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Finished pain au chocolat with flaky layers and dark chocolate filling on a serving plate.

Pain au Chocolat Recipe (Homemade Chocolate Croissants)

Fresh Pain Au Chocolat straight from the oven pairs perfectly with coffee and brings crisp buttery layers and soft chocolate. Freezer-friendly and ideal for make-ahead baking.

Course: Breakfast
Cuisine: French
Cook Time: 20 minutes
Total Time: 20 minutes
Servings: 25
Author: Manuela Zangara

Ingredients

For the Dough

  • 750 g – 6 cups all-purpose flour
  • 14 g – 2 packets yeast
  • 110 g – ½ cup sugar + 2 tsp sugar
  • 70 ml – 5 tbsp milk
  • 18 g – ¾ tbsp salt
  • 53 g – 3 ¾ tbsp butter – at room temperature
  • 23 g – 1 ½ tbsp milk powder
  • 300 ml – 1 ¼ cups water

For the Beurrage

  • 490 g – 4 ⅓ stick butter divided into two – at room temperature

For the Egg Wash

  • 2 eggs
  • 1 egg yolk
  • 1 pinch of salt

For the Filling

  • dark chocolate sticks

Instructions

Dough Preparation

  1. Sift the flour into the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with a hook attachment, then add the salt, 110 g – ½ cup sugar, milk powder, milk, and 53 g – 3 ¾ tbsp of soft butter.
  2. Dissolve the yeast in half of the water and make sure it is lukewarm, together with the 2 tsp of sugar. Set it aside to activate, then add it to the bowl with the other ingredients once frothy.
  3. Knead the dough only until all the ingredients are just combined (do not overwork it, as you do not want to develop the gluten in the flour), adding the remaining water as needed to obtain a smooth dough.
  4. Shape the dough into a ball, place it in a bowl, cover with cling wrap, and let it rise for 1 to 1 ½ hours, or until doubled in size.
  5. Punch down the dough to return it to its initial size, cover again with cling wrap, and refrigerate for 1 hour to 1 hour and 15 minutes.
  6. Punch the dough down once more to its initial size.

Preparing for Lamination

  1. At this point, you can either continue with the recipe or store the dough in the refrigerator until the next day; in either case, first chill the dough in the freezer for 30 minutes.
  2. Remove the dough from the fridge and roll it into a long rectangle shape, then cover it with cling wrap and return it to the fridge while you prepare the butter.
  3. Cut two sheets of baking paper and measure them against the rolled dough. Each sheet should cover ⅔ of the dough.
  4. Fold each sheet in half, then fold in about 2.5 cm – 1 inch along the three open edges to create sealed butter packets.
  5. Divide the butter into two equal pieces and place them into the paper packets. Close the packets and roll from the outside until the butter fills each packet evenly, then refrigerate until firm.

    Note: Both the butter and the dough must be very cold before proceeding with lamination, or the butter may leak during rolling.

Laminating the Dough

  1. Remove the paper from one butter packet only, take the cold dough from the fridge, and place the butter rectangle over the lower two-thirds of the dough.
  2. Give the dough a simple turn by folding the bottom third up (butter on butter), then folding the top third down over it; you should now see three layers.
  3. Roll the dough into a long rectangle again and repeat the same simple three-fold turn, this time without adding any more butter.
  4. Cover the folded dough with cling wrap and place it in the freezer for 30 minutes, then transfer it to the fridge for 1 hour.
  5. Roll the dough out again into a long rectangle roughly the same size as before and repeat the simple three-fold turns, the first with the remaining butter and the next without.
  6. Flour your work surface regularly to prevent sticking, and use a brush to remove excess flour before folding the dough each time.
  7. At this stage, you should have completed four single turns in total. One turn with butter, one without, followed by a rest period, then one turn with the second butter packet and one without.

  8. Cover the dough and refrigerate overnight to make shaping easier and keep the butter firm.

Shaping and Baking

  1. The next day, roll the dough into a 2.5 mm – 0.1 inch thick sheet, returning it to the fridge if it starts to warm up.
  2. Divide the dough into three portions and work with one at a time, keeping the remaining dough covered and chilled.
  3. Cut rectangles measuring 20 cm – 8 inches long and 10 cm – 4 inches wide. Place a chocolate stick measuring 10 cm – 4 inches at the base of each rectangle and roll up from the bottom. Arrange the pains au chocolat seam-side down on a baking tray lined with baking paper, leaving 5 cm – 2 inches of space between each one.
  4. Let them rise for 1 ½ to 2 hours at room temperature, loosely covered with cling wrap so the surface does not dry out.
  5. Brush with egg wash and bake for 20 minutes in an oven preheated to 220°C – 430°F. Lower the temperature to 190°C – 375°F immediately after placing the pastries in the oven.
  6. Continue baking until the pains au chocolat are deeply golden. Full baking gives a soft and airy interior.
  7. Allow them to cool for at least 10 minutes before serving.

Recipe Notes

If you want to make these ahead, pain au chocolat can be frozen after shaping, before proofing. Wrap each one individually in cling wrap and store in a zip-top freezer bag. When ready to bake, allow them to thaw, proof, and bake as directed.