Flaky, buttery croissant bread requires time, precision, and patience, but is a very rewarding baking project that will make your kitchen smell like a French boulangerie. (And is there any better smell than fresh bread?) I know making homemade pastry can seem intimidating, but I thoroughly break down the process for you, step by step, in the tutorial below. Any home baker—like me or you—can accomplish this.
What is Croissant Bread?
Croissant bread is exactly what it sounds like: croissant dough baked as bread. My inspiration for this recipe was this croissant loaf on Food52, but I used a scaled-down version of my own homemade croissants dough to produce just 1 loaf. Though I can’t promise how long your loaf will last… it doesn’t last long in my house! The other difference in my croissant bread recipe is we’re going to roll up the dough first, and then cut into rolls, instead of cutting strips and individually rolling them.
The result is an impressive loaf version of everyone’s favorite yeasted pastry, which smells and tastes like a croissant, but slices like bread. Incredible on its own, but try it as a grilled cheese, BLT, toasted with jam or honey butter, or in your favorite breakfast strata recipe or French toast casserole!
Croissant Bread Details
- Texture: The texture of this croissant bread is melt-in-your-mouth soft and tender, with a crispy, flaky crust. Because it’s baked as bread in a loaf pan, it’s not quite as layered and crust-shattery (technical terms) as croissants, but it’s still very airy.
- Flavor: Blissfully buttery and slightly sweet—just try to keep your eyes from closing when you taste this, I’m not sure it’s possible!
- Ease: The great news is that making croissant bread is easier than making individual croissants. It requires no special ingredients, but it does require 3 rounds of 20-minute refrigerations and 2 rises. For these reasons, I categorize this as an advanced baking recipe. But I’m here to walk you through each step. You can absolutely make this!
- Time: Plan for this recipe to take just under 6 hours, plus some cooling time, which is considerably shorter than 12+ hours for my individual croissants. There’s resting time between most steps, which means most of the time is hands off. To develop all those flaky pastry layers, croissant dough needs to rest in the refrigerator often. It likes to nap, if you will.
Only 7 Ingredients Total
You need just 6 simple ingredients for the croissant bread dough: flour, butter, salt, yeast, milk, and sugar. The 7th ingredient is an egg to make an egg wash for brushing over the top to get that glossy golden sheen on the top of the loaf—much like pie crust and stromboli.
What is Laminated Dough?
Laminating dough is the process of folding butter into dough many times, which creates multiple alternating layers of butter and dough. (Similar to how we make biscuits, cheddar biscuits, and rough puff pastry, though today’s dough includes yeast.) When the laminated dough bakes, the butter melts and creates steam. This steam lifts the layers apart, giving us dozens of flaky, airy, buttery layers.
In my regular croissants and chocolate croissants recipes, we mix butter and flour together to make a butter block. With today’s croissant bread recipe, however, we’re lining pieces of butter down the dough so there’s no compact butter block needed.
4 Tips for Laminating This Dough
- It’s OK if there are air bubbles in the dough; your rolling pin will pop them.
- If the dough tears and butter is exposed, just sprinkle the exposed butter with flour.
- If the dough is impossible to roll, try flipping it over. If it’s still impossible to roll, cover and let it rest for 5 minutes before trying again, to let the gluten relax.
- There are 3 rounds of 20-minute refrigerations. Do NOT extend these times because the yeasted dough will puff up too much. The timer is your friend here!
Video & Photos: How to Make Croissant Bread
The full printable recipe is below, but this recipe involves quite a few steps, so I’m going to walk you through it with step-by-step photos. I’m leaving out photos of preparing the dough because you can see it come together in the video tutorial. I also have a separate video tutorial for How to Knead Dough, if you need extra help with that step.
Here is the dough after the 1st rise and then after you punch it down:
Now it’s time to flatten the dough and prepare it for lamination. Gently flatten the dough out into a 10×14-inch (25x35cm) rectangle using lightly floured hands to carefully stretch the dough. I recommend flattening it right onto a nonstick surface so you can literally pick it all up without the dough losing shape. Refrigerate this flattened dough for 20 minutes:
After 20 minutes in the refrigerator, the dough is about as pliable as the butter. Line the butter down the center third of the dough as pictured:
1st lamination: Fold one side over the butter:
Fold the other side over that, like you would fold a business letter:
Rotate the dough so the long edge is facing you:
Roll out into a 9×12-inch (23x30cm) rectangle. You can see the butter hiding in there:
Fold up like a business letter, cover, and then chill for 20 minutes:
2nd & 3rd lamination: After refrigerating, repeat lamination process above 2x with no dough chilling between each—rotate dough, roll out, fold like business letter, rotate dough, roll out, fold like a business letter. And then chill 1 last time for 20 minutes.
