A baked ham and cheese croissant.
Last summer, my sister and I escaped to NYC for 36 hours. We packed in a show, some good shopping, and a lot of good eating including breakfast at Eataly and dinner at Momofuku.

I’m pretty sure I’ve mentioned this getaway before — sorry, I don’t get out much — but after discovering that Danish pastry dough can be made in the food processor and, as a result, that cheese danishes can be whipped up in just a few hours, I found myself dreaming about other danish-like pastries, croissants in particular, ones brimming with prosciutto à la Eataly specifically.

The breakfast pastries we ate at Eataly were served at room temperature and were filled with slices of meat sandwich-style. They inspired me to make the pain au jambon I had read about in the Tartine cookbook, in which smoked ham and cheese are rolled and baked with the dough.

Guided by Tartine, I layered thin slices of prosciutto and batons of gruyère over my faux croissant dough, and before too long, a half dozen crackly golden pastries emerged from my oven, cheese oozing from the ridges, salty meat entwined with each flaky layer.

If you read this post about the cheese danishes, you know I am in awe of this dough. Without any labor-intensive butter-laminating process, this pastry dough bakes into a puff of feather-light layer upon feather-light layer. It’s astonishing.

Perhaps more astonishing, however, is how the finished croissants — how so many good croissants — feel and taste about as light as rice cakes, as if very little butter went into their creation at all. How do they do that? What a sham.

In any case, the possibilities with this dough seem endless — croissants aux amandes, pain au chocolat, morning buns, plain croissants perhaps made for the sole purpose of making croissant bread pudding or French toast the following day?

If you are hosting a holiday brunch, know that the rolled croissants can be prepared a day in advance, stored in the fridge for up to 18 hours, and after a three-hour rise the following morning, baked to golden perfection.

As with the cheese danishes, too, they reheat incredibly well on subsequent mornings, and when halved and toasted and filled with a fried egg, they make just about the best breakfast sandwich you could ever imagine.

Homemade ham and cheese croissants, cooling on a rack.

Rolling out the croissant dough

Croissant dough, rolled out, cut into triangles, top with slices of smoked ham.

Croissant dough, rolled out, cut into triangles, top with slices of smoked ham and cheese.

Ham and cheese croissants, rolled and ready to rise.

Ham and cheese croissants, brushed with an egg wash.

Freshly baked ham and cheese croissants.

A freshly baked ham and cheese croissant.

A halved ham and cheese croissant.

I received a couple of comments/questions regarding the rolling out process of the Danish pastry dough, and how to do it without adding too much flour. I hope this video offers some guidance:

These are two rolled croissants that spent 12 hours in the fridge. The following morning, after letting them rise for 3 hours…
rolled croissants after 18 hours in the fridge

…they baked off beautifully. This is nice to know if you want to shape the croissants the night before you plan on serving them.
baked croissants after a night in the fridge

Toasted, halved, and topped with a fried egg. Yum.
prosciutto and gruyère croissant with fried egg via Instagram

Print
clock clock iconcutlery cutlery iconflag flag iconfolder folder iconinstagram instagram iconpinterest pinterest iconfacebook facebook iconprint print iconsquares squares iconheart heart iconheart solid heart solid icon
smoked ham and gruyère croissant

Smoked Ham (or Prosciutto) & Gruyere Croissants


5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star

5 from 8 reviews

Save Recipe

Description

Pastry Dough Source: Nigella Lawson’s How to Be a Domestic Goddess

If you want to make cheese danishes, view this post. Day-old pastries reheat nicely at 350ºF for 10 minutes or so.


