten development; would account that to a longer fridge time and possibly kneading rather than the milk content (but will experiment more next time). While it felt like the dough fought back the most during laminating, it was not something a little "chill" wouldn't fix (and it was my third dough in the day so I may have been tired of it at that point). At the same time I haven't observed any "premature fermentation issue due to a wetter environment". In any case, the 2nd and 3rd dough produced superior results (the difference was immense). More water in my case not only made the dough handling better, but also contributed to higher rise (and in the 3rd case it may have been improved by stronger gluten structure). Your flour may behave differently. For the reference I've used Bongiovanni Piazza Castello and a local butter with 84% fat content. Side note: I've rolled in a piece of gruyère in half of my croissants (from each batch). I highly recommend such experiments.
I have been trying to make croissants that look like that for a while. I'm retired now, so I'm going at it until I perfect it. And I've learned three new things watching this video. So far, they have made rolling the dough much, much easier. My dough is currently in the fridge after it's final turn. Thank you for this video, Benny! Those are the most beautiful croissants I've ever seen :)
Certainly one of the best videos on RUclips about croissants. You not only show the ideal process but also provide context as to why you do certain things. You also illustrate what not to do. Very good educational material. I bet you’ve read many recipes and watched lots of videos to arrive here, just as I did. Two takeaways for me: no egg wash before proofing and only once with milk before baking. I was never satisfied with a single egg wash before proofing as it dried out the surface, but double egg wash resulted in glossy thick crust which I also didn’t like. Single milk before bake makes a lot of sense!
Every step so far is alright for me meaning i can work with this when about to make a croissant, it just the proofing part is difficult for me because i have a small portable oven and it wont at fit top and lower tray at the same time for croissant proofing🥲 i did saw a video where a guy proof batches of croissant by pouring hot water into a ramekin cup, place it middle of the tray, and cover the tray with a plastic wrap idk if that method is better than an oven proof method, or the other way around… either way, lovely videos! very informative baking tips! and sorry for the paragraph comment haha
Amazing croissant..,, I have tried it also and I made in one day but when I proofed the dough in the fridge..my little brother took me to bakery shop to buy croissant and he enjoyed it so much.
Hello Benny, I just made this version and my dough seemed “dryer or tougher” than the other version. I was tempted to add more water or milk but didn’t. Can I knead the dough with the mixer all the way? It came out absolutely amazing though. Thank you SO much for making my croissant making dream a reality! :)
I just had the same issue, the dough was harder to knead, and would crack. I added a little bit of water, which seemed to improve it at least in the moment, and eventually it would crack again (maybe a little less, though). Now I'm letting it rise and I'll go one with the recipe. But I wonder if it's because of the milk? I usually use water, or a mix of milk and water. Also to note, I did not have milk powder so I skipped that ingredient.
So I made your croissants, and they came out BEAUTIFULLY! Thank you so much for sharing your recipe and knowledge. Mine were not quite as open and airy on the inside as yours (any idea why that might be?), and the interior was moister and more tender than I am used to. I guess that is the 52% hydration thing. All in all, great technical instructions, great croissant, and great recipe. Thanks again.
yeah I tried and have same issue too, mine had layers but kinda wet/ raw look, even I tried to bake 200C 10min then 170C 11mins but result are same. Also the texture of the outside layers like crumb, not flaky, not sure it is right flour (I sue 12.5% protein)
The only question I have is for the first fold, I could fold in half and slit the fold (instead of folding the 2 sides over then slit the 2 sides), and avoid the seam in the middle. Yes?
Hi Benny, I love your channel, I would like to know if I can used instant yeast for this recipe. I don’t have the fresh yeast right know. Do you think I should order it for better results? And if I can use the instant yeast how much should apply for this recipe. Thank you great job you’re doing.
Dude, amazing. I have been trying to make croissants for what feels like forever, and your detailed explanation for everything was the only thing that worked for me. What thermometer are you using? Regards from sweden
Great teacher! Croix are my nemesis and as I tell people with bread it is usually your method of the process not the recipe that is the weak link. Now to practice what I preach 😂 Great to see local ingredients on the screen. Thank you.
Thank you very much for a winning recipe👏👏 I made it and it turned out perfect thank you very much♥️ tip from me, I made the croissants and I didn't have time that day to bake so I just put them in the freezer wrapped in plastic wrap when I wanted to bake I took the tray out of the freezer put it in the oven turned off without the plastic put in a pan with boiling water and gave Defrost and swell the croissants. When they swelled, I took out the pan, heated the oven and baked them. It turned out perfect again, thank you very much ❤️♥️
Impressive! You made these croissants with such great care, no wonder they came out perfect. This is the most informative baking video I've seen on youtube. You earned a new subscriber!! :-))
Hi Benny. I love how detailed this video is. You definitely deserve more subscribers! Just one question, when you’re rolling and folding during lamination, what is the temperature range for the dough to be in? I find that my butter breaks when I’m rolling my dough straight out of the fridge and I get uneven layers.