Final lamination: After that final refrigeration, repeat lamination 1x. Then roll out the dough into a 9×12-inch (23x30cm) rectangle for the last time:
Roll it up like a jelly roll cake or cinnamon rolls dough, starting from the shorter end:
Slice into 5 thick rolls. Look at all those layers!
Arrange in a greased loaf pan, cover, and let rise until puffy. Then brush with egg wash before baking:
No Two Loaves Look the Same
Keep in mind that your loaf may look exactly like or slightly different from these photos. Despite following the exact same recipe and directions, some of my test loaves looked more airy, or less flaky, or more layered. You can see the variety in these photos. So don’t be discouraged if yours looks different… just wait until you TASTE it!
See Your Croissant Bread!
Feel free to email or share your recipe photos with us on social media. 🙂
PrintCroissant Bread (Loaf)
- Prep Time: 4 hours, 45 minutes
- Cook Time: 1 hour
- Total Time: 6 hours, 30 minutes (includes cooling)
- Yield: 1 loaf
- Category: Bread
- Method: Baking
- Cuisine: French
Description
Bakers of any skill level can use this thoroughly detailed recipe to make a beautifully flaky and golden brown loaf of homemade croissant bread. There are 3 rounds of 20-minute refrigerations. Do not break up the lamination steps and do not extend the refrigeration times because the dough will begin to over-expand.
Ingredients
Dough
- 1 cup (240ml) whole milk, warmed to about 110°F (43°C)
- 2 and 1/4 teaspoons (7g) instant or active dry yeast (1 standard packet, see Notes)
- 3 Tablespoons (38g) granulated sugar
- 1 and 1/4 teaspoons salt
- 3 Tablespoons (43g) unsalted or salted butter, softened to room temperature and cut into 3 equal pieces
- 3 cups (375g) all-purpose flour (spooned & leveled), plus more as needed and for lamination
Lamination
- 3/4 cup (12 Tbsp; 170g) salted butter, slightly softened (see Notes)
Egg Wash
- 1 large egg, cold or room temperature
- 1 Tablespoon (15ml) water
Instructions
- Preliminary notes: Watch the video tutorial and use the step-by-step photos before you begin. Read the recipe instructions and notes before beginning. Make room in the refrigerator for your half baking sheet for steps 6–9.
- Prepare the dough: In a large ungreased mixing bowl, whisk the warm milk, yeast, and sugar together in the bowl of your stand mixer fitted with a dough hook attachment. Cover and allow mixture to sit for about 5 minutes or until foamy on top. *If you do not own a mixer, you can do this in a large mixing bowl and in the next step, mix the dough together with a large wooden spoon/silicone spatula. A hand mixer works, but the sticky dough repeatedly gets stuck in the beaters. Mixing by hand with a wooden spoon or silicone spatula is a better choice.*
- Add the salt, butter, and 2 cups (250g) of flour. Beat on medium speed for 2 minutes, stopping and scraping down the bowl as needed to help the mixture combine. There may still be chunks of butter—that’s ok. Add remaining flour, scrape down the bowl as needed, and beat on low speed until a soft dough forms and pulls away from the sides of the bowl. Dough will be very soft, but not overly sticky. Beat in 2–3 more Tablespoons of flour if dough seems very sticky. Avoid adding more flour than you need.
- Knead the dough: Keep the dough in the mixer and beat for an additional 5 full minutes, or knead by hand on a lightly floured surface for 5 full minutes. (If you’re new to bread-baking, my How to Knead Dough video tutorial can help here.) If the dough becomes too sticky during the kneading process, sprinkle 1 teaspoon of flour at a time on the dough or on the work surface/in the bowl to make a soft, slightly tacky dough. Do not add more flour than you need because you do not want a dry dough. After kneading, the dough should still feel a little soft. Poke it with your finger—if it slowly bounces back, your dough is ready to rise. You can also do a “windowpane test” to see if your dough has been kneaded long enough: tear off a small (roughly golfball-size) piece of dough and gently stretch it out until it’s thin enough for light to pass through it. Hold it up to a window or light. Does light pass through the stretched dough without the dough tearing first? If so, your dough has been kneaded long enough and is ready to rise. If not, keep kneading until it passes the windowpane test.
- 1st rise: Lightly grease a large bowl with oil or use nonstick spray. Place the dough in the bowl, turning it to coat all sides of the dough in the oil. Cover the bowl with aluminum foil, plastic wrap, or a clean kitchen towel. Allow the dough to rise in a relatively warm environment for 1.5–2 hours or until nearly double in size. (For a tiny reduction in rise time, see my answer to Where Should Dough Rise? in my Baking with Yeast Guide.)
