Skip to main content

Cream Puffs

Ingredients

Preparation

  1. Beads of moisture

    Step 1

    This happens when cream puffs are underbaked. Return them to the hot oven, turn off the oven at once, and let them sit in there for 5 minutes with the door slightly ajar (the traditional oven door prop is a wooden spoon). The beads of moisture should disappear.

  2. Collapsed and soggy

    Step 2

    Cream puffs collapse when they are cooked on the outside and too moist on the inside. So slice off the top, remove the moist dough with your fingers (yes, you can eat it), replace the top, and return to the hot oven. Turn off the oven, leave the door ajar, and wait for 10 minutes. Then proceed normally.

    Step 3

    Next time, here’s the professionals’ method for perfect puffs: as soon as they’re cooled, put your puffs in the freezer. Even if you’re serving them the same day, freeze them. When you’re ready to assemble them, put them on a baking sheet in a 350°F oven for 2 minutes. Slice them in half and fill. They’ll be crisp outside and soft inside, just as they should be.

  3. Didn’t puff

    Step 4

    Make a splendid dish with crispy outsides by coating the unpuffed puffs with caramelized sugar. Toss them (using two forks) in a pot of caramelized sugar. Let them harden (which happens almost instantly) and then split them and fill as you had planned.

How to Repair Food, Third Edition
Read More
Like lemony baked salmon and strawberry shortcake roll.
Like spicy carrot rigatoni and weeknight-fancy ravioli with peas.
Keep this easy frittata recipe on hand for quick breakfasts, impressive brunches, and fridge clean-out meals.
A birthday favorite in the Bon Appétit Test Kitchen.
Turn humble onions into this thrifty yet luxe pasta dinner.
This broiled hot honey salmon recipe results in sweet, spicy, glossy fish coated in a homemade hot honey glaze for an easy weeknight dinner or make-ahead lunch.
Like lemony risotto and tandoori-style cauliflower.
A warmly spiced Ashkenazi charoset, perfect for your Passover seder—or spooned over yogurt the next morning.