Awesome video! I love your geeky humour 😅 I always wondered why some people are so adamant about not letting the dough proof at all before shaping the croissants (the explanation I saw most frequently is that you don't wanna develop the gluten too much). I tried it like that but the dough still is tensed af and springs back.
How's going, Natalia :) Simple, different recipes require a different procedure, type of flour, quantity of the dough, recipe, different folding system...the list goes on! For home bakers, it's best to bulk ferment to ensure the dough is properly developed, you don't want pancake croissant XD
@@Bennysbaked I think you're right. Since I can't find type 00 flour so easily anymore where I live, I've been using either cake flour (12% protein, goes to show that protein content it's not all that matters in a flour) or type 55. Everything went smoothly until the final proofing when my croissants cracked and collapsed 😔. I guess bc of the weak flour and lack of gluten development (this never happened when I had good quality type 00 italian flour). Thank you so much for your insights :D
You don't know how much this video has helped me. And could you please tell me what temperature should I use while baking them in a manual electric oven?
OMG I love this channel so so much!!! Thank you for every recipe and video. One question ... do you have / own a bakery or something like that? because you deserve so!! and I would really travel from where I am ( Mexico ) to wherever your bakery is because omg, man you are pure talent and I love watching your videos. Simply thank you ✨🥰
Hiya Benny! Amazing video and really cool channel :) I am following your croissant recipe at the moment but am already stuck at the initial kneading phase. I don't have an electric mixer so mixed by hand from the beginning, but even after close to an hour of kneading my dough does not seem to have formed the right amount of gluten, it seems like the dough doesn't want to get out of the rough mix stage :( Any tips on what I might be doing wrong and how I can improve? Cheers!
My husband and I love your videos. They’re honestly amazing! (Instructive but also super relaxing). Thank you! Please keep uploading. (Could you please make a video on kouign amann next?)
I've looked at a LOT of croissant videos, I've made so many attempts, and I never had such a result. There are new things in this video I didn't see elsewhere, so I will try again with your technique!! Hopefully it will pay off :D
You are amazing! I just went through comments and was so nicely surprised to see someone nit only giving valuable tips in the video that can make a huge difference on the outcome, but then also give additional advice in the comments section O.O I've never made croissants before, but I enjoy making breads, brioche, etc.. I'm definitely tempted to try making these one day 😋😁 I'll post links to pictures when I do :) thanks for sharing!
this video feels like the perfect recipe and technique! i’ve been studying abou croissants for about 2 months and this is one of the beeeest videos! thanks for this, lots of love from brazil🫶🏻
God you are the only one to highlight about the aircon in the recipe. I live in a tropical country with outside temp is always over 30•C. I am having a hard time working with butter.
I like a recipe that weighs the ingredient instead of mesures, you can’t go wrong using weighs. Temperature of dough is also very important. Thanks for the great recipe.
All i can say is thankyou. My croissants are perfect because that small little tips many forget to mentioned are all mentioned by you… i love the simplicity of croissants & yet again it bloom so beautifully as we bake it… it does taste amazing…
I’ve stumbled across you video in persuit of the perfect croissant tutorial and I might just have found it, I’ve been put off making them because of all the multitude of variables one has to do but after watching yours I’m going to dive in and give it a try. The most profound part of choosing your recipe over all others ? The Aussie frozen peas 😀 game changer
As a former baker I gladly give my thumbs up for this video. The only part I am a little sceptical about is letting the dough sit for an hour in room temperature to awaken the yeast. I say put it straight in the fridge, but that all depends on the yeast and surrounding temperature.
I don't know how many times I have watched you videos. Your step by step explanations are just amazing and I am so thankful for your hard work!!!! I have a question. If I don't use milk powder, Do I need to use 250g + 60g unsalted butter or 255g milk+ 60g unsalted butter? Thank you!!!
Hi Benny, i'm following this recipe for the third time. Well i'm following for 90% the rest is other dough, kitchen, temperatures, ... What is your advice on keeping the layers beautifully together while rolling out between folds? My layers shift each time where you can clearly see the different butter layers already. I do a 45 min rest in the fridge
Congratulations for the video. This is, so far, the best scientific video to make a proper croissant. I have question: "What's the best stage to freeze the croissant?" Usually I freeze them after the shaping. I wrap each croissant and I put 5-6 of them in a freezer plastic bag. When needed, I put them in a pan (in the oven) and I let them rising all night. In the morning, I bake them. Does it sound right to you? Thank you.
Yes correct! I would let them deforest overnight before proofing :) The outside of the croissant will defrost faster than the center, sometime can result in uneven proofing!