- Flatten dough: Punch down the dough to release the air. Place dough on a silicone baking mat-lined, parchment paper-lined, or lightly floured baking sheet. (I highly recommend a silicone baking mat because you can roll the dough out in the next steps directly on top and it won’t slide all over the counter.) Gently flatten the dough out into a 10×14-inch (25x35cm) rectangle using lightly floured hands to carefully stretch, but not tear, the dough. Lightly cover and place the entire baking sheet in the refrigerator, and allow the covered dough to rest and chill for 20 minutes. Do not extend this time.
- Meanwhile, prepare for lamination: Cut the salted butter into 1/4-inch thick slices and, as explained in the recipe note below, make sure the butter is not overly soft. It’s important to note the following 4 tips before you begin laminating in steps 8, 9, & 10: (1) It’s OK if there are air bubbles in the dough because your rolling pin will pop them. (2) If the dough tears and butter is exposed, just sprinkle the exposed butter with flour. (3) If the dough is impossible to roll, try flipping it over. If it’s still impossible to roll, cover and let it rest for 5 minutes before trying again, to let the gluten relax. And (4) Do not extend the refrigeration times, because the folded dough will begin to over-expand.
- 1st lamination: Remove dough from the refrigerator and set baking sheet aside. I like to keep the dough on the silicone baking mat when I’m rolling it because the mat is nonstick. Working with the longer (14-inch) edge in front of you, line butter down the center of the dough, covering the center third of the dough. Fold one dough edge over on top of butter, and fold other edge on top of that (like folding a business letter). Pinch/seal the two short ends to enclose butter inside. Rotate dough so the long edge is horizontally in front of you. Lightly flour the top of the folded dough and, using a lightly floured rolling pin, roll out to a 9×12-inch (23x30cm) rectangle. Fold dough edges over on top like folding a business letter. Cover dough, place back on baking sheet, and refrigerate 20 minutes. Do not extend this time.
- 2nd & 3rd laminations: Remove dough from the refrigerator and set baking sheet aside. Rotate dough so the long edge is horizontally in front of you. Lightly flour the top of the folded dough and, using a lightly floured rolling pin, roll out to a 9×12-inch rectangle. Fold dough edges over on top like folding a business letter. Rotate dough horizontally and repeat rolling out to 9×12 inches and folding like a business letter. Cover dough, place back on baking sheet, and refrigerate 20 minutes. Do not extend this time.
- Final lamination & shaping: Remove dough from the refrigerator and set baking sheet aside. Rotate dough so the long edge is horizontally in front of you. Lightly flour the top of the folded dough and using a lightly floured rolling pin, roll out to a 9×12-inch rectangle. Fold dough edges over on top like folding a business letter. For the last time, rotate horizontally and roll out to 9×12 inches. Working from a 9-inch side, roll dough up like you would roll up a jelly roll cake or cinnamon rolls. Place 9-inch log on a cutting board and cut into 5 even rolls (just eyeball it, they don’t need to be perfectly even).
- 2nd rise: Grease a 9×5-inch (23x13cm) loaf pan. Place rolls, seam side down, in loaf pan. Cover tightly and allow to rise until slightly puffy, about 45–60 minutes.
- Preheat the oven to 350°F (177°C).
- Whisk egg wash ingredients together. Generously brush risen rolls/loaf with egg wash. Bake loaf for 1 hour until golden brown on top, loosely tenting with aluminum foil after 25 minutes to prevent the top from over-browning before the center can cook. For an accurate test of doneness, the bread is done when an instant-read thermometer reads the center of the loaf as 195°F (90°C). (Tip: Keep in mind that the bread will continue to cook for a few minutes as it cools.)
- Remove from the oven and place loaf pan on a wire rack. Cool for 30 minutes in the loaf pan. Run a knife around the edges of the pan to release the bread, and then remove bread from loaf pan and cool at least 15 more minutes directly on a wire rack before slicing and serving. (Bread tends to fall apart when sliced warm.) Bread may slightly deflate as it cools.
- Storing & freezing baked bread: Cover and store leftover croissant bread covered at room temperature for up to 3 days or in the refrigerator for up to 1 week. You can also freeze it for up to 3 months and then thaw on the counter or overnight in the refrigerator. Warm up to your liking.
