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To look at these little beauties, you wouldn’t think that you could whip up a batch in less than an hour. Chouquettes (pronounced shoo-kets) are French pastry sugar puffs and can also be made into profiteroles (French cream puffs) if you’re feeling fancy.

Choquettes served in a cloth lined copper basket
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It’s that magic pâte à choux dough recipe again, the very same one used to make savory Gougères. But instead of Gruyère cheese and black pepper, you’ll add a little sugar to the dough and a generous sprinkle of pearl sugar to the top.

Choquettes Served in a Linen Lined Basket

How to Make Chouquettes

Making the chouquette dough is simple. (Also called choux pastry – the same dough used by patisseries in France to make eclairs, profiteroles, gougeres, and more.) You’ll bring most of the recipe ingredients to a boil then add the flour all at once and stir like crazy until it’s smooth and pulls away from the sides of the pan. After the dough cools for a few minutes, you’ll whisk in the eggs one by one.

step by step images for making choux pastry dough

I take a rustic approach to forming these, scooping them out in heaps with a small cookie scoop or a couple of teaspoons, but you can certainly pipe them from a pastry bag onto the baking sheet if you want more uniform puffs. A thin sugar glaze (genius tip from Clotilde’s Edible Adventures in Paris – first pair of photos below) and pearl sugar sprinkle promise a sweet crackle in every bite.

making sugar glaze
scooping glazing and baking chouquette dough

Chouquettes bake into golden brown little pastries that are crisp on the outside, and hollow, creamy and tender within (before removing from oven, turn off the oven, open it a crack and leave for 5 minutes to ensure that they don’t deflate). They’re wonderful snacks or party fare and a perfect edible gift. Wrap them up in a little paper sack as they do in Paris boulangeries.

More of My Favorite French Recipes

Homemade Chouquettes (French Pastry Sugar Puffs)

4.84 from 18 votes
Prep: 15 minutes
Cook: 30 minutes
Total: 50 minutes
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: French
Calories: 46
Servings: 35 Chouquettes
Simple to make and absolutely delicious, chouquettes are lightly sweet pastry puffs that make a wonderful snack and perfect party fare.
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Ingredients  

  • 1 cup water
  • 1 tablespoon granulated sugar
  • 1/4 teaspoon fine salt
  • 6 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 1 cup all-purpose flour 125 grams
  • 4 large eggs
  • 2 tablespoons pearl sugar (recipe note #3)

Sugar Glaze

  • 2 tablespoons water
  • 2 tablespoons granulated sugar

Instructions 

  • Preheat oven to 400ºF.
  • Line a baking sheet with parchment paper.
  • Heat water, sugar, salt, and butter in a medium saucepan until boiling. Remove from heat and add flour all at once, stirring vigorously with a wooden spoon, until dough is smooth and pulls away from the sides of the pan.
  • Let dough cool for 2 minutes then whisk in eggs, one at a time, until shiny and smooth. Set aside. (recipe note #1)
  • To make sugar glaze, combine water and sugar in a small saucepan. Bring to boil over medium heat; cook and stir until sugar dissolves, about one minute. Remove from heat and set aside to cool.
  • Scoop dough onto baking sheet with small cookie scoop (a leveled 1 tablespoon scoop is ideal). Or, scoop a walnut-size mound of dough with a teaspoon and, with a second teaspoon, scrape onto prepared baking sheet. Repeat with remaining dough, spacing the dough mounds evenly apart, giving them a little room to spread. (Or pipe dough onto baking sheet with a 1/2-inch round tip.)
  • Brush dough mounds with sugar syrup then sprinkle generously with pearl sugar. Bake for 20 to 25 minutes or until puffed and golden brown. Turn oven off and crack the door open for 5 minutes before removing them (this should prevent the chouquettes from deflating). (recipe note #2) Enjoy warm or at room temperature.

Notes

  1. Don’t be alarmed when the dough is lumpy as you add the eggs. Keep whisking (or stirring) vigorously and the dough will become smooth.
  2. For chouquettes that are more crispy, pierce with a sharp knife immediately after removing from the oven to allow steam to escape.
  3. Be sure to use Swedish pearl sugar as the Belgian variety is much larger and won’t stick well.
  4. To serve these as profiteroles, just slice in half crosswise and fill with custard, whipped cream, pastry cream, or ice cream and drizzle with chocolate sauce if you like.
  5. If you won’t be eating all of these the same day you cook them, they freeze beautifully. Let cool, then transfer to freezer bag for up to one month. Two great options for reheating:
    1. To reheat straight from the freezer: preheat oven to 350ºF then turn oven off. Arrange frozen chouquettes on ungreased baking sheet and, after you turn oven off, place in oven for 5 minutes. Serve warm or at room temperature.
    2. For a crispier version: Thaw at room temperature. Preheat oven to 350˚F. Arrange thawed chouquettes on an ungreased baking sheet and bake for 5 minutes. Serve warm or at room temperature.

Nutrition

Calories: 46kcal | Carbohydrates: 5g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 3g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Cholesterol: 26mg | Sodium: 25mg | Potassium: 12mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 2g | Vitamin A: 91IU | Calcium: 4mg | Iron: 1mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

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74 Comments

  1. Lori says:

    5 stars
    Just discovered these in France last week and am so happy to find a recipe.

    1. Marissa Stevens says:

      Wonderful! I hope you’ll love your own homemade version, Lori!