Hi there 😀 I made your recipe in Congo where it's hot and humid and it worked! Croissants were delicious, crispy on the outside, fluffy in the inside! So thank you very much
a very in depth explanation, LOVE it !!! quick question tho, how do you prevent the butter from leaking out since you slice the edges in between folding? and what should i do if there are butter leak?
Thank you!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
It took me 2 months to finally have a croissant I could be proud off.
In Mexico flour is different, I had to use a high protein flour (13% protein), Osmotolerant dry instant yeast (golden package) and use 60% water and 40% milk of the total hydration of this recipe. Everything else on this recipe was the same.
I saw at least 200 Hours of video material and another 100 hours of reading about dough, croissant, butter, yeast, laminating technique, proofing, flour properties and temperatures and over 20 failures (each one with different flour, or butter, or percentages, or kneading or yeast) to have it right. There were times in which I was so discouraged that I did not wanted to know anything about bread or butter. But I will say everything in the process is key (lol XD) and everything you need IS in this video. Do not go anywhere else just find the right materials and keep practicing.
I tried full recipe and half of it and results are the same.
You just need to find the right flour for you (this is a journey by itself), once you do, basically any butter not too soft (you can check it at the store by pressing it) will do it, flavor will definitely will be affected by the butter but with the right flour and right dough temperature, and right laminating technique and right proofing will do it. Here is always hot, so boiling water in the over, wait for 5-10 min to put in the croissants and a little spring of water over the shaped croissants will do it (it tried egg wash, milk, no moisture) for the 2-2.5 hours proofing).
And yes, go for the expensive butter, cheap butter tastes cheap.
I'm happy that my video helped you in your journey of croissant making, practice makes perfect, and using good flour is half the battle!!
Also here in the philippines it is so hot , i dont have any idea how to make adjustments , I am so dumb with this lmao
¡Hermano mexicano! Bro, I'm on the same path as you. I'm struggling so much. It's midnight and I'm the middle of another (hopefully not failed) batch. If you have any tips, please, aiudaaa.
@@ronyoichi331 tried making croissant days ago. The weather was hot. The croissant was literally delicious ( I think because of the butter😁, it was lurpak) but it didn't gave me the result I needed. So I am going to try it again but when the weather cools down, maybe in oct. or nov.
@@erikledezmaguevara7247 Sorry for taking too long to answer, how it went with your croissants batch? Believe me, the struggle is real and you will struggle with a different factor and/or step each time XD . Tell me if you continue to struggle with the process (and on what) and I will try to help as much as I can.
This is the best tutorial video for croissants on RUclips as far as I've seen!
Thank you!
@@Bennysbaked Seriously! There are so many small steps and intricacies that you included. VERY few questions after the ending.
after years of practice, i’ve never had a result like yours. after seeing your recipe , i tried it with all the tips you gave and it literally worked !!
That has to be one of the most perfect interiors of a croissant I've ever seen. your technique is not only obviously pro culinary grade, it is also profoundly great. Truly bravo. you are the real deal. my dough is in the fridge for tomorrow. my belly, and those of those around me thank you, Professor Ben!
You're very welcome, I'm flattered! Good luck with your croissants!
As a Pastry Chef in training… croissants are currently my nemesis. I want to perfect them. I cannot wait to try these at home. So many useful tips. Thank you!
Don't hesitate to ask me any questions!
I have made them 2 times now
First time- I got a bit like a honeycomb structure but it was under proof hence raw in middle. Second time- did proofing right but due to my temperature rise in my country I think butter and flour got incorporated and hence I got a baked properly proofed but bready croissant. Hope third time the charm
@@Bennysbaked I live in a hot country should I wait till winter to make it because the new batch I made turns out to be bready I guess butter and flour got incorporated. Any advice on how to bake them in given climatic conditions?
@@aryanverma8344do you have air conditioner in your house?
@@Bennysbaked yes I do
so it’s decided, we’re all coming for breakfast next Sunday.... you bring the croissant and we bring the coffee!!
Only if I'm not working 😂
IF you want croissants in sunday morning you need to come Saturday night. wink wink
do you answer me please to make croissant right
thank you very much.
Took a week off at work to make this. We ended up eating peas and corn. Next morning I went to the bakery to get me some croissants 😊
Epic comment
😂 i was really interested in making the croissants until I realized this video is better used to help you nap
@@suanneali but in all fairness, this amount of work when a traditional croissant is completely handmade from scratch explains why they are priced so high at an artisan bakery. I wish I had the time and patience to do this but some things are just more convenient to buy ready to go.
HAHAHAHAHAHA GOOD ONE !! YOU CAN STUFF THE CROISSANTS WITH PEAS, CORN AND BEGGA CHEESE!!
I am dead 😂😂😂.
Pastry chef apprentice here! having my final exam in january, you just make me to understand so many things that my master couldn't. Love how you explain with a funny touch
Best of luck!