Notes
- Overnight Dough Instructions: After step 10, cover the shaped rolls in the loaf pan tightly and refrigerate for up to about 15 hours. At least 3 hours before you need the bread the next day, remove from the refrigerator, keep covered, and allow to rise on the counter for about 1–2 hours before baking. Alternatively, you can let the dough have its 1st rise (step 5) in the refrigerator overnight. Cover the dough tightly and place in the refrigerator for up to 12 hours. Remove from the refrigerator and allow the dough to fully rise for 2 more hours. Continue with step 6.
- Freezing Dough Instructions: The best way to successfully freeze and thaw this dough is after step 10. (Freezing/thawing before makes lamination difficult.) Cover and freeze shaped dough loaf (after step 10) for up to 3 months. Thaw in the refrigerator at least 3 hours before you need the bread, remove from the refrigerator, keep covered, and allow to rise on the counter for about 1–2 hours before baking.
- Special Tools (affiliate links): Stand Mixer or Large Mixing Bowl and Wooden Spoon/Silicone Spatula | Ruler or tape measure | Silicone Baking Mat (optional but recommended) | Rolling Pin | 12×17-inch Half Sheet Pan | 9×5-inch Loaf Pan | Pastry Brush | Instant-Read Thermometer | Cooling Rack
- Milk: Whole milk is ideal, but you can swap a lower-fat or non-dairy milk. Avoid nonfat milk.
- Yeast: You can use active dry or instant yeast in this recipe. Follow all of the same instructions. If using active dry yeast, the rise times are usually *slightly* longer, but not much. Reference my Baking with Yeast Guide for answers to common yeast FAQs.
- Butter: You can use either unsalted or salted butter in the dough, but be sure to use salted butter in the lamination step. The butter in the dough can be softened to room temperature, even overly softened is fine. However, the butter for the lamination does require your attention. It’s important to make sure your lamination butter is not too cold/hard and you don’t want it too greasy/soft either, because it needs to be about as pliable as the dough to incorporate into it. Sometimes I use a cooking thermometer just to check what temperature my butter and dough are for the lamination step, and it’s ideal they both register *around* 60°F (15°C). Being about the same temperature helps the butter and the dough laminate easily.
- Can I Halve or Double This Recipe? No. Follow the dough recipe precisely as written. If 1 loaf is too much, freeze any extras. If you want 2 loaves, make the dough 2x separately.
- Can I Add a Filling? I tried jam and cinnamon sugar (1/4 teaspoon cinnamon with 2 Tbsp granulated sugar). The only one that worked fairly well was the cinnamon sugar. Anything wet like jam will create too much moisture and the bottom of the loaf doesn’t bake very well. Plus, you need quite a lot to really taste it, which makes rolling up the dough fairly messy and difficult. You can absolutely try adding something dry like the cinnamon sugar, chopped nuts, or even chocolate chips! Spread a thin layer on the dough before rolling it up into a log in step 10.
Hi, I have family member that has an egg allergy so is there an alternative for the egg wash?
Hi Tae, you can leave the egg wash off if needed, but the loaf won’t have that nice glossy sheen. You could do a simple brush of milk instead, too.
I just took the bread out of the oven. Smells amazing! The recipe was easy to follow
For the lamination, am I supposed to use 3/4 cup of butter for EACH lamination step, or is that total?
Hi Althea, you’ll need 3/4 cup total.
Can I make buns from this recipe?
Hi Deb, we haven’t tested these as individual rolls, so we’re unsure of exactly how they’d bake up. If you do decide to try, we’d use the same temperature and baking time will likely be a bit shorter. Let us know what you try!
This bread turned out beautifully! My favorite recipe I’ve made on this site, and one of my favorite things I’ve ever baked.
I’ve made this bread a few times and it’s always turned out. Today, it turned out similar to another bakers post, biscuit like and stiff. It was a very hot day and everything was going great until the final lamination. That’s when the dough got super sticky and was falling apart. I didn’t use any flour when rolling it out to eliminate it becoming too tough. Any ideas as to why this happened?
Hi Alyssa, it definitely could be because of the very hot day. In our testing, the loaves that lost their layers during baking were the ones where the butter got too warm in lamination.
could I make this recipe into croissant rolls instead of a loaf?
Hi Shylah, here is our croissants recipe instead!
Hi I am wondering about the refrigeration time.. does this vary depending on the temperature of your refrigerator? If so then what is the ideal temperature?
Hi Jade, usually ideal refrigerator temperature is considered to be about 37°F (3°C).
Can I make this in my bread machine
Hi Connie! We haven’t tested it, but you should be able to prepare the dough in the bread machine, then continue the recipe with lamination.
What can i make from a baked loaf of crescent bread. Besides French toast or bread pudding?
Hi Nancy, try it as a grilled cheese, BLT, toasted with jam, or in your favorite breakfast strata recipe or French toast casserole!
