Chocolate-Almond Croissants Recipe on Food52 (2024)

Almond

by: Mei Chin

April23,2015

4.7

3 Ratings

  • Makes 14 croissants

Jump to Recipe

Author Notes

This recipe is an amalgamation of the many places I've had the pleasure to work (and learn). —Mei Chin

  • Test Kitchen-Approved

What You'll Need

Ingredients
  • For the croissants:
  • 115 gramswhole milk, hand temperature
  • 115 gramswater, hand temperature
  • 1 tablespoonactive dry yeast
  • 500 gramsall-purpose flour
  • 14 gramskosher salt
  • 65 gramssugar
  • 320 gramsunsalted, room temperature butter, divided
  • 1 bar dark chocolate, roughly chopped
  • Egg wash
  • Almond cream (see recipe below)
  • Slivered or sliced almonds, for garnish
  • For the almond cream:
  • 125 gramsroom-temperature butter
  • 250 gramsalmond paste, crumbled
  • 1 egg, plus 1 yolk
  • 7 1/2 gramscorn starch
  • 15 gramsrum (optional)
Directions
  1. For the croissants:
  2. Prepare the almond cream (recipe below) and set aside. (This can be done up to 3 days in advance—just be sure to bring it to room temperature before using.)
  3. In a small bowl, combine the milk and water. Make sure the milk and water are the same temperature as your hand (around 90º F). (Any warmer than this, and the yeast will get too hot and die.) Stir in the yeast, and let sit for 5 minutes, or until foamy and bubbly.
  4. In the bowl of a stand mixer, combine the flour, salt, and sugar. When the yeast mixture is nice and foamy, add it into the flour mix and start to combine it with a dough hook on low speed. While the dough hook mixes, add in 20 grams of the butter. Mix this until elastic and smooth.
  5. Transfer the dough to a lightly oiled bowl, cover it with plastic wrap, and let it proof at room temperature for 1 1/2 hours, or until it has doubled in size. Let it proof at room temperature for 45 minutes. Gently punch down the dough and fold it onto itself (see pictures above), then continue to let it rise for another 45 minutes, or until the dough has doubled in size from the original.
  6. While the dough is rising, roll out the remaining 300 grams of butter: Cut it into 1-inch pieces and place it between between two large pieces of plastic wrap. Pound it (gently!) with a rolling pin until it all comes together into a thin, pliable block. Don't worry if the butter gets too thin (transluscent) in places; if this happens, gently peel back the plastic wrap, refold the butter onto itself, re-cover it with the wrap, and roll or pound it out with the rolling pin. Repeat as necessary until you have a smooth, pliable block of butter. Roll this block—still between the plastic wrap—to a size of 10 - x 8-inches, about 1/8- to 1/4-inch thick. Place it in the refrigerator to chill. Remove it from the refrigerator 5 minutes before you are ready to use it (in Step 7).
  7. Return to the proofed dough and roll it out into a large rectangle on a floured surface. Fold it into thirds (with the long ends overlapping like a letter). Cover it lightly with plastic wrap and let it rest for 20 more minutes in the fridge.
  8. Once it's rested, roll out the dough to 21- x 10-inches. This will look like a long, horizontal strip. Place your butter block over the left two-thirds of the dough, leaving a 1-inch border around it and an uncovered portion to the right. (The butter will cover both the middle and the left end of the dough, leaving the right side uncovered.) Fold the unbuttered, right side of the dough into the middle, two-thirds of the way up. Fold the buttered, left end over top of it into a letter fold. Gently press the edges together to seal the butter in. Rotate the dough 90 degrees and re-roll it out into a long rectangle. Fold the dough again like a letter, wrap it in plastic, and place it in the refrigerator to chill for 30 minutes. Repeat this process (rolling and folding it into a letter) 2 more times. After the final turn, let it rest in the refrigerator at least 3 hours, or overnight.
  9. Roll out the dough on a floured surface into a long rectangle, about 21- x 10-inches. Using your hands, square the sides so that the corners are angular. It should be about 1/4-inch thick.
  10. Cut the dough horizontally into two even, long strips 5-inches wide (so that each strip is 21- x 5-inches wide). On each long piece of dough, make a cut every 3 inches so that you have seven 3- x 5-inch rectangles per long strip (for 14 total). Place a rectangle in front of you horizontally, then push out the rectangle slightly with your fingers. Place a line of chopped chocolate across the width from the top edge to the bottom edge and roughly 1/2 inch away from the left edge. Brush the left edge with your egg wash, then fold it over the line of chocolate to seal it. Place another line of chocolate directly to the right of this roll, then seal it with an egg wash in the same way. The croissant should be rolled like a little scroll. Place the croissant on a parchment-lined sheet tray, making sure the sealed edge is on the bottom. Repeat for each rectangle, leaving 3 inches between each croissant on the baking tray. (You should be able to line up 7 to 8 per tray.)
  11. When you're finished shaping each croissant, cover the entire tray lightly with plastic wrap and and allow to proof in a warm place until they're light and airy, about 20 to 40 minutes. To check if the dough has risen enough, poke one. If it retains its poke indent, it's ready to be baked.
  12. Preheat the oven to 450º F. Carefully brush the tops of the croissants with egg wash, taking care not to deflate them. Bake them for 20 minutes, rotating at 10 minutes, then reduce the heat to 400º F and continue baking until the croissants are golden brown, 15 to 20 minutes more. While they bake, remove the almond paste from the refrigerator to bring it to room temperature. At this point, you have completed chocolate croissants. Eat one to celebrate, then make the rest into chocolate-almond croissants. I know the chocolate croissants look good enough to stop here, but you won't regret it, I promise.
  13. Turn the oven down to 350º F. Cut the chocolate croissants in half horizontally, as though you are making a sandwich. Spread 1 to 2 tablespoons of the almond cream over the bottom half and place the top half back on top. Spread another tablespoon of the almond cream over the top, sprinkle with sliced or slivered almonds, and bake in a 350º F oven for 15 minutes, or until the almond mixture has cooked through and is golden brown around the edges. Remove them from the oven, pour yourself a cup of tea, and have one or two. To save some for breakfast, store them in airtight container for up to 3 days.
  1. For the almond cream:
  2. In a stand mixer with a paddle attachment, mix all the ingredients together on low speed for 1 minute. Scrape down the sides, then mix on high speed until well combined, about 1 additional minute. Remove from stand mixer and use immediately in the croissant recipe above or store in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 3 days.