@@Bennysbaked Hi again! i'm looking to save minutes in my pastry exam (we have to make 7 differents pastries, one of them, croissants in 7 hours), so here my question. When you do the last fold 1x3 and the dough has to chill, you chill the dough in the fridge for 45 minutes. Could it be shortened if the dough is left in the freezer for an x time and then in the fridge? or has to chill only in the fridge for 45 minutes? :) (your croissants made my wifes boss ate them, when she normally does not eat croissants xD)
Of course it could. The faster you chill it the better. Just be sure to avoid freezer burn.
Wow. Just wow. Absolutely the best all around corissant video I ever saw. All the info and the final product are just amazing. Gonna try this method soon
Cheers! Don't hesitate to ask me any questions on Instagram 🙂
I can't believe that I just baked my first croissants that taste better than the bakeries!! I used this recipe and followed your instructions. I made some mistakes at the lamination stage and I thought it's going to be a big fail, but after proofing they looked pillowy and they jiggled! And when I baked them they didn't look perfect but they turned out very flaky and taste amazing!! My family loved them too and finished the whole batch! Thank you so much chef! 🥰
I am very happy for you! You are welcome!
I was STUNNED by how amazing and even the honeycomb cross-section is! I watched Dominique Ansel (James Beard award-winning pastry chef!) talk about the internal structure of a perfect croissant, and it's pretty darn strict: not too tight on the bottom, no condensed layer on the top... etc. I found all other recipes, such as NYT cooking and many other million-sub channels to be sub-par per that standard. This is AMAZING. please accept my STANDING OVATION + slow clap
😂Thank you so much😁
One day I finally decided to try the Ansel “Cronut” when the usual line of tourists wasn’t too long. I was stunned by how bad it was. Just way, way too sweet and gross tasting. My friend hated it too. We threw most of it out. Good marketing > good pastry.
I 💯 agree! I tried the #NYT one & it broke my butter & destroyed the hours of careful work I did for a day🤬 Note to the wise, don’t freeze your dough for 20mins & chill for an hour after freezing. It does NOT work😩😂😂
The most instructive croissant video on youtube. Especially appreciate the emphasis on temperature. Thank you so much!
A few questions:
Can you skip the powdered milk if you don't have it? Or replace with whey protein maybe?
At what temperature is the pastry considered too warm for folding and must be chilled? To what temperature must it be chilled before continuing to laminate?
Lastly, what's the best baking temperature for regular convection ovens?
Thanks again!
Hi thank you so much :) If not using milk powder, decrease the milk to 255g, increase butter to 60g. When pastry temperature goes above 10c Is consider a bit warm. 11-13c is still acceptable...If you work very fast. Does your oven have a fan force setting?
@@Bennysbaked thanks for replying! My oven does not have a fan.
@@rashahamze2841 Bake at 200c for 20mins :)
Can I replace fresh yeast with SAF instant yeast? If so, how much would you recommend? 10g?
@@MrYuetoo Go 12g :)
You’re honestly so amazing, I tried making a ton of batches from different bakers, and yours turned out literally PERFECT :) thank you ❤
Thank you!😃
You actually understand his way of presentation?! His formula doesn’t make sense at all, and why did he say “if milk has to be 35’c” what’s the reason to say “has to be”? I completely cannot follow his thought.
Not to mention he will do cold fermentation at 3’c after an hour, what’s the point of using that formula?
@@costruito bulk fermentation at room temperature for an hour🙂
@@costruito I think that’s due to how hot you got it, or left it out. Any where between the limits is ok.
Thanks, Impressive! This is the most informative baking video I've seen on RUclips.
I struck gold when I found this video, a highly detailed, professional approach to making croissants at home - with brands I recognise (fellow Aussie)! Thank you so much x
I'm glad you enjoyed it 🤠
I love learning the technical and theoretical parts! Would love to see more video like this one different types of baking.
Thank you! There will🙂
@@Bennysbaked Mi sarebbe piaciuto leggere i passaggi in italiano
Hello Reckless
This is the best croissant making video I have ever seen, it’s so detailed! Thank you so so much for sharing your technique! I will definite follow your video next time! 😄👍🏻
Thank you!
Hello
THANK YOU! I just started my croissant journey yesterday. I used a sad recipe from a “test” kitchen baking book. It wasn’t bad, the flavor was there, and kinda the shape. I’m exited I found your channel. One day, my croissants will look like yours, you are a very good teacher. 👍🏼
the finn and jake cup 100% made the croissant experience 2x better! ur amazing
You know it!😆
I baked at a supermarket chain here in the states for a few years, and you earned an upvote for the wobble test. Single handedly the easiest test for croissants.
If your are struggling to get the croissants to pass the wobble test after 4-5 hours, what could the problem be? I always seem to struggle with the final prove and getting a successful "wobble". Thanks in advance
@@peebs1019 The temperature of the room might be too low.
i've been binge watching croissant recipes on youtube for a few days and urs is the most detailed oriented out of all! l'll definitely try ur tips and recipe once l got the temperature thermometer and the high protein flour that u reccommended. but l've got a few questions here,
1) is stand mixer necessary in making the pastry? ( i currently dont have one)
2) any tips on how to roll the pastry for equal thickness?
