¡Bienvenido, Scoolilover!

Scoolinary Forums Ask a question Problem solving my croissants

  • Sussan Estela Olaya

    Administrador
    febrero 16, 2025 en 03:05
    Level: favicon spaced Scoolinary Team

    Hi Aaron.

    Welcome to the Scoolinary community! Thank you for your question.

    Making croissants is one of those baking tasks that requires a lot of practice and patience. It’s not impossible, but mastering the technique takes time and dedication. From the photos, I can see a few points that might be affecting the result:

    1. Lamination and layers: The interior shows some layers, but they aren’t fully defined. This could indicate that the butter melted during lamination or that the dough didn’t rest enough between folds. Make sure to work in a cool environment and refrigerate the dough after each turn.

    If you’re just starting out with croissant-making and don’t have much experience, you can work with the butter at a temperature of 14–16°C (57–61°F) and the dough at around 4–6°C (39–43°F).

    For those with more experience, we recommend working with both the dough and butter at 15–16°C (59–61°F), as experienced bakers tend to work more quickly, preventing the dough from warming up, the butter from melting, and the layers from disappearing.

    2. Fermentation: The croissant looks a bit dense, which might indicate underproofing (the dough should double in size before baking) or overproofing, which could cause the dough to collapse.

    3. Baking: The color is nice, but if the surface is very dark while the interior remains a bit dense, this could be a problem with oven temperature — too hot, causing the exterior to brown before the inside is fully baked. Try baking at 170°C (338°F). You can use an oven thermometer to ensure the temperature is correct, helping you achieve even baking.

    The key is to practice a lot to master the technique, adjust small details, and observe how your dough responds at each step.

    I hope this information helps!

    Best regards.

  • Sol Damiani

    Administrador
    febrero 24, 2025 en 20:06
    Level: favicon spaced Scoolinary Team

    Hey there Chef Aaron!👋

    Welcome to the Scoolinary Community! 😊Join our awesome group of food lovers and share your love of cooking. Everyone’s invited!

    I’m Sol Damiani, the Community Builder and I’m from Buenos Aires.

    I hope Sussan’s answer helped you. Please let us know if it did.

    This is a Community that values your participation a lot. That’s why we created “Masters Game”, the game that could get you a FREE SUBSCRIPTION RENEWAL:

    • Win Scoolipoints by sharing a pic of your own dishes in our Community > Cooking Feed section. If it is really cool you can snag a #Scoolistar: you’ll win 100 Scoolipoints and we’ll give you a shoutout on social media!🤩

    • 🏆Check out our Challenges and score Scoolipoints! Right now we have the #TechniquesChallenge going on and you can win an exclusive live session with Lorena Hidalgo, one of Scoolinary’s Co-Founders, and 250 scoolipoints! 🎉 Don’t miss this unique opportunity to connect, learn, and get insider insights straight from the source! There will be two winners this time!

    • You’ll see everything you need to know about how to win Scoolipoints and renew your subscription for FREE here.

    Let’s build a community of foodies together.

    We hope you have a blast learning with Scoolinary!

Log in to reply.

Inicio del debate
0 de 0 respuestas Junio de 2018
Ahora

¡Bienvenid@ a Scoolinary!

Accede de inmediato a más de 300 cursos. Aprende de los mejores chefs del mundo.

Únete a Scoolinary

¿Ya tienes cuenta? Inicia sesión

¡Qué bien verte de nuevo en Scoolinary!

Accede a tu cuenta

Accede a tu cuenta

¿No tienes cuenta? Regístrate