Easy Choux Pastry
Choux pastry has a reputation for being a bit fussy and temperamental, but I don’t think it deserves these labels. Instead, I’d like to think of choux as a really approachable, airy French pastry that is quick to make (certainly faster than puff pastry or croissants) and highly customizable. Choux has a very light texture with a golden, crisp exterior. It doesn’t have much flavor, since it’s meant to be filled with pastry cream or other fillings and topped with something sweet, like powdered sugar or ganache. You may notice this recipe has some slight variations from the choux used in my cream puffs. I make the puffs a bit smaller in that recipe, and I am assuming that if you’re making that recipe you’ll follow my instructions for removing the puffs, poking a hole, returning to the oven, etc. This is a general recipe though, and not all recipes will necessitate that (many recipes simply cut the choux in half). Also, you can still fill this just like you would in my cream puff recipe.
What You Need
You only need 5 ingredients to make today’s choux recipe! These include:
Eggs. It’s best to use room temperature eggs. You can whisk them up with a fork before adding them to the dough, if you’d like (this makes incorporating them a bit easier!). Flour. Make sure you measure your flour properly! I highly recommend using a kitchen scale for this, as it is the most precise way to measure. If your flour is especially lumpy, you may want to sift it before adding it. Butter. Use unsalted butter (or don’t add salt, if using salted butter) and cut it into tablespoon-sized pieces before adding it (this helps it melt faster). Water. This will bind everything together and create steam in the dough while it bakes, forcing the choux to rise and become hollow. Salt. For flavor, of course! You can always leave this out if you use salted butter.
SAM’S TIP: Some people like to dress up their choux with craquelin to make choux au craquelin. Craquelin is a sweet dough that is rolled thin, cut into small circles, and placed on top of the choux before baking. Once in the oven, the craquelin melts onto the choux and creates a crackly, sweet exterior. If you’d be interested in a recipe for this, let me know! Remember, this is just an overview of the ingredients I used and why. For the full recipe please scroll down to the bottom of the post!
How to Make Choux Pastry
SAM’S TIP: Your dough will look like it doesn’t want to come together after you add each egg, it will be a bit separated. Don’t panic. Just keep stirring with your spatula, and it will eventually come together nicely into a smooth batter. SAM’S TIP: You can pipe or form the choux into any shape you’d like (like oblong hot-dog shape for eclairs), but just know that the baking time will vary depending on the size. If you are piping them like I did in these photos, do your best to pipe straight down (don’t swirl as if you were piping frosting on a cupcake) for the best shape after baking.
Troubleshooting Choux Pastry
Butter split from the dough: This can happen from having your dough on the heat too long or from handling it too much. Dough is too runny or too thick: Choux dough that is too runny means you may have over-measured your liquid ingredients (or didn’t cook the water out of the dough enough), or you under-measured your flour. Consequently, dough that is too thick is caused by the opposite. Choux pastry collapsed after baking: Either your dough was too runny (see above) or the choux was underbaked. If this is an issue you’ve faced, it can also be extra security to poke a hole in your choux during the last ten minutes in the oven, like I do with my cream puffs; this allows the steam to escape and the choux to dry out. Choux doesn’t have a hollow center: Your dough was likely too thick from too much flour or cooking out too much of the water while it was on the stove. Choux pastry tastes eggy: This is normal, for the most part! Choux pastry is mostly eggs, so you’re definitely going to taste them here. If you’re really tasting the eggs, then you may have added them in the while the dough is too warm.
Don’t let this section intimidate you! As long as you measure your ingredients properly and follow my instructions, your choux should come out perfectly. See that hollow center? That’s exactly how choux pastry should look! Enjoy! Let’s bake together! I’ll be walking you through all the steps in my written recipe and video below! If you try this recipe, be sure to tag me on Instagram, and you can also find me on YouTube and Facebook