A curated, actionable toplist of pastry recipes with full step-by-step instructions, ingredient lists, timing, practical tips and serving/storage notes. Each recipe is written for home bakers who want reliable, repeatable results from quick beginner bakes to classic laminated confections.
-
Croissant vs Danish Pastry: What’s the Difference?
-
How to Make Puff Pastry – The Complete Step-by-Step Guide
-
What Is Choux Pastry? Definition, Recipe, History & Uses
1. Classic French Croissants
Yield: 12 medium croissants
Active time: 1 hr (+ overnight fermentation + lamination and proofing ~12–16 hr)
Equipment: rolling pin, bench scraper, pastry brush, baking sheets
Ingredients
- 500 g strong (bread) flour
- 50 g granulated sugar
- 10 g fine salt
- 11 g instant yeast (1 packet)
- 275 g whole milk, cold
- 40 g unsalted butter, softened (for dough)
- 300 g unsalted butter, cold, for lamination (butter block)
Step-by-step
- Make dough: Mix flour, sugar, salt and yeast (keep yeast away from salt while mixing). Add cold milk and 40 g softened butter; combine to form a shaggy dough. Knead briefly (3–4 min) until smooth.
- First rest: Shape into a disk, wrap and chill 1 hour.
- Prepare butter block: Flatten the 300 g cold butter between parchment to a 20×15 cm rectangle; chill until firm but pliable.
- Encase butter: Roll the dough to a rectangle ~40×25 cm. Place butter block centered, fold dough over to enclose. Seal edges.
- Turns (lamination): Roll to 60×25 cm, perform a letter fold (fold one third over, then the other third). Rotate 90°. Chill 30–45 min. Repeat rolling and folding two more times (total 3 turns), chilling between each.
- Shape & proof: Roll to 40×30 cm, cut triangles (~12). Roll from base to tip into croissant shapes. Place on baking trays, proof at ~24–26°C until doubled (3–4 hr) or retard overnight in fridge for flavor.
- Bake: Egg wash (1 egg + 1 tsp water). Bake at 200°C (400°F) for 12–16 minutes until deep golden. Cool on racks.
Tips & storage
- Use European-style butter if available for stronger flavor.
- If croissant interiors are doughy, increase bake time or lower oven shelf.
- Store in an airtight container for 1 day; refresh in a 180°C oven for 5–7 min.
2. Puff Pastry Apple Turnovers (using store pastry)
Yield: 8 turnovers
Active time: 30–40 min
Equipment: baking sheet, rolling pin
Ingredients
- 1 sheet frozen puff pastry (approx. 250–300 g), thawed
- 3 medium apples (about 450 g), peeled and diced
- 50 g granulated sugar + 1 tbsp for sprinkling
- 1 tsp ground cinnamon
- 1 tbsp cornstarch (optional, for juicier apples)
- 1 tbsp lemon juice
- 1 egg beaten (egg wash)
Step-by-step
- Make filling: Toss diced apples with lemon juice, sugar, cinnamon and cornstarch. Cook briefly (optional) in a saucepan over medium heat for 3–4 minutes to soften and thicken; cool.
- Prepare pastry: Roll pastry to 3–4 mm thickness. Cut into eight 12×12 cm squares.
- Assemble: Spoon ~2 tbsp filling onto each square. Brush edges with egg wash, fold into triangles, and crimp with fork.
- Bake: Brush with egg wash, sprinkle a little sugar, cut a small vent. Bake at 200°C (400°F) for 18–22 minutes until puffed and golden. Cool 10 minutes.
Tips & storage
- Use firm, tart apples (Granny Smith, Braeburn).
- Freeze unbaked turnovers on a tray, then bag; bake from frozen adding ~6–8 min to time.
Croissant vs Puff Pastry: Difference, Texture, Layers, Recipes, and Uses
3. Chocolate Éclairs (Classic Choux Pastry)
Yield: 12 éclairs
Active time: 40–50 min (plus cooling)
Equipment: piping bag with plain 1cm tip, oven tray
Ingredients
Choux pastry
- 250 ml water
- 100 g unsalted butter
- 150 g all-purpose flour
- 4 large eggs, room temperature
- Pinch of salt
Pastry cream
- 500 ml whole milk
- 100 g granulated sugar
- 4 egg yolks
- 40 g corn starch
- 50 g unsalted butter
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
Chocolate glaze
- 120 g dark chocolate
- 60 ml heavy cream
Step-by-step
- Make choux: Bring water and butter to a rolling boil with a pinch of salt. Remove from heat, add all flour at once and stir vigorously until a smooth ball forms. Return to low heat 1–2 min to dry. Cool 3–5 min. Beat in eggs one at a time until glossy and pipeable.