  2. Jeff says:

    4 stars
    Your recipe saved me after David Lebovitz’s directions to merely heatthe water until the butter melts, rather than boiling, which resulted in a batter rather than a dough. This was much better, though a little rest in the refrigerator made the still-loose dough much more manageable (maybe my eggs were oversized). However, you should specify Swedish pearl sugar, since my Belgian pearl sugar was way too large to properly coat the tops.

    1. Marissa Stevens says:

      So glad you enjoyed the recipe, Jeff! You’re right about using the smaller Swedish pearl sugar. I’ve added a recipe note about it.

  3. Valentina says:

    5 stars
    I haven’t made choux pastry for years and this is a most delicious reminder that I must do it. I would LOVE these with my coffee. Everyday. 🙂 ~Valentina

    1. Marissa Stevens says:

      haha…me too! Thank you, Valentina!

  4. Mary Ann | The Beach House Kitchen says:

    5 stars
    How delicious do these look Marissa?! I’d certainly have an issue with portion control. Lol! Can’t wait to give this recipe a try. Pinned!

    1. Marissa Stevens says:

      Excited for you to try these, Mary Ann! And, haha, the struggle is real! It’s nice that they freeze so well so I can get them out of arm’s reach quickly.

  5. David @ Spiced says:

    5 stars
    Pearl sugar is such a fun thing! I remember when I first stumbled across it at a grocery store in Europe. I bought like 4 boxes to bring home! (Of course, now there’s Amazon for everything….haha.) I need to pull some of that pearl sugar out to make these chouquettes for sure!

    1. Marissa Stevens says:

      It really is a fun ingredient! I hope you’ll give these a try, David.

  6. Dawn - Girl Heart Food says:

    5 stars
    I need these right now with my morning coffee! They look so perfect and super delish! What a treat and talk about a fun project to do on the weekend 🙂

    1. Marissa Stevens says:

      Thanks so much, Dawn!

  7. Katherine | Love In My Oven says:

    5 stars
    You’re so talented! These look wonderful – and I’m glad you told us how to pronounce them 😉 I’m dreaming of a little basket of a warm batch of these in my hands!

    1. Marissa Stevens says:

      And you’re so kind, Katherine! Thank you!

  8. Lea says:

    5 stars
    Hi Marissa! Thank you for this delicious recipe. I just got those beauties out of the oven 10 minutes ago and they look and smell amazing. However, I divided the dough into two ( one half, followed your recipe. And the for the second half, I smothered it with cinnamon and some vanilla because why not lol)
    It was just perfect. I just wanted to say thank you 🙂

    1. Marissa says:

      Aww, Lea, you made my day! Thank you!

  9. Natasha de Sousa says:

    Where did you get your pearl sugar? I bought mine off amaZon but the sugar pearls are too big – especially compared to the ones I’ve seen used in our local French bakery.
    The recipe is great! Have made these many times and they disappear within minutes! Thank you!

    1. Marissa says:

      Hi Natasha! I’m so glad you’re enjoying the chouquettes! I bought pearl sugar at my local grocery store – it was this brand and variety.

  10. Linda Barbour says:

    These are yummy! I’m making them for our Girl Scout World Thinking Day party tomorrow. Gonna have to make a second batch since we’ve eaten some! Wondering if dipping them in strawberry sauce or chocolate sauce will make them more inticing to kids. Will give it a shot and let you know. Thanks for the super easy recipe! Linda

    1. Marissa says:

      Hi Linda! I’m so glad that you’re enjoying the Chouquettes! Dipping them in strawberry or chocolate sauce sounds delicious to me!! 🙂

  11. Kirin says:

    I made these tonight with my daughter and they were perfect when I removed them from the oven. They delayed though. I’m not sure what I did wrong. Any tips?

    1. Marissa says:

      Hi Kirin! They deflated? I’m so sorry to hear that!! I haven’t had that happen. Perhaps they needed to cook a few minutes longer? Ovens vary so much that I’ve suggested a range of 20 to 25 minutes – do you remember how long yours baked?

  12. April Daenzer says:

    Hello, I am making these for my son’s French class for tomorrow and I am ready to make these little beauties but realizedt hat I’m out of parchment paper so should I grease the bottom of the pan or will this make them flat?

    1. Marissa says:

      Hi April! I think that greasing the pan will work just fine. Hope everyone loves them!

  13. Connie says:

    How long will these last once they are made?
    My daughter has a French class party in Wednesday & we were planning on making a few days prior ( Sunday), will they still be fresh?

    1. Marissa says:

      Hi Connie! I recommend making them, letting them cool completely and then freezing them. When you reheat them, they’ll taste 95% as good as when they first came out of the oven! To reheat: preheat oven to 350ºF then turn oven off. Arrange frozen chouquettes on a baking sheet and, after you turn oven off, place in oven for 3 to 5 minutes or until warm.

  14. ls says:

    will this recipe work with gluten free flour?

    1. Marissa says:

      Hi there. That’s a great question, but It’s not something I’ve tried. To try it, I’d use a gluten free flour intended specifically for baking like this one.

  15. Heather Eveges says:

    5 stars
    Thank you, just made these for French food day for my son’s class. How do I turn this recipe into cream puffs?

    1. Marissa says:

      Hi Heather! How fun! To turn them into cream puffs: cut them in half side to side and, if you like, pull out any soft dough. (I usually just leave it in.) For a quick option, fill the middle with whipped cream and you can dust a bit of powdered sugar over the top (optional). You can also fill them with a pastry cream like this one. Enjoy!