Ever since I heard about star pastry chef Dominique Ansel inventing the cronut, I knew I needed to try one. So mock this trend if you must, but I just tried my first one tonight, and I'm proud to say I made it myself! I started making the croissant dough on Bastille Day, and tonight made my first run at the cronut. I have to say it turned out perfect, fried at 375 degrees for just a couple of minutes (flipped too), then dusted in cinnamon sugar. I have more dough in the fridge and plan on getting a little more ambitious on my next try. But I didn't want to invest too much tonight not knowing how the first try would work. In particular, I was worried about the butter and the hot oil and possible burning - but no issues. So many possibilities, and with all that's fresh at the market, perhaps a blueberry or peach filling, with a vanilla glaze . . . or maybe a coconut pastry cream filling and a dark chocolate glaze with toasted coconut. Anyway, here's my pictorial including the cinnamon-sugar cronut:
The dough, pre-butter
The softened, shaped butter meets the dough
The folding and turning begins!
A long process
The first cronut is formed - two layers, water to keep the layers together
First cronut done!
The interiorI plan to be very busy making more cronuts soon . . . can't believe how good they are.