- Pipe & bake: Pipe 12 × 10 cm logs onto parchment (leave space). Bake 200°C (400°F) 10 min, reduce to 180°C (350°F) and bake 15–20 min until dry and hollow. Turn off oven, crack door and cool 10 min.
- Pastry cream: Heat milk. Whisk yolks, sugar, cornstarch; temper with hot milk, return to pan and cook until thick. Add butter and vanilla. Chill.
- Fill & glaze: When choux are cool, cut or poke hole and fill with pastry cream via piping bag. Melt chocolate with cream and dip tops; chill briefly to set.
Tips & storage
- If choux collapse, underbaking is common; ensure interiors are fully dry.
- Filled éclairs keep best same day; refrigerate up to 24 hours.
4. Cream Cheese Danish
Yield: 8–10 pastries
Active time: 40–60 min (plus chilling/proofing)
Equipment: oven tray, small mixer or bowl
Ingredients
- 1 sheet puff pastry (or 500 g Danish dough)
- 225 g cream cheese, softened
- 50 g powdered sugar
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 1 egg (for egg wash)
- 100 g fruit jam or fresh berries (optional)
Step-by-step
- Make filling: Beat cream cheese with powdered sugar and vanilla until smooth.
- Cut & shape: Roll pastry to 3–4 mm. Cut into 8–10 squares. Score a 1 cm border on each square (don’t cut through). Spoon ~1½ tbsp cream cheese into center; add a teaspoon of jam or berries if using. Fold corners inward or make pinwheels.
- Proof & bake: Chill 15–20 min, brush with egg wash, bake 200°C (400°F) for 12–16 minutes until golden.
- Finish: Cool and optionally glaze with thin icing (1 cup powdered sugar + 2–3 tsp milk).
Tips & storage
- For richer flavor, make Danish dough (laminated like croissants).
- Best same day; refrigerate up to 2 days.
5. Spinach & Feta Puff Pastry Pockets (Savory)
Yield: 12 mini pockets
Active time: 30–40 min
Equipment: skillet, baking tray
Ingredients
- 2 sheets puff pastry, thawed
- 300 g fresh spinach (or 200 g frozen, thawed and drained)
- 150 g feta, crumbled
- 1 small onion, finely chopped
- 1 garlic clove, minced
- 1 tbsp olive oil
- 1 egg (egg wash)
- Salt & pepper, pinch of nutmeg
Step-by-step
- Sauté filling: Heat oil, cook onion until translucent. Add garlic, then spinach; cook until wilted. Cool, squeeze excess moisture. Combine with feta, nutmeg, salt/pepper.
- Assemble: Cut pastry into 12 rectangles. Place ~1 tbsp filling on each, fold and seal edges with fork.
- Bake: Brush with egg wash. Bake at 200°C (400°F) for 15–20 minutes until puffed and golden.
Tips & storage
- Drain spinach thoroughly to prevent soggy bottoms.
- Freeze unbaked pockets on a tray; transfer to bag once firm.
6. Classic Fruit Tart (Pâte Sucrée + Pastry Cream)
Yield: 1 × 23 cm tart (8–10 servings)
Active time: 1 hr (+ chilling)
Ingredients
Sweet tart crust (pâte sucrée)
- 250 g all-purpose flour
- 140 g unsalted butter, cold, cubed
- 90 g powdered sugar
- 1 large egg
- Pinch salt
Pastry cream (crème pâtissière)
- 500 ml whole milk
- 100 g sugar
- 4 egg yolks
- 40 g cornstarch
- 50 g butter
- 1 tsp vanilla
Topping
- Seasonal fruit (berries, kiwi, peach slices)
- Apricot jam, warmed and strained for glaze
Step-by-step
- Make crust: Rub butter into flour and sugar until pea-size crumbs. Add egg and bring together briefly. Chill 30–60 min. Roll and line a 23 cm tart tin. Blind-bake at 180°C (350°F) for 18–20 min (use baking beans), remove beans and bake 5–8 min more until golden. Cool.
- Pastry cream: Prepare as in éclair recipe; chill. Fill cooled tart shell with cream.
- Decorate: Arrange fruit in pattern; brush with warmed apricot glaze.
Tips & storage
- Chill before slicing for clean edges.
- Tart stores 1–2 days refrigerated (avoid long storage when using fresh fruit).
7. Sausage Rolls (British-Style)
Yield: 12 rolls
Active time: 30–40 min
Equipment: bowl, baking sheet
Ingredients
- 500 g sausage meat (or good quality ground pork)
- 1 small onion, finely chopped and sautéed
- 1 tbsp chopped parsley
- 1 tsp mustard (Dijon)
- 1 sheet puff pastry (or 2)
- 1 egg for wash, salt & pepper
Step-by-step
- Prepare filling: Mix sausage meat with sautéed onion, parsley, mustard, salt and pepper.
