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If you visit a classic French Bakery, you’ll likely see these behind a shiny glass: “Croissants aux Amandes” (aka Almond Croissants).
My cousin’s wife, Katya, shared this recipe with me on our recent trip to the Seattle area. She served them with breakfast alongside a hot latte. These almond croissants were delicious and easy to make. The recipe can be cut in half for a smaller crowd. What a wonderful treat!
Ingredients for Almond Croissants:
8 (one-day-old) medium/large croissants, left at room temp uncovered overnight
3 Tbsp sliced almonds
Powdered (Confectioner’s) sugar for dusting
Ingredients for the syrup:
2 Tbsp sugar
4 Tbsp rum (optional, but highly recommended. You can use 1 tsp Vanilla extract instead)
1 Cup water
Ingredients for the Almond Cream (crème d’amandes):
1/2 cup granulated sugar
1 cup almond meal/almond flour (or 2/3 cup whole blanched almonds, but you’ll need a good food processor to process almonds into an almond meal)
1/8 tsp of salt
1 stick (8 Tbsp) unsalted butter, room temp, sliced
2 large eggs

Watch How To Make Almond Croissants:
How to Make the Syrup:
1. In a small saucepan, combine 1 cup water, 2 Tbsp sugar and 4 Tbsp rum. Bring to a simmer for a minute and stir until the sugar dissolves then remove from heat and let cool to room temp.

How to Make the Almonds Filling:
If using whole almonds: combine 1/2 cup sugar, 2/3 cup almonds and 1/8 tsp salt in the bowl of a food processor, and pulse until finely ground. Add the butter, and mix again until well blended. Add in the eggs one by one, and process on high speed until creamy and fluffy.
If using almond meal or almond flour: In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the whisk attachment, combine 1/2 cup sugar, 1 cup almond meal and 1/8 tsp salt. Mix until well incorporated, then blend in the butter. Finally add the eggs 1 at a time and mix on med/high speed until the whole mixture is creamy and fluffy.

If it looks like this,

beat it some more until it looks like this:

Assembling your French Almond Croissants:
Preheat the oven to 350° F . Line a cookie sheet with parchment paper.
1. After your croissants have been on the counter drying out overnight, and you’re ready to use them, slice each croissant horizontally like you would for a sandwich.
2. Work with each croissant one by one: dip it into the syrup, coating both sides and the ends well. The croissant should be quite moist, but not soaking wet. Just dip it once on each side.
3. Arrange the croissants on a baking dish, cut side up. Spread about 2 Tbsp of almond filling on the bottom half of each croissant.
4. Place the top halves on and spread about 1 Tbsp of almond filling over the top. Sprinkle with sliced almonds.

5. Bake on the center rack for 15 to 18 minutes or until the cream is golden. Transfer to a wire rack and cool to room temperature or just warm. Dust with powdered sugar before serving. These are best served the same day they are made.

Credits: I learned to make these from my cousin’s wife, Katya. The original recipe was adapted from Clotilde’s Almond Croissants.
Now I’m so so curious, what’s your favorite dish to serve guests for breakfast?
Almond Croissants Recipe (French Bakery Style)

Ingredients
- 8 one-day-old medium/large croissants, left at room temp uncovered overnight
- 3 Tbsp sliced almonds
- Powdered, Confectioner's sugar for dusting
- 2 Tbsp sugar
- 4 Tbsp rum, optional, but highly recommended. You can use 1 tsp Vanilla extract instead
- 1 Cup water
- 1/2 cup granulated sugar
- 1 cup almond meal/almond flour, or 2/3 cup whole blanched almonds, but you'll need a good food processor to process almonds into an almond meal
- 1/8 tsp salt
- 1 stick, 8 Tbsp unsalted butter, room temp, sliced
- 2 large eggs
Instructions
How to Make the Syrup:
- In a small saucepan, combine 1 cup water, 2 Tbsp sugar and 4 Tbsp rum. Bring to a simmer for a minute and stir until the sugar dissolves then remove from heat and let cool to room temp.
How to Make the Almonds Filling:
- If using whole almonds: combine 1/2 cup sugar, 2/3 cup almonds and 1/8 tsp salt in the bowl of a food processor, and pulse until finely ground. Add the butter, and mix again until well blended. Add in the eggs one by one, and process on high speed until creamy and fluffy.
- If using almond meal or almond flour: In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the whisk attachment, combine 1/2 cup sugar, 1 cup almond meal and 1/8 tsp salt. Mix until well incorporated, then blend in the butter. Finally add the eggs 1 at a time and mix on med/high speed until the whole mixture is creamy and fluffy with a frosting-like consistency.
Assembling your French Almond Croissants:
- Preheat the oven to 350° F . Line a cookie sheet with parchment paper.
- After your croissants have been on the counter drying out overnight, and you're ready to use them, slice each croissant horizontally like you would for a sandwich.
- Work with each croissant one by one: dip it into the syrup, coating both sides and the ends well. The croissant should be quite moist, but not soaking wet. Just dip it once on each side.
- Arrange the croissants on a baking dish, cut side up. Spread about 2 Tbsp of almond filling on the bottom half of each croissant.
- Place the top halves on and spread about 1 Tbsp of almond filling over the top. Sprinkle with sliced almonds.
- Bake on the center rack for 15 to 18 minutes,or until the cream is golden. Transfer to a wire rack and cool to room temperature or just warm. Dust with powdered sugar before serving. These are best served the same day they are made.




hi Natasha! pls do you have a recipe for croissants? these look amazing and i want to try them. obviously i have to use vanilla. LOL!
Hello Annah, I have this Almond Croissant Recipe. I hope you like it!
pls i mean regular croissants not almond croissants
Do you have a recipe that uses prepared almond paste to make the almond cream? I’m trying to use up several tubes of the 7 oz Odense almond paste. Just got some Costco croissants as well-couldn’t resist. Thanks.
Hi Karen, I don’t have a recipe for that yet but that’s a good idea!
Would you be able to use freshly baked croissants for this recipe? If so how would you do this?
You can but you will need to take an extra step. Here’s what one of our readers wrote ” I bought fresh croissants and put them in the oven