Three years ago, I bit into one of my neighbor Sarah's chocolate croissant at her Sunday brunch and literally stopped talking. The layers were so buttery they fell apart in my hands, and the chocolate croissant inside was still a little warm and gooey. I looked at her and said, "Okay, you have to tell me where you bought these." She just grinned and said, "I made them yesterday morning."I spent the next two weeks texting her daily until she agreed to show me how. Sarah had been making pain au chocolat for five years but never told anyone because she thought people would think it was too complicated.

Why You'll Love This Recipe
Back making these chocolate croissants every other weekend for three years, I can tell you exactly why they're worth it. The two-day timeline sounds intense, but Sarah explained it perfectly: "You're not working for two days - the fridge is doing all the hard stuff while you're living your life." The actual hands-on time? Maybe 35 minutes total. You mix dough one evening, do a few folds the next morning, then bake them that afternoon. Between steps, I'm usually doing laundry, helping Lucas with homework, or just relaxing.
What really convinced me was when Sarah said, "If you keep everything cold and don't rush, you honestly can't mess these up." She was right. I've made them during summer heat waves and forgotten the dough in the fridge an extra day - they still came out beautiful. Lucas has "helped" by spilling flour and sneaking chocolate, and we still get those crispy, buttery layers every time. The smell of them baking makes our whole house feel special, and watching people's faces when they bite into one never gets old.
Jump to:
- Why You'll Love This Recipe
- Ingredients for Chocolate Croissants
- How To Make Chocolate Croissants Step By Step
- Smart Swaps for Chocolate Croissants
- chocolate croissant FOR Variations
- Equipment FOR chocolate croissant
- Storing Your Chocolate Croissants
- Top Tip
- FAQ
- Fresh-Baked Croissants Right from Your Kitchen
- Related
- Pairing
- chocolate croissant
Ingredients for Chocolate Croissants
The Dough Base:
- All-purpose flour
- Whole milk
- Active dry yeast
- Granulated sugar
- Fine salt
- Unsalted butter
The Chocolate:
- Dark chocolate bars
- Semi-sweet chocolate bars
See recipe card for quantities.
How To Make Chocolate Croissants Step By Step
Day One - Evening (15 minutes):
- Mix flour, yeast, sugar, salt, and cold milk until dough comes together
- Knead briefly on counter until smooth
- Wrap tight in plastic
- Refrigerate overnight
Day One - Next Morning (20 minutes):
- Shape cold butter into flat rectangle between parchment
- Roll dough into large rectangle on floured counter
- Place butter block in center and fold dough over like a letter
- Roll out and do first fold
- Chill 30 minutes
- Do second fold
- Back in fridge overnight
Day Two - Morning (25 minutes):
- Roll dough to quarter-inch thickness
- Cut into rectangles about 4 by 6 inches
- Place cold chocolate bar at one end
- Roll tightly toward other end
- Set on parchment-lined sheets
- Let rise 2 hours at room temperature
The Bake:
- Cool 10 minutes before eating
- Brush gently with egg wash
- Bake 400°F for 18-22 minutes
- Watch for deep golden color
Smart Swaps for Chocolate Croissants
I've tested these changes over the past three years, some because I ran out of ingredients and some just out of curiosity:
Butter Options:
- European butter → Regular butter (works but less flaky)
- Dairy butter → Plant-based butter (tried twice, not quite the same)
Chocolate Choices:
- Dark chocolate → Milk chocolate (Lucas prefers this sweeter version)
- Chocolate bars → Nutella (completely different but really good)
- Dark → White chocolate (tried once for Valentine's Day, surprisingly nice)
Flour Swaps:
- All-purpose → Bread flour (makes them chewier, still tasty)
- Regular → Gluten-free (haven't figured this one out yet, honestly)
Time-Savers:
- Homemade dough → Store puff pastry (Sarah would probably kill me, but it works in a pinch)
chocolate croissant FOR Variations
Double Chocolate:
- Add dark chocolate inside plus drizzle melted chocolate on top after baking
- Creates intense chocolate flavor that serious chocolate lovers go crazy for
- The drizzle adds a glossy finish that makes them look bakery-perfect
- Lucas calls these "chocolate explosion croissants"
Almond Chocolate:
- Spread thin layer of almond paste before adding chocolate bar
- Sprinkle sliced almonds on top before baking
- The almond flavor pairs beautifully with dark chocolate
- This is Sarah's favorite version for special occasions
Hazelnut Heaven:
- Replace chocolate bar with hazelnut spread and chopped hazelnuts
- Add a few chocolate pieces if you want
- Tastes like a fancy Italian pastry
- I've made this version at least 30 times for birthdays
Salted Caramel:
- Drizzle caramel sauce inside before rolling
- Add chocolate pieces
- Sprinkle sea salt flakes on top before baking
- The sweet-salty combo is absolutely addictive
Equipment FOR chocolate croissant