Tags:

  • Bread
  • Pastry
  • American
  • Almond
  • Chocolate
  • Milk/Cream
  • Breakfast

See what other Food52ers are saying.

Recipe by: Mei Chin

Let's have dinner sometime. There will be champagne and ice cream for sure; everything else is up in the air.

Popular on Food52

5 Reviews

Megan T. June 2, 2016

Can you make this successfully with a hand mixer and not a stand mixer?

Michele June 21, 2015

Thanks "Drunken Boxer"! I'll google it. Hope you sober up :)

Ron S. June 21, 2015

We don't do grams in the USA, how about converting the recipe to USA standards.

Michele May 31, 2015

Okay so this sounds amazing, however, it would've been REALLY helpful to have step by step pics on the folding, rolling, re-folding, etc. It gets a bit confusing without physically seeing what you're doing. :(

drunkenboxer June 19, 2015

Michele, the method used is standard for croissant dough and can be found, for example, in Julia Child's "Mastering the Art of French Cooking Volume II". A quick internet search for making croissant dough will demonstrate how to fold the dough. But yes, a very thorough recipe would have included it.

Chocolate-Almond Croissants Recipe on Food52 (2024)

FAQs

Do Trader Joe's almond croissants have a filling? ›

Flaky, buttery, and filled with a sweet and lightly cinnamon-y almond filling...these croissants are EVERYTHING.

What is a chocolate almond croissant in French? ›

Petit Pains Au Chocolat aux Amandes which is French for small chocolate almond croissants. These are ridiculously easy to make and are perfect for Christmas morning breakfast.

Why are almond croissants flat? ›

Classically, an almond croissant will be flat, and I hate to say it, often rather sad looking. The old-school way to make almond croissants is to bake them between two trays, such that they are squashed during their second bake.

Should you refrigerate almond croissants? ›

There is no need to refrigerate most pastries if you are planning to consume them within the day, as the moisture from the fridge can turn them soggy. But for pastries with custard and other fillings, it is recommended that you store them in the fridge if you are not consuming them within 12 hours.

