¡Bienvenido, Scoolilover!

Scoolinary Forums Ask a question Question on recipe for croissant by Antonio bachour

  • Sussan Estela Olaya

    Member
    February 5, 2024 at 01:53
    Level: favicon spaced Scoolinary Team

    Hi Erik

    The recipe has 1500 grams of flour, the result of mixing all the ingredients will result in a quantity of dough.
    From that amount of dough, separate 1350 grams of dough ready to prepare your croissant.
    We hope this information is helpful.

    Greetings.

    • madalinamitache6

      Member
      May 15, 2024 at 14:00

      Hi. Please help me understand this recipe. I should divide the final dough into 2 balls of 1350 g. And to each one I should add 500 g of butter. Is that correct?

      • Sussan Estela Olaya

        Member
        May 15, 2024 at 15:09
        Level: favicon spaced Scoolinary Team

        Hi @madalinamitache6

        Correct, for the Croissant you will need 1300 grams of dough and 500 grams of butter to be able to laminate.

        Greetings.

      • Sol Damiani

        Administrator
        May 16, 2024 at 17:44
        Level: favicon spaced Scoolinary Team

        Hi Chef @madalinamitache6 👋

        Welcome to our Community! I hope you feel totally at home. Where are you from? I’m Sol from Buenos Aires and I’m the Community Builder.

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

        I want to invite you to explore our Feed. There you can:

        • Share your dish pics and videos (up to 10MB). There’s a chance you’ll win a #ScooliStar. if your pic is great and the plating, too; we’ll upload it, mentioning you on our Instagram stories.
        • 🚀Join our Challenges: you may win some wonderful prizes! Right now we have a very special one going on: the #ScoolinaryCakeChallenge. You will find everything you need to know on our Feed. It’ll be pinned at the top until it ends on May 20th.

        Have a super great day and hope to see you around often!

  • Sol Damiani

    Administrator
    February 6, 2024 at 16:56
    Level: favicon spaced Scoolinary Team

    Hi @erikdrobinsgmail-com 👋

    Welcome to our Community! ☺I hope you feel totally at home. Where are you from? I’m Sol from Buenos Aires and I’m the Community Builder.

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

    I want to invite you to explore our Feed. There you can:

    • Share your dish pics and videos (up to 10MB). There’s a chance you’ll win a #ScooliStar. if your pic is great and the plating, too; we’ll upload it, mentioning you on our Instagram stories.
    • Start new debates you find interesting.
    • Share a very cool recipe of your own creation or a variation of one you saw at our Courses.
    • 🚀Join our Challenges: tomorrow we launch a very special one. Stay tuned.

    Have a super great day and hope to see you around often!

  • Oscar Rp

    Member
    February 13, 2024 at 05:01

    Did your dough did well mine break a lot has almost cero stretching also my dough looks very dry

    • Sussan Estela Olaya

      Member
      February 13, 2024 at 14:42
      Level: favicon spaced Scoolinary Team

      Hi Oscar

      Depending on the brand or protein percentage of the flour, you may have a slightly drier dough as a result.

      When you are preparing your dough, you can add between 10% and 12% of the total liquid in the dough, this way you will obtain a more hydrated dough.

      • Oscar Rp

        Member
        February 13, 2024 at 23:06

        Moul-Bie

        GRUAU ROUGE WHEAT FLOUR T45

        This is what I use so do you think I will be fine just adding extra liquid because I use the rest exactly as the recipe and I buy a 15q Comercial mixer and was extremely hard to wonk in medium level because the dough was really dry and firm

        • Sussan Estela Olaya

          Member
          February 14, 2024 at 01:24
          Level: favicon spaced Scoolinary Team

          Hi Oscar

          I think it could help you add extra liquid and other colleagues tried it.

          Also remember that the time and speed at which the dough is beaten can cause the gluten to develop more, making the dough more resistant when working with it.

          Greetings.

Log in to reply.

Welcome to Scoolinary!

If you’re passionate about gastronomy, here’s something you’ll really love.

Join Scoolinary

Already a member? Sign in

Nice to see you again at Scoolinary!

Login to access to your account

Access to your account

Don’t have an account? Sign up