The difference between a puffed cream puff and a flat one is the baking method (described below) and the freshest eggs possible. This is the easiest, most reliable cream puffs, zeppoli, profiterole, eclair shell recipe ever! Fill them with anything you like from sweetened whipped cream, pudding, mousse, pastry cream, ice cream, sandwich fillings (pulled pork, tuna salad, chicken salad…) or my personal favorite, ricotta cannoli filling! I get my cannoli filling from a local Italian bakery. Can’t beat it. Ready to make them? Let’s do it!

Best Cream Puffs Recipe ever!

BEST CREAM PUFFS RECIPE EVER!

INGREDIENTS

1 cup water
½ cup butter (one stick=1/4 lb)
1 cup flour
4 fresh eggs at room temp

LET’S MAKE IT!

Preheat oven to 400°F.  Line two baking sheets with parchment paper.

In a medium saucepan over medium-high heat, combine butter and 1 cup water. Bring to a boil and add the flour. Stir vigorously with a wooden spoon until batter forms a ball and a film forms on the bottom of pan. Remove from heat.

Using either a wooden spoon or mixer, stir eggs into flour mixture one at a time, completely incorporating each egg before the next addition. Batter should be stiff.

(Note: the fourth photo in the following collage is not as stiff as it should be, but it’s close and it worked.)

Scoop dough onto baking sheet using a 4 oz cookie dough scoop, shaped with two spoons or by using a piping bag. (These baking directions apply to a 4 oz cream puff shell, but the dough can be scooped into rounds for cream puffs or ovals for eclairs and size may vary according to your preference- but know that baking times will vary by size and shape, so adjust accordingly.)

Bake for 30 minutes at 400°F, reduce heat to 325° and bake for 10 minutes more. (This step is the key to deflation-proof cream puffs!)  Puffs should be golden brown when removed from oven. Cool on baking sheet before filling.

Once cool, the cream puffs can be cut in half to fill or filled by sticking the tip of a piping bag in through the puff.

Ricotta cannoli-filled cream puffs
Ricotta cannoli-filled cream puffs
Ricotta cannoli-filled cream puffs
Best Cream Puffs Recipe ever! | The Chicken Chick®

Watch me and Julie the Garden Fairy as we made these Live on Facebook at this link!

 http://www.facebook.com/pg/TheChickenChick/videos/?ref=page_internal

These puffs didn’t rise due to a measuring error (don’t ask) but they worked beautifully with pulled pork and coleslaw. #yum

Pulled pork inside cream puffs that didn't rise. Yum!

Kathy Shea Mormino

Affectionately known internationally as The Chicken Chick®, Kathy Shea Mormino shares a fun-loving, informative style to raising backyard chickens. …Read on

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The difference between a puffed cream puff and a flat one is the baking method (described below) and the freshest eggs possible. This is the easiest, most reliable cream puffs, zeppoli, profiterole, eclair shell recipe ever! Fill them with anything you like from sweetened whipped cream, pudding, mousse, pastry cream, ice cream, sandwich fillings (pulled pork, tuna salad, chicken salad…) or my personal favorite, ricotta cannoli filling! I get my cannoli filling from a local Italian bakery. Can’t beat it. Ready to make them? Let’s do it!

Best Cream Puffs Recipe ever!

BEST CREAM PUFFS RECIPE EVER!

INGREDIENTS

1 cup water
½ cup butter (one stick=1/4 lb)
1 cup flour
4 fresh eggs at room temp

LET’S MAKE IT!

Preheat oven to 400°F.  Line two baking sheets with parchment paper.

In a medium saucepan over medium-high heat, combine butter and 1 cup water. Bring to a boil and add the flour. Stir vigorously with a wooden spoon until batter forms a ball and a film forms on the bottom of pan. Remove from heat.

Using either a wooden spoon or mixer, stir eggs into flour mixture one at a time, completely incorporating each egg before the next addition. Batter should be stiff.

(Note: the fourth photo in the following collage is not as stiff as it should be, but it’s close and it worked.)

Scoop dough onto baking sheet using a 4 oz cookie dough scoop, shaped with two spoons or by using a piping bag. (These baking directions apply to a 4 oz cream puff shell, but the dough can be scooped into rounds for cream puffs or ovals for eclairs and size may vary according to your preference- but know that baking times will vary by size and shape, so adjust accordingly.)

Bake for 30 minutes at 400°F, reduce heat to 325° and bake for 10 minutes more. (This step is the key to deflation-proof cream puffs!)  Puffs should be golden brown when removed from oven. Cool on baking sheet before filling.

Once cool, the cream puffs can be cut in half to fill or filled by sticking the tip of a piping bag in through the puff.

Ricotta cannoli-filled cream puffs
Ricotta cannoli-filled cream puffs
Ricotta cannoli-filled cream puffs
Best Cream Puffs Recipe ever! | The Chicken Chick®

Watch me and Julie the Garden Fairy as we made these Live on Facebook at this link!

 http://www.facebook.com/pg/TheChickenChick/videos/?ref=page_internal

These puffs didn’t rise due to a measuring error (don’t ask) but they worked beautifully with pulled pork and coleslaw. #yum

Pulled pork inside cream puffs that didn't rise. Yum!
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Alaena Ensey
Alaena Ensey
2024 years ago

These cream puffs look great?! I had some in France in an Italian restaurant no less and they topped them with chocolate sauce and filled with whipped cream. Pretty tasty treat! Please count me in the drawing for the heater!

Lightberry
Lightberry
2024 years ago

I am very interested in these puffs. My mom loves cream puffs, but we’ve never known how to make them.

Debbie Rogowski
Debbie Rogowski
2024 years ago

I love the fresh puffs, I never thought of using them for anything but a dessert but the pulled pork and coleslaw on them looked like heaven. I came to this site for your take on all things chicken LOL. (and I did that because my daughter has chickens but she reads nothing. So I will read all I can and relate to her. you have 2 followers in one) I think that cannoli filling is just ricotta and powdered sugar. I know that some want to be fancy and add heavy cream but I don’t think Nana did it… Read more »

Julie Johnson
Julie Johnson
2024 years ago

Love this heater!

Deserah Moncrieffe
Deserah Moncrieffe
2024 years ago

We have had a horrible winter here in Oregon. My seven hens and one Rooster (Prissy) survived it well. My chicks were all supposed to be hens….so they all have girly names. I am sure they would have been more comfortable with a heater. I love them so much. What a joy to have pets that give back so much more than I can ever give them, even though I spoil them!

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