- Assemble: Roll pastry into a rectangle, form a log of filling down centre, brush edges with egg, fold and seal. Cut into 12 pieces.
- Bake: Egg wash each roll and bake 200°C (400°F) for 20–25 min until crisp and browned.
Tips & storage
- Test one roll for seasoning before assembling all.
- Reheat in oven for best texture rather than microwave.
8. Palmiers (Elephant Ears)
Yield: ~24 palmiers
Active time: 20–30 min
Equipment: sharp knife, baking tray
Ingredients
- 1 sheet puff pastry, thawed
- 100 g granulated sugar (plus extra to sprinkle)
- Optional: 1 tsp cinnamon
Step-by-step
- Coat pastry: Sprinkle sugar (and cinnamon) on surface, roll to press sugar in. Repeat on other side.
- Fold: Fold both long edges to meet at centre, then fold in half to create a log. Refrigerate 15 min.
- Slice: Cut 0.8–1 cm slices, place cut side up on parchment.
- Bake: Bake 200°C (400°F) for 12–15 min, flip half-way to caramelize both sides.
Tips & storage
- Work quickly; sugar seeping can stick to rolling pin.
- Store in an airtight tin for up to 3 days.
9. Baklava (Phyllo, Nuts & Honey Syrup)
Yield: 20–24 pieces
Active time: 1 hr (+ syrup cooling)
Ingredients
- 400 g phyllo sheets (about 20–24 sheets)
- 300 g mixed nuts (walnuts & pistachios), finely chopped
- 200–250 g unsalted butter, melted
- 100 g granulated sugar (in filling)
- 1 tsp ground cinnamon
Syrup
- 200 g sugar
- 200 ml water
- 3 tbsp honey
- 1 tbsp lemon juice
Step-by-step
- Prepare nuts: Mix chopped nuts with 100 g sugar and cinnamon.
- Layer phyllo: Brush baking pan with butter. Layer phyllo, brushing each sheet with butter; after 6–8 sheets sprinkle a thin layer of nuts. Repeat until used, finishing with 6–8 buttered phyllo sheets. Score into diamond shapes.
- Bake: 175°C (350°F) for 35–40 minutes until golden and crisp.
- Syrup: Boil syrup ingredients 6–8 min, cool slightly. Pour cooled syrup over hot baklava. Cool completely before serving.
Tips & storage
- Keep phyllo covered with a damp towel to prevent drying.
- Baklava improves after 24 hours as syrup soaks in; store at room temperature covered.
10. All-Purpose Pie / Shortcrust Pastry (Base Recipe)
Yield: Dough for 1 × 23–26 cm double crust pie (or 1 tart + scraps)
Active time: 20–30 min (+ chilling)
Ingredients
- 300–320 g all-purpose flour
- 200 g unsalted butter, cold, cubed
- 1 tsp fine salt
- 2 tbsp granulated sugar (optional for sweet crust)
- 60–90 ml ice water (add gradually)
Step-by-step
- Combine dry: Whisk flour, salt and sugar.
- Cut in butter: Use a pastry cutter or fingertips to rub in cold butter until mixture resembles coarse crumbs with pea-size pieces.
- Add water: Sprinkle ice water 1 tbsp at a time until dough just holds when pressed. Avoid over-hydrating.
- Rest & roll: Form into a disk, chill 30–60 min. Roll on lightly floured surface to desired diameter. Use for pies, tarts or galettes. Blind-bake when recipe requires.
Tips & storage
- Keep everything cold for flakier layers.
- Freeze dough disks wrapped for up to 3 months.
Frequently Asked Questions (SEO-friendly)
Q: What is the easiest pastry recipe for beginners?
A: Shortcrust pastry and puff pastry hacks (using frozen puff pastry) are easiest and teach basic baking skills quickly.
Q: Can I freeze pastry dough or finished pastries?
A: Yes — most raw doughs freeze 1–3 months; baked pastries typically freeze well for 1–2 months. Thaw slowly in the refrigerator.
Q: Is puff pastry the same as croissant dough?
A: Both are laminated, but croissant (viennoiserie) dough is yeasted and enriched, producing a different texture and flavor from classic puff.
Q: How do I avoid soggy bottoms in tarts and pies?
A: Blind bake the shell, use an egg wash or thin layer of chocolate or ground nuts to create a moisture barrier for juicy fillings.
Conclusion
From buttery croissants to crisp baklava, pastry recipes span cultures, flavors, and skill levels. Start with beginner-friendly options like hand pies or turnovers, then challenge yourself with advanced pastries such as croissants or mille-feuille. With practice, you’ll master the techniques that pastry chefs use and bring bakery-quality results into your home kitchen.