3) is there a substitue for milk powder and fresh yeast? (its kinda hard to find in my country)
4) if l use milk wash, do l need to wash the top surface and cross section or only the top surface ?
thank you again for the recipe!
Hi, thank you!
1. No you can hand knead the dough, just takes a longer time.
2. Go to your local hardware store and buy 4, 4mm wooden plank roughly 40 by 2.5cm, place them down next to your pastry two on each side, and use them as a guide!
3. It can't really be substituted, but you can simply remove it from the recipe by reducing milk to 250 and increase butter to 60g.
4. Unlike eggwash, you can brush the whole croissant with milk, it's fine :)
oh man, this is true LOVE. Such a dedication and respect to the croissant! I adore croissants and brioche. I definitely will try this recipe when I have 2 days off in a row haha... Thank you so much for your elaborate explanation, all the hard work for editing this video too. Truly chapeau ;-)!! Merci infiniment!
Thank you for liking the video!
Watching how croissants, sfogliatelle, panettone etc are made , I will never eat them without an appreciation for how much goes into the process.
Coming back to this recipe after a while I have one (I'd say important) takeaway for people struggling with croissants:
TLDR: Pay attention to the dough texture more than to numbers. Big croissants require a strong (stretchy) dough.
Long story: I decided to make 3 batches in one day, which is nice for comparison testing (was able to laminate 2 interleaving, 3rd was laminated afterwards separately).
I was always puzzled by how the Benny's dough looks much more pliable and stretchy than mine and so I tried to adjust water content. For the second dough I've added 280 g of milk. The third dough was 240 g of milk + 40 g of water (but still having the milk powder in).
The third dough had the nicest gluten development; would account that to a longer fridge time and possibly kneading rather than the milk content (but will experiment more next time). While it felt like the dough fought back the most during laminating, it was not something a little "chill" wouldn't fix (and it was my third dough in the day so I may have been tired of it at that point). At the same time I haven't observed any "premature fermentation issue due to a wetter environment".
In any case, the 2nd and 3rd dough produced superior results (the difference was immense). More water in my case not only made the dough handling better, but also contributed to higher rise (and in the 3rd case it may have been improved by stronger gluten structure).
Your flour may behave differently. For the reference I've used Bongiovanni Piazza Castello and a local butter with 84% fat content.
Side note: I've rolled in a piece of gruyère in half of my croissants (from each batch). I highly recommend such experiments.
Well said. The recipe is never set in stone, experiment with the ingredients you have and make changes to what works for you!
If iam halfing the recipe do i need to reduce the dimensions to butter block and dough
I have been trying to make croissants that look like that for a while. I'm retired now, so I'm going at it until I perfect it. And I've learned three new things watching this video. So far, they have made rolling the dough much, much easier. My dough is currently in the fridge after it's final turn. Thank you for this video, Benny! Those are the most beautiful croissants I've ever seen :)
Practice makes perfect!
Certainly one of the best videos on RUclips about croissants. You not only show the ideal process but also provide context as to why you do certain things. You also illustrate what not to do. Very good educational material. I bet you’ve read many recipes and watched lots of videos to arrive here, just as I did. Two takeaways for me: no egg wash before proofing and only once with milk before baking. I was never satisfied with a single egg wash before proofing as it dried out the surface, but double egg wash resulted in glossy thick crust which I also didn’t like. Single milk before bake makes a lot of sense!
Clear and explanatory but not boring. Thank you 🎉
You are very welcome!
Every step so far is alright for me meaning i can work with this when about to make a croissant, it just the proofing part is difficult for me because i have a small portable oven and it wont at fit top and lower tray at the same time for croissant proofing🥲
i did saw a video where a guy proof batches of croissant by pouring hot water into a ramekin cup, place it middle of the tray, and cover the tray with a plastic wrap
idk if that method is better than an oven proof method, or the other way around…
either way, lovely videos! very informative baking tips! and sorry for the paragraph comment haha
For you that might be a better way... proofing croissants is challenging for home bakers sometimes we need to get creative!
Your tutorial is very detailed! Thanks for the hard work putting this together 👍🏻
Thank you 😊
This video helped fine tune my process to get the results I've been pursuing for about a year. It's so rewarding. Thank you Ben!
You're very welcome 🙂
Amazing croissant..,, I have tried it also and I made in one day but when I proofed the dough in the fridge..my little brother took me to bakery shop to buy croissant and he enjoyed it so much.
He has beautifully explained each and everything so well along with the scientific reasoning behind each product. Love it!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Going to try this recipe soon :)
Hello Benny, I just made this version and my dough seemed “dryer or tougher” than the other version. I was tempted to add more water or milk but didn’t. Can I knead the dough with the mixer all the way? It came out absolutely amazing though. Thank you SO much for making my croissant making dream a reality! :)
Yes of course you can use only the mixer all the way!