Ingredients

processor danish pastry:

  • 1/4 cup (60 ml) warm water
  • 1/2 cup (125 ml) milk at room temperature
  • 1 large egg at room temperature
  • 2 1/4 cups (286 g) all-purpose flour
  • 1 package (2.25 tsp. | 7 g) instant yeast
  • 1 teaspoon kosher salt
  • 1 tablespoon (25g) sugar
  • 1 cup (250 g) unsalted butter, cold, cut into thin slices

pain au jambon:

  • 8 to 16 thin slices prosciutto di Parma or smoked ham (depending on how many croissants you are making)
  • Gruyère or similar cheese, about 1/2 oz per croissant (I used 4 oz. total), cut into matchstick-sized pieces
  • egg wash: 1 egg beaten with 2 tablespoons of milk

Instructions

  1. Make the pastry: If you are using instant yeast or fresh yeast and have planned ahead such that you know you will be refrigerating the dough over night: Pour the water and milk into a measuring cup and add the egg, beating with a fork to mix. Set aside. If you need to speed up your dough-making process or want to make sure your yeast is alive and well: Sprinkle yeast over the warm water and milk with a little bit of the sugar (I take 1/2 teaspoon from the 1 tablespoon) and let stand until the mixture starts to foam a little bit. Then, beat egg with a fork until broken up and add to milk-yeast mixture. Beat mixture with fork again until just combined. Set aside.
  2. Place a large bowl near your food processor. Then put the flour, yeast (if you haven’t mixed it with the milk), salt and sugar in the processor, and give it one quick whizz just to mix. Add the cold slices of butter and process briefly so that the butter is cut up a little. You still want visible chunks of butter about least 1/2 inch in size — about 10 to 15 short pulses.
  3. Empty the contents of the food processor into the large bowl, then add in the milk-egg mixture. Use your hands or a rubber spatula to mix the ingredients together, but don’t overdo it: expect to have a gooey mess with some butter lumps pebbling it. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap, put in the refrigerator, and leave overnight or up to 4 days. (Note: If you have “bloomed” your yeast as noted in step 1, you can get away with two hours in the fridge at this step.)
  4. To turn the dough into pastry, take it (or half of it — I find it easier to work with half the amount of dough at this step) out of the refrigerator, let it get to room temperature (or don’t if you are pressed for time) and roll the dough out into a 20-inch square. (Note: Don’t worry too much about inches here — just try to roll the dough out into a large square that is relatively thin. Also, you will need to lightly dust your work surface with flour and add more flour as needed to your rolling pin and board.) Fold the dough square into thirds, like a business letter, turning it afterward so that the closed fold is on your left, like the spine of a book. Roll the dough out again into a large square (mine always looks more like a rectangle), repeating the steps above 3 times.
  5. Wrap the dough in plastic wrap, and put it in the refrigerator for 30 minutes (you can keep it in the refrigerator for up to 4 days, if you haven’t already done so at the earlier stage), or refrigerate half to use now and put the other half in the freezer to use later. (Note: If you are pressed for time, skip this 30 minute chill time.)
  6. Roll the croissants: Roll the dough out again into a large square or rectangle. Cut the dough in half lengthwise and crosswise. Then cut each each of the four pieces created in half diagonally. (See pictures for guidance.)
  7. Lay a piece of prosciutto or smoked ham over two-thirds (or more) of each triangle, leaving the pointed tip uncovered. Scatter the batons of Gruyère over top. Starting with the wide base of each triangle, carefully roll up each croissant, encasing the ham and cheese as you go.
  8. Place the rolled croissants on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper and brush with the egg wash. Leave them to rise until they double in size, about 1 1/2 hours; they should then feel like marshmallow. (Note: With both the cheese danishes and these croissants, it never looks as though the pastries have doubled nor does the texture of the dough feel as fluffy marshmallow. I just stick them in the oven after 1.5 hours regardless of how they look.)
  9. Meanwhile, about 30 minutes before they’re ready to be cooked, preheat the oven to 350°F. Place in the oven and bake for 15 to 20 minutes or until puffy and golden brown.
  • Prep Time: 12 hours
  • Cook Time: 20 minutes
  • Category: Breakfast
  • Method: Baked
  • Cuisine: French