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If you’ve been craving a cozy baking project, croissants are it—buttery layers, crisp edges, and that soft, honeycomb center. This tutorial walks you through each step with photos and real-world tips, so you get visible layers and a tender bite.
We’ll cover the cues that matter (how the dough should feel, how the butter should bend, and what “proofed and puffy” actually looks like), plus make-ahead and freezing for weekend brunch or holiday mornings.

Here is the deal, they are actually very straight forward and technically not hard at all. If you make bread you can make these, but you do need time (think like the whole weekend or you know, fourteen hours or so) and patience, which I have neither of. Still kind of amazed I actually made them, but like I said I have been wanting to forever. Ok well, that and I needed some of the dough for a project.
Oh and I should mention, I made not only one batch of croissant, I actually made a total of three. Yeah, three. One for now and two to freeze and save for Thanksgiving and Christmas. I figured if I was making them, I might as well just make a ton. My cousins are coming for Christmas again this year (so excited!!) and I can guarantee we will have Thanksgiving guests too…..
Enter random kids who my brothers find on the hill. It’s just so much fun!
Not.
Anyway, I am stocked with croissants. Over fifty are sitting in my freezer right now. It’s kind of awesome.
Ok enough, let’s get on with it!

Gather your ingredients.
Start out pretty simple. Flour, cold milk, hot water, yeast, sugar, salt and lots of butter!

Start by activating the yeast. Combine the warm water with the sugar and yeast. Let sit for 10 minutes until foamy. It should smell bread-like.

In the large bowl of a stand mixer (or in a large bowl) fitted with the paddle attachment, combine the remaining sugar, salt, melted butter, milk and the yeast mixture and mix on medium speed until combined.

Gradually add the flour 1/2 cup at a time and mix just until the dough comes together in a sticky ball. I ended up using all five cups, but you may need less.

On a lightly floured surface, roll out the dough into a rectangle about 1/2 inch thick. Transfer to a large baking sheet and cover with plastic wrap. Place in the fridge until chilled, about 40 minutes.

It’s butter time…..
Also, the secret to amazing croissants and also a pain my rear.

I found it was easiest to place all four sticks of butter together in a gallon size ziplock bag. Then using a rolling-pin, beat the butter on a work surface to flatten it. Continue to gently beat the butter with the rolling-pin and shape the butter into a 6-by-8-inch rectangle. This part was really kind of hard, but just keep working it.
Place the butter back in the fridge and grab the dough (after 40 minutes or so of chilling in the fridge). Now it is time to laminate the dough, which just means fold the dough with the butter to create layers. On a lightly floured work surface, roll out the dough into a 16-by-10-inch rectangle.
With a short side facing you, place the butter in the middle of the dough. Fold the ends up like a letter. Fold over the upper half to cover the butter and press the edges together to seal. Then fold over the remaining lower half and press the edges together to seal.

Turn dough again so the short side is facing you, and use the rolling-pin to press down equally on the dough to help flatten it. Roll dough into a 15 x 10 inch rectangle.

Then fold the dough like a letter again, with a short side facing you, fold the bottom third up, then fold the top third down. Use your hands to pull the dough into a rectangle shape. You should now have a roughly 11 x 6 inch rectangle. This completes the first turn. Wrap in plastic wrap and place in the fridge to chill for 45 minutes.
Return the chilled dough to the lightly floured work surface with a folded side to your left and repeat the process to make 3 more turns, rolling, folding and chilling the dough each time, for a total of 4 turns. After the final turn, refrigerate the dough for at least 4 hours or overnight (I chilled mine overnight).

That photo above would be all three of my batches…..
What was I thinking?
In over my head.

Now it’s time to form the croissants. Divide the dough in half and place one half in the fridge while working with the other half. Hopefully your dough will look like the photo above, with layers of dough and butter. If not? Pray for the best! Roll out one half of the pastry on a lightly floured work surface into a 9-by-18-inch rectangle. Using a pizza cutter or sharp knife cut the dough in half lengthwise, and then cut the dough into triangles.
Roll out one half of the pastry on a lightly floured work surface into a 9-by-18-inch rectangle. Using a pizza cutter or sharp knife cut the dough in half lengthwise, and then cut the dough into triangles. 
Cut a small vertical slit right into the middle of the straight end, and using both hands, roll croissant up pushing the sides out to either side. Place on a baking sheet about 2-3 inches apart, cover with a towel and set in a warm place to rise for 1-2 hours. The croissants will not double in size like other yeast doughs do. After one hour position a rack in the middle of the oven and preheat to 425 degrees
Lightly brush the tops of the pastries with the egg mixture. Bake the pastries, 1 sheet at a time, until golden brown, 15-18 minutes. Transfer to a wire rack and let cool on the pan. DEVOUR

Or, you can also stuff the croissants with fun fillings. I did chocolate, chocolate peanut butter, cinnamon sugar and cinnamon sugar pumpkin.
All so incredibly good.

And so incredibly flakey.
It’s all those layers of butter.

Perfect with a smear of thick homemade pumpkin butter (I have never had the Trader Joe’s stuff, but I think homemade is always better) or apple butter or jam or just more butter!
Or even all by themselves fresh from the oven. So good.

Or with…

Some chocolate.
Obviously, that one had to happen. As I said, I also did chocolate peanut butter and cinnamon sugar, but stupidly I only made two of each of those and they were gone the second they came out of the oven.
Killer.
The fourth one was cinnamon sugar pumpkin, the photo below. I think this one was my favorite. Perfect for fall, yes, but I just love these flavors. It was epic.
Make-ahead: Pause after shaping. Freeze on a sheet until firm, then bag. Thaw in the fridge, then proof until puffy before baking.
Leftovers: Keep covered at room temp; re-crisp briefly in a warm oven until the exterior is flaky again.
Freezing baked: Wrap well; reheat from thawed until the crust crackles.

Nutritional information is only an estimate. The accuracy of the nutritional information for any recipe on this site is not guaranteed.

So worth it.
I have made sooo many of your recipes, I have three of your cookbooks, and I’m so excited to try these croissants!!! I’m making and freezing them as a gift for a friend, but I’m a little confused. You say if freezing to complete through step 8, which includes the rise, but then you say to freeze them right after forming the rolls. Do I let them rise for the 1-2 hours before freezing or do I just freeze them right after forming the rolls?
Hi Stacey,
Thanks so much!! You will skip the rise and put them in the freezer:) They will rise once you thaw them. I hope you love this recipe! xx
What you made was bread, not a croissant. Looks delicious though.
How do I extend the shelf life? Should I put in air tight container in the fridge or will they truly only last one day. Can I freeze them after baking?
Hey Stephanie,
You could freeze them in an airtight container, that should work nicely for you! I hope you love this recipe! xT
First time croissant-maker, here! I think I may have put in too many layers and I forgot the egg wash on the first tray, but they’re still delicious, and simple enough I’m definitely going to be making them again at some point!
Hi Sandra,
Happy Sunday!!🍋🍊 I am thrilled to hear that this recipe turned out well for you, thank you so much for making it! xT
Definitely a labor of love and time consuming but delicious! Easy to make just takes time. I’ve always wanted to try to make croissants and happy with how they turns out! Baked half the dough and the other half planning to freeze. I probably make a HBH recipe every week and I have never been disappointed by one.
Hey Taylor,
Thanks so much for your kind message and sharing your feedback! Yes, definitely a labor of love here! So glad they were enjoyed:) xx