How long should we knead it using hand mixer if the dough dryer?
@@galuhasri2698 No definite answer, just keep checking windowpane.
I just had the same issue, the dough was harder to knead, and would crack. I added a little bit of water, which seemed to improve it at least in the moment, and eventually it would crack again (maybe a little less, though). Now I'm letting it rise and I'll go one with the recipe. But I wonder if it's because of the milk? I usually use water, or a mix of milk and water. Also to note, I did not have milk powder so I skipped that ingredient.
@@FlorianBecquereau try half milk half water next time. Different flour different characteristics.
wow this is a work of art. so relaxing and calming to watch. hope i'll have the courage to make one myself :)
Thank you!
So I made your croissants, and they came out BEAUTIFULLY! Thank you so much for sharing your recipe and knowledge. Mine were not quite as open and airy on the inside as yours (any idea why that might be?), and the interior was moister and more tender than I am used to. I guess that is the 52% hydration thing. All in all, great technical instructions, great croissant, and great recipe. Thanks again.
Hi Vincent! I'm so glad to hear that :) Send me pictures of your croissants on Instagram. I can help you better that way!
@@Bennysbaked Will do! @beat_me_cakes
yeah I tried and have same issue too, mine had layers but kinda wet/ raw look, even I tried to bake 200C 10min then 170C 11mins but result are same. Also the texture of the outside layers like crumb, not flaky, not sure it is right flour (I sue 12.5% protein)
You did a work even the best chef's of pastry can't do at their Homes , you have my respect cause you're a genius
Thank you 😊
@@Bennysbaked you're from ?
@@joe20774 He lives in Australia :D
Super explanation, I've tried 5-6 videos, this is the best I've come across so far.
Thank you!! 🙏😊
The only question I have is for the first fold, I could fold in half and slit the fold (instead of folding the 2 sides over then slit the 2 sides), and avoid the seam in the middle. Yes?
@@fffuuuiiis2948 But that way you will have less layers🤔
Man I love how you demonstrate percentages of protein and fat, I just found out that I was using a shitty butter all this time!!
Haha, I'm glad my video helped!
Hi Benny, I love your channel, I would like to know if I can used instant yeast for this recipe. I don’t have the fresh yeast right know. Do you think I should order it for better results? And if I can use the instant yeast how much should apply for this recipe. Thank you great job you’re doing.
Hi yes you can definitely use instant yeast, go 12g🙂
Thank you
@@mariainesvillasmil369 Hello
Dude, amazing. I have been trying to make croissants for what feels like forever, and your detailed explanation for everything was the only thing that worked for me. What thermometer are you using?
Regards from sweden
Infrared thermometers with lasers, it's an old model, you can definitely get a better one!
@@Bennysbaked thanks!
@@harrymalm anytime!
Great teacher! Croix are my nemesis and as I tell people with bread it is usually your method of the process not the recipe that is the weak link. Now to practice what I preach 😂 Great to see local ingredients on the screen. Thank you.
Thank you!
Hello
Thank you very much for a winning recipe👏👏 I made it and it turned out perfect thank you very much♥️ tip from me, I made the croissants and I didn't have time that day to bake so I just put them in the freezer wrapped in plastic wrap when I wanted to bake I took the tray out of the freezer put it in the oven turned off without the plastic put in a pan with boiling water and gave Defrost and swell the croissants. When they swelled, I took out the pan, heated the oven and baked them. It turned out perfect again, thank you very much ❤️♥️
Well done! Thank you!
@@Bennysbaked ❤️
Just as nerd as me!
LOVED IT!
Lots of information I'd find nowhere :D
Thanks!
Impressive! You made these croissants with such great care, no wonder they came out perfect. This is the most informative baking video I've seen on youtube. You earned a new subscriber!! :-))
Thanks so much!
Hi Benny. I love how detailed this video is. You definitely deserve more subscribers! Just one question, when you’re rolling and folding during lamination, what is the temperature range for the dough to be in? I find that my butter breaks when I’m rolling my dough straight out of the fridge and I get uneven layers.
Keep it between 10-13c😊. Try wait for 5 mins before rolling again!
YOU’RE MY HERO! I’ve never been able to make decent croissants until now!!!!
I'm happy that the video was helpful to you.🙂
From all the videos I watched on croissant making..Have to commend this one..its the best and most helpful
Thank you!
Awesome video! I love your geeky humour 😅 I always wondered why some people are so adamant about not letting the dough proof at all before shaping the croissants (the explanation I saw most frequently is that you don't wanna develop the gluten too much). I tried it like that but the dough still is tensed af and springs back.