Do you have to leave Trader Joe's croissants out overnight? ›

Step 1: Proof (let rise) Overnight

The only downside to these croissants is that they are not a game time decision- you want to lay them out the night before. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper and grab your box of buttery croissants.

What is an almond croissant called in France? ›

You can find almond croissants, or “Croissants Aux Amandes” in almost every French bakery.

What is a chocolate croissant called in France? ›

Pain au chocolat

What do the French call a chocolate croissant? ›

Chocolate croissants and pain au chocolat are the same pastry; “pain au chocolat” is the French name for chocolate croissants. They are made from the same pastry dough as traditional croissants, but with the addition of chocolate inside and baked in a rectangular shape.

How unhealthy is an almond croissant? ›

Almond croissants are typically made with ingredients that can cause a spike in blood glucose levels, such as refined flour, sugar, and butter. When you eat such a high-carbohydrate food, your body breaks down the carbohydrates into glucose and releases them into your bloodstream. This causes hyperglycemia.

What is inside an almond croissant called? ›

Almond croissants are made from day old croissants that are sliced in half, dipped in a sugar syrup, then filled with an almond cream (creme d'amandes), that is made with sugar, almond meal or almond flour, butter and eggs.

Did they discontinue almond croissant? ›

Many long-time fans have fond memories of foods from Starbucks they may never eat again thanks to the ever-changing menu. One of the more recent losses from Starbucks' food menu was the beloved almond croissant: A buttery croissant stuffed with almond-flavored filling and topped with sliced almonds.

How do you make Trader Joe's almond croissants rise faster? ›

According to Half Scratched, to proof the croissants faster than the recommended nine hours, you can place them about 4 inches apart on a baking sheet and let them rest in a 90-degree oven for just two hours. The time in the oven should have those croissants looking about twice their previous size.

Can you make Trader Joe's chocolate croissants without proofing? ›

Yes, you can bake Trader Joe's croissants without proofing. The croissants are designed to be baked directly from the freezer without the need for proofing, making them a convenient option for a quick and easy breakfast or snack. What is the recommended baking temperature and time for Trader Joe's croissants?

How do you refresh an almond croissant? ›

(This tip actually works for all stale breads, per the Food Network.) Run your croissant quickly under water — you don't want it to be sopping wet, just to add a little moisture to the pastry — and then air fry it for a few minutes at 350 degrees Fahrenheit, turning it over halfway.

What are the ingredients in Trader Joe's almond croissants? ›

INGREDIENTS: Enriched flour (wheat flour, niacin, iron, thiamine mononitrate, riboflavin, folic acid, enzymes, ascorbic acid), butter (cream (milk)), water, almonds, sugar, powdered sugar (sugar, cornstarch), enriched flour (wheat flour, malted barley flour, niacin, iron, thiamin mononitrate, riboflavin, folic acid), ...

Do croissants have fillings? ›

In France and Spain, croissants are generally sold without filling and eaten without added butter, but sometimes with almond filling. In the United States, sweet fillings or toppings are sometimes used, and warm croissants may be filled with ham and cheese, or feta cheese and spinach.

What do almond croissants contain? ›

Wheat Flour (Wheat), Butter (Milk) (20%), Almond Filling (19%) (Sugar, Almonds (Almonds), Wheat Flour (Wheat), Flavouring (Natural Flavouring), Water), Water, Sugar, Almonds (Almonds) (4%), Yeast, Wheat Gluten (Wheat), Icing Sugar, Free-Range Egg (Egg), Salt, flour treatment agent (Ascorbic Acid).

What are the ingredients in Trader Joe's croissants? ›

UNBLEACHED ENRICHED FLOUR (WHEAT FLOUR, NIACIN, REDUCED IRON, THIAMINE MONONITRATE, RIBOFLAVIN, FOLIC ACID), CULTURED BUTTER (MILK, NATURAL FLAVOR, BACTERIAL CULTURE), WATER, YEAST, CANE SUGAR, DOUGH CONDITIONER (WHEAT GLUTEN, WHEAT FLOUR, RAPESEED LECITHIN, MALTED WHEAT FLOUR, DEACTIVATED YEAST, ASCORBIC ACID, ENZYMES ...

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