I have made this recipe many times and my layers were always gorgeous. The other day I used Irish butter to laminate. I noticed I couldn’t see any layers when I sliced the loaf into 5 parts. After baking, the loaf was very dense like a biscuit. Was it the butter? I made sure the butter temp was close to 60 degrees.
Hi Ellen, Were you preparing the dough on a particularly hot or humid day? In our testing, the loaves that lost their layers during baking were the ones where the butter got too warm in lamination. Also, if you ever try the recipe again – see if you can go easier on the flour during the lamination steps. It’s possible there was just too much and it worked itself into the dough producing a denser texture. Hope this helps!
I cannot wait to try this recipe! I was wondering if you’ve ever added any fruit to the recipe? I’m thinking about thinly sliced or diced apple with cinnamon and sugar.
Hi Helen! We have not tested that, but it sounds delicious.
MAKE SURE TO align the slices so that they touch, so they will stay together as they rise.
Roll the dough tightly.
Can you use a Pullman loaf pan (covered) with this recipe?
Hi Mike, we haven’t tested this particular recipe in a Pullman loaf pan, so we’re unsure of the results. Let us know if you do give it a try.
To any one! If you buy salted butter for just this recipe know that you can freeze butter until you need more later. Butter freezes very well! love your breads Sally!!!!!! I make them all the time!
I am fresh off my first attempt at your actual crossiants, and despite looking a little goofy, IT WORKED — the lamination held and they were delicious. I am excited to try this streamlined recipe that can be made in one day. Once I have practiced, I want to try this dough in muffin cups or on a sheet to see if it that works. The regular croissant recipe is a fun “project” but too labor intensive for lazy me to do often. Thank you for your site. You bring so much joy.
Could you add any herbs to the dough itself?
Absolutely; I would use dried herbs, but fresh herbs chopped fine would work nicely too.
Hi, I’m wondering why it’s recommended to use salted butter for the lamination–is there a specific reason? Can I use unsalted butter and add the salt into the dough, or sprinkle it on top of the butter? I don’t typically keep or use salted butter and I would like to avoid wasting the leftover butter if possible.
See note about butter– we strongly recommend salted butter for the lamination. Unsalted butter is fine in the dough.
I understand that, but why? Why is salted butter recommended rather than using unsalted butter and simply adding more salt into the dough to compensate?
The salted butter provides more flavorful flakes in the finished bread. If you don’t want to buy salted butter, you can use unsalted and perhaps add a light sprinkle of salt on top of the pats of butter.
Thank you for this recipe/video! If I wanted to make Croissant buns like the ones the green, siren logo coffee company based in Seattle uses for their Double-Smoked Bacon, Egg, and Cheese Croissant sandwiches, how would I adapt this? Watching the video, I am guessing it would be after slicing – place them cut side down on a baking sheet, egg wash, then bake. Would I bake then at normal temp/time, or would I need to make adjustments?
Hi Lauren, we haven’t tested these as individual rolls, so we’re unsure of exactly how they’d bake up. If you do decide to try, we’d use the same temperature and baking time will likely be a bit shorter. Let us know what you try!
This was so yummy. Butter, light, and flaky. I was nervous to attempt it, but watched the video and it came out picture perfect! Not a slice remaining. Definitely worth the time it takes to make. Will be doing it again very soon!!
Hi can I make this dough in a bread machine.
Thank you
Hi Selena! We haven’t tested this dough in a bread machine.
This bread looks amazing and I’m definitely giving it a try for Thanksgiving! Question: Could you use Olive oil instead of butter for a Vegan version?
Hi Heather, the lamination won’t work properly with oil. I haven’t tested it with solid coconut oil, but you could try that if you’d like.
Incredible! I wish I had a picture as it was seriously perfect. No large gaps and perfectly done. I shared the bread with neighbors in our building and the comments were “best thing I’ve ever had” to “best bread”…and we live in the land of sour dough, San Francisco. Just to let you know, we are a family of bakers but live far apart. The line amongst us, “Did you get this from Sally?” So thank you.
I buy raw milk from a nearby farm. Can I use this in this recipe? (Croissant Bread (Loaf))
I tried baking croissants a handful of time but never succeeded. I tried to give it one last shot with this recipe and wow! I’m so proud of the result, it came out delicious and it looked very impressive. Thank you, Sally!
I just made the croissant loaf. Every step you described came off exactly as you said and the result was excellent. The process took all day to complete, most of the time waiting between steps. But none of the steps were difficult.
Do you have to slice the roll? Just wondering what would happen if you don’t.
Hi Tam! Slicing the rolls really allows all the flaky layers to rise and get crispy.