How's going, Natalia :) Simple, different recipes require a different procedure, type of flour, quantity of the dough, recipe, different folding system...the list goes on! For home bakers, it's best to bulk ferment to ensure the dough is properly developed, you don't want pancake croissant XD
@@Bennysbaked I think you're right. Since I can't find type 00 flour so easily anymore where I live, I've been using either cake flour (12% protein, goes to show that protein content it's not all that matters in a flour) or type 55. Everything went smoothly until the final proofing when my croissants cracked and collapsed 😔. I guess bc of the weak flour and lack of gluten development (this never happened when I had good quality type 00 italian flour). Thank you so much for your insights :D
@@nataliaoprea8378 Hello
Hi Benny, how do you think should I try Manitoba Caputo Oro flour with 14 % protein or should I mix it with Caputo 00?
Thanks for making this awesome vid! So informative and helpful. Your croissants look AMAZING! 💥
Thank you!
Hello
I need to watch this many times, so that making croissant will be like second nature to me, hopefully just (or almost) like you!
Practice makes perfect 😉
Thank you ! You are the best in Croissants teaching.
You don't know how much this video has helped me.
And could you please tell me what temperature should I use while baking them in a manual electric oven?
200c 😁 for 19 mins
Love your videos! You have inspired me to open my own RUclips channel!
I'm so glad to hear that! Keep up the good work!
@@Bennysbaked Thank you so much!!
OMG I love this channel so so much!!! Thank you for every recipe and video. One question ... do you have / own a bakery or something like that? because you deserve so!! and I would really travel from where I am ( Mexico ) to wherever your bakery is because omg, man you are pure talent and I love watching your videos. Simply thank you ✨🥰
Thank you for your support 😊
I don't have my own bakery 😁 but one day I might!
Your technique is on point and your croissants look amazing! Very enlightening and peaceful video, loved it! Sending lots of love :D
Thank you so much!
Wohhhhhhh wohhhhhhh wonderful amazing awesome finishing.... what a great demonstration.... very nice and very clear.. congratulations to you sir
thank you!
Ein sehr professionelles Video, ausgezeichnete Erklärungen und hervorragende Tipps - hier ist ein echter Profi am Werk. Gratulation !!
Ich danke dir sehr! Ich bin froh, dass es Ihnen gefallen hat!
Hiya Benny! Amazing video and really cool channel :) I am following your croissant recipe at the moment but am already stuck at the initial kneading phase. I don't have an electric mixer so mixed by hand from the beginning, but even after close to an hour of kneading my dough does not seem to have formed the right amount of gluten, it seems like the dough doesn't want to get out of the rough mix stage :( Any tips on what I might be doing wrong and how I can improve? Cheers!
Hi, what flour did you use?
@@Bennysbaked Hello! Molino Grassi’s Farina per pasta Fresca; 12g of protein 🙊
@@aninditabhattacharjee1709 12% flour has better ability to absorb water! Try increase the hydration by 10g!
@@Bennysbaked thanks, and will do! Now I have already let the dough rest overnight, I guess I'll just continue like this?
My husband and I love your videos. They’re honestly amazing! (Instructive but also super relaxing). Thank you! Please keep uploading.
(Could you please make a video on kouign amann next?)
I've looked at a LOT of croissant videos, I've made so many attempts, and I never had such a result. There are new things in this video I didn't see elsewhere, so I will try again with your technique!! Hopefully it will pay off :D
You can do it!
You are amazing! I just went through comments and was so nicely surprised to see someone nit only giving valuable tips in the video that can make a huge difference on the outcome, but then also give additional advice in the comments section O.O
I've never made croissants before, but I enjoy making breads, brioche, etc.. I'm definitely tempted to try making these one day 😋😁 I'll post links to pictures when I do :) thanks for sharing!
Cheers!
Benny, you made this video with love. Great respect to you.
Glad you enjoyed it!
@@Bennysbaked Be happy.
this video feels like the perfect recipe and technique!
i’ve been studying abou croissants for about 2 months and this is one of the beeeest videos!
thanks for this, lots of love from brazil🫶🏻
Cheers!
Omg thank you so much for this in depth explanation! I’m definitely gonna have to try making this over again 😋
You are so welcome!
God you are the only one to highlight about the aircon in the recipe. I live in a tropical country with outside temp is always over 30•C. I am having a hard time working with butter.
Temperature control is everything in croissant making!
me too
Pancake croissant is all I can find in my city 😭 so I’ll have to make my own!
Hahaha, so you're literally making bakery-quality croissants at home!
I like a recipe that weighs the ingredient instead of mesures, you can’t go wrong using weighs. Temperature of dough is also very important. Thanks for the great recipe.
wow, my life has been solved in 20 minutes. thank you!!!!!!
i attempted this but the butter kept squirting out of the dough 😭 so i ended up mixing them all cuz i was upset LOL
The butter and the dough should have the same consistency😂
Instructions unclear: I added peas and corn to my dough. 😢
Delicious!🤣
Don't use Aussie peas. Your recipes will turn out with strong accents.
