Croissant Dough

Makes

1

Ingredients

100g strong flour, chilled

55ml milk, chilled

5g soft borwn sugar, chilled

2 1/2g salt, chilled

5g fresh yeast, chilled

20g unsalted butter, softened

935g strong flour, chilled

550ml milk, chilled

60g soft brown sugar, chilled

15g salt, chilled

35g fresh yeast, chilled

500g unsalted butter, extra, laminating, chilled

Description

Making croissant dough borrows more technique from making bread than from pastry. By allowing a croissant dough to prove slowly and adding a small amount of day-old-croissant dough (ferment) you can achieve a deeper more complex flavour. Careful folding of the dough (also known as laminating) will result in perfect thin layers of flaky pastry. Croissant dough is also used to make pan au chocolate, pan au raisin, Danishes, bear claws and praline twists.

Method

To make the ferment, put all of the ingredients in a bowl and use one hand to squeeze everything together until the mixture starts to resemble a crumbly dough. Turn out onto a clean work surface and knead for about 10 minutes, or until you have a smooth elastic dough that doesn’t break when stretched gently. If you are using an electric mixer, put all the ingredients in the bowl of the mixer fitted with a dough hook. Process on low speed for 3 minutes, or until a smooth elastic dough forms. Gather together in a ball and leave at room temperature for 2 hours. Cover with cling film and refrigerate overnight, or for up to 3 days before using.

To mix the croissant dough by hand, put the flour, milk, sugar, ferment, salt and yeast in a bowl and use one hand to squeeze everything together until the mixture starts to resemble a crumbly dough. Turn out onto a clean work surface and knead for about 10-15 minutes.

If you are using an electric mixer, put the flour, milk, sugar, ferment, salt and yeast in the bowl of the mixer fitted with a dough hook. Process on low speed for about 3-4 minutes, then increase the speed to high and mix for another 2 minutes.

You should have a smooth elastic dough that doesn’t break when stretched gently. Gather the dough into a ball. Place in a plastic bag and refrigerate for at least 2 hours, or preferably overnight.

Before laminating, or folding, the pastry, remove the extra butter from the fridge — it should be cold but malleable. Use a rolling pin to gently pound the butter between sheets of baking paper into a 20 cm (8 inch) flat square about 1 cm (½ inch) thick.

Using a lightly floured rolling pin, roll the dough out into a rectangle, about 20 x 40 cm (8 x 16 inches). Place the butter in the centre of the dough and fold the dough over the top, squeezing the edges together to completely enclose the butter. Carefully roll the dough out into a rectangle, about 20 x 90 cm (8 x 35½ inches). Fold the rectangle from one long end by one-third, so the dough is now 20 x 60 cm (8 x 24 inches). Fold the other long end over the top so that the dough is now 20 x 30 cm (8 x 12 inches). These folds are like the folding of a letter to place in an envelope.

Put the dough in a plastic bag or cover well with cling film and refrigerate for about 20 minutes to allow the gluten to relax. Repeat this folding and resting process twice more, each time rotating the dough 90 degrees so that as you roll it out you are stretching it in the opposite direction to the previous fold.

Once the dough has been rolled and folded three times and had a final rest in the fridge for about 20 minutes, it is ready to be pinned out and shaped into croissants or used to make pan au raisin, pan au chocolat, Danishes, bear claws or praline twists.