- Heavy rolling pin
- Metal ruler
- Sharp knife or pizza cutter
- Two baking sheets
- Parchment paper
- Pastry brush
Storing Your Chocolate Croissants
Same Day (Best Option):
- Eat within 6 hours of baking
- Leave uncovered on counter
- Reheat 5 minutes at 350°F if they cool down
- This is when they taste absolutely perfect
Short-Term (2 days):
- Store in paper bag at room temperature
- Never use plastic - makes them soggy and sad
- Warm in oven before eating
- They lose some crispiness but still taste good
Freezing Baked (1 month):
- Cool completely first
- Wrap each one individually
- Reheat from frozen at 350°F for 10 minutes
- Not as good as fresh but decent for a quick breakfast
Freezing Unbaked (Best for Planning):
- Thaw overnight in fridge and let rise before baking
- Shape them completely
- Freeze on trays until solid
- Transfer to freezer bags
Top Tip
- fourth baking session. I was freaking out because my butter block wasn't the exact size she said it should be, and I kept remeasuring with my ruler. She grabbed the ruler out of my hand and said, "Stop. The French have been making these for two hundred years without rulers. You're overthinking it."
- What she meant was that feeling matters more than measuring. If my kitchen is hot, the butter gets soft fast and I need to move quickly. If it's cold, I can relax and take my time. She learned this working in a bakery for two years, and it took me probably 45 batches before I stopped panicking about every little thing.
- The other thing she was super strict about - and I'm glad she was - is that 2-hour rise. I tried cutting it short once when my sister showed up early for dinner, and they came out flat and tough. Lucas took one look and said, "These don't look right." He was four and he could tell. Now I set a timer and walk away. Sarah says you know they're ready when they look puffy and wobble when you shake the pan, and that's exactly right.
FAQ
What is a croissant with chocolate called?
A croissant with chocolate is called "pain au chocolat" in French, which means chocolate croissant bread. I've made these for three years now, and I've learned the traditional ones are rectangular shaped, while some bakeries make them in the crescent shape. Sarah always corrects people who call them chocolate croissants, but honestly both names work fine.
What kind of chocolate is in a croissant?
Traditional pain au chocolat uses dark chocolate bars, usually around 60-70% cocoa. After testing dozens of chocolate types, I stick with semi-sweet chocolate croissant bars that stay solid during baking. Don't use chocolate chips - they melt everywhere and make a mess. I learned that one the hard way on batch three.
What's the difference between chocolate croissant and pain au chocolat?
They're the same thing - pain au chocolat is just the French name. The confusion comes from shape: real pain au chocolat is rectangular with chocolate inside, while some bakeries make crescent-shaped croissants filled with chocolate. I've made both at least 50 times, and the rectangular shape is way easier to work with.
Does Starbucks sell chocolate croissants?
Yes, Starbucks sells them, though they're not always available at every location. I've compared theirs to mine (because of course I did), and theirs are okay but less buttery and flaky. Making them at home means I control the chocolate croissant quality and eat them fresh from the oven - there's really no comparison.
Fresh-Baked Croissants Right from Your Kitchen
You now have every single trick Sarah taught me about making chocolate croissants - from that cold butter rule to not rushing the rise time. These buttery, flaky pastries show that fancy bakery stuff is completely doable at home if you're patient. Lucas and I have been making these almost every other weekend for three years, and they're still our favorite Saturday morning thing.
Looking for more breakfast treats? Our Delicious Cinnamon Swirl Apple Fritter Bread makes the whole house smell incredible. Need something fast? Lucas begs for our Easy Nutella Toast Pies before school at least twice a week. And when we have people over, our Easy Pigs in a Blanket Recipe always vanishes first - kids and adults both grab them.
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Related
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Pairing
These are my favorite dishes to serve with chocolate croissant

chocolate croissant
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- n a large bowl, mix flour, yeast, sugar, salt, and cold milk until dough comes together. Knead lightly until smooth. Wrap in plastic and refrigerate overnight.
- The next morning, shape cold butter into a flat rectangle between parchment paper. Chill until firm.
- Roll out dough into a large rectangle; place butter block in center and fold like a letter. Roll gently to flatten and refrigerate 30 minutes.
- Repeat rolling and folding one more time. Chill overnight.













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