All i can say is thankyou. My croissants are perfect because that small little tips many forget to mentioned are all mentioned by you… i love the simplicity of croissants & yet again it bloom so beautifully as we bake it… it does taste amazing…
Top video. Can’t wait to make my very own and enjoy them with a short black. Champion video. Congratulations 🎉💪💪🏆🏆🏆🍾🍾🍾🍾
Cool.. cooking with math..
Would much rather hear you speak than the very repetitive "music." Beautiful croissants though!
Ik heb geen woorden om mijn dankbaarheid uit te drukken voor deze perfecte masterclass! 👏👏👏Je bent mijn held! ❤
Après des années de pratique du rouleau je vois enfin quelqu'un qui sait faire un tourage vraiment au carré et beau résultat bravo.....
the best croissant I come across, still the best on utube
Thank you 😊
I have to say I have finally found proper instruction on how to make croissants!! Thank you!!
You're welcome!
Wow! What an amazing presentation. I'll never take a croissant for granted again. The process is hard work. Thank you for sharing your recipe.
You're welcome!
@@Bennysbaked you took the time to answer, I'm subscribing ! 🤗
@@kericue2065 Thank you for the support😇
This is the best, most detailed informative croissant video I’ve seen so far. I will try your recipe and your way to make croissant.
Thank you ☺️
I’ve stumbled across you video in persuit of the perfect croissant tutorial and I might just have found it, I’ve been put off making them because of all the multitude of variables one has to do but after watching yours I’m going to dive in and give it a try. The most profound part of choosing your recipe over all others ? The Aussie frozen peas 😀 game changer
By far the best guide & recipe! Wanna try soon
Thank you!
Marvellous! Thanks a lot for sharing your recipe!
you are amazing. all the guidance, all the hints, all the error analyse. Thank you very much
Thankyou!
this is the most perfect croissant demonstration i have ever seen. appreciate
Thank you 😌
As a former baker I gladly give my thumbs up for this video. The only part I am a little sceptical about is letting the dough sit for an hour in room temperature to awaken the yeast. I say put it straight in the fridge, but that all depends on the yeast and surrounding temperature.
I have shown my room temp in the video, it's part of the recipe.
Your process obviously gives spotless results!
I don't know how many times I have watched you videos. Your step by step explanations are just amazing and I am so thankful for your hard work!!!! I have a question. If I don't use milk powder, Do I need to use 250g + 60g unsalted butter or 255g milk+ 60g unsalted butter? Thank you!!!
Just simply remove it from the recipe😀everything stays the same!
Best croissant video I’ve ever seen. ( and I’ve seen many)
Thanks bro :)
Hi Benny, i'm following this recipe for the third time. Well i'm following for 90% the rest is other dough, kitchen, temperatures, ...
What is your advice on keeping the layers beautifully together while rolling out between folds? My layers shift each time where you can clearly see the different butter layers already. I do a 45 min rest in the fridge
Congratulations for the video.
This is, so far, the best scientific video to make a proper croissant.
I have question: "What's the best stage to freeze the croissant?"
Usually I freeze them after the shaping.
I wrap each croissant and I put 5-6 of them in a freezer plastic bag.
When needed, I put them in a pan (in the oven) and I let them rising all night. In the morning, I bake them.
Does it sound right to you?
Thank you.
Yes correct! I would let them deforest overnight before proofing :) The outside of the croissant will defrost faster than the center, sometime can result in uneven proofing!
Son una maravilla tus croissant, una obra de arte, lo.mejor que he visto hasta ahora. Felicitaciones desde Argentina.
Muchas gracias por su apoyo 🙂
Great vid! Could I do a cold overnight ferment with this recipe right after final lamination and before final rolling and shaping?
Holy crap, that is a lot of information. Thank you for this video. And you have beautiful hands!
Most exact folding and shaping i have seen on RUclips. Excellent demo.
Thank you so much
best recipe on youtube worked a treat first time, great instructions and tips to succeed, thank you for sharing.🙏
Cheers!
Hi there 😀 I made your recipe in Congo where it's hot and humid and it worked! Croissants were delicious, crispy on the outside, fluffy in the inside! So thank you very much
Im happy to hear that 😁 great job!
a very in depth explanation, LOVE it !!! quick question tho, how do you prevent the butter from leaking out since you slice the edges in between folding? and what should i do if there are butter leak?
If your room temperature is cold enough the butter should not leak out! There is no fixing butter leak, you can only continue the process.
ahh, i see thanks 🙌
another question, im currently doing half of your recipe, whats the measurement for the butter slab? thanks again 😅
Thanks for asking the oozing butter question. Now I am going to go make my butter square and try step two.
seems like the best recipe. so detailed, so exact.
I follow you from Algeria
thank you so much for your chef's advice, it was very useful