Hey everyone, hope you are having an incredible day today. Today, we’re going to make a distinctive dish, sourdough croissants. One of my favorites. This time, I will make it a bit tasty. This is gonna smell and look delicious.
Sourdough Croissants is only one of the most popular of current trending meals on earth. It’s enjoyed by millions every day. It is simple, it’s quick, it tastes yummy. Sourdough Croissants is something which I’ve loved my whole life. They’re nice and they look wonderful.
Become a Pro with these valuable skills. These Sourdough Croissants are the best croissants ever! To have fresh Sourdough Croissants for breakfast, refrigerate them overnight and bake in the morning.
To begin with this particular recipe, we must prepare a few components. You can cook sourdough croissants using 8 ingredients and 10 steps. Here is how you cook that.
The ingredients needed to make Sourdough Croissants:
- Make ready 90 g Sourdough starter
- Get 340 ml Milk
- Make ready 5 g Instant Yeast
- Get 575 g All-purpose Flour
- Make ready 40 g sugar
- Prepare 9 g salt
- Prepare 40 g softened butter
- Get 350 g refrigerated butter
I guess you need to perfect many techniques and time that is very crucial it certainly needs patience. When making the dough, make sure the butter is properly softened before incorporating it into the flour. The dough should be slightly elastic, tacky to the touch, and fairly smooth. The croissant dough takes two days from start to finish with the option to extend it to three days if it works better in your schedule.
Instructions to make Sourdough Croissants:
- On the morning of day 1 (for this is a 2-day recipe) mix together all of the ingredients (except the refrigerated butter). Knead into a dough. Wrap in clingfilm and refrigerate until the afternoon.
- In the afternoon, when you are ready to start the lamination, get the butter out of the fridge, sandwich it between two sheets of clingfilm, and then beat it flat with a rolling pin. It should end up about 5mm thick, and it should be a rectangular slab.
- Take the dough out of the fridge and roll it flat so that it is just slightly larger than twice the size of the butter slab. place the butter on one half of the dough, and fold the dough over so that it completely encloses the butter. pinch the edges to seal. Cover with clingfilm and return to the fridge for 15 mins.
- Now the lamination begins. remove dough from fridge and roll it as flat as you dare. try to make it long and thin. Then do a set of book folds. ie. fold one third into the middle then fold the other third on top of it. It should now be 1/3 of the size and 3 times as thick. Cover with clingfilm and return to the fridge for 15 mins.
- Repeat the previous step 2 more times (for a total of 3 folds). Then wrap in clingfilm and leave the dough in the fridge overnight.
- The morning of day 2, take the dough out of the fridge and roll it flat. This may take a while. The goal is to make the dough about 5mm thick (and rectangular). But your dough may be easier or harder to roll (just because) so don't worry if you don't quite get there.
- Cut the dough into long rectangles, as shown. Depending on the ratio of the rectangle you made in the previous step, your croissants may be short and fat or long and thin. (Long, thin rectangles make short fat croissants)
- Make a cut in the shortest side of the triangle, and roll into a croissant shape. If your dough allows it, you can stretch the dough a little to help create the shape you want (if you've not done this before, a video is really helpful - Google how to shape croissants) This pastry is quite versatile - we also made cinnamon buns and turnovers from the end scraps - so you can be a bit creative with the shape of your pastries.
- Cover and prove at room temperature. Ideally, the croissants should double in size. We were a bit impatient and just baked them after 2 hours. This seemed to work. The resulting croissants were quite dense (which by happy coincidence is how I like them). Waiting for them to expand more might produce less dense (more traditional) croissants.
- Brush with beaten egg and bake at 230C (450F) for 5 minutes, then reduce to 180C (350F) and bake for 15 minutes. Add a dish of water to the oven to increase humidity. We tried to bake the first batch on a pizza stone, but a decent amount of butter leaked out during the baking, which dripped off the edge of the stone and caught fire on the bottom of the oven. So possibly use a baking tray.
The wait is worth it though, promise. But boy have I been missing out: not only is the flavour even better than using commercial yeast, you get even crispier croissants that truly shatter as you break into them. I must admit I am a little obsessed with Sourdough croissants made in the Thermomix. Once you have made them you will never want to go back. Don't expect the lightest texture and biggest spiderweb.
So that’s going to wrap this up for this exceptional food sourdough croissants recipe. Thank you very much for reading. I am sure you can make this at home. There is gonna be interesting food in home recipes coming up. Don’t forget to save this page in your browser, and share it to your family, colleague and friends. Thank you for reading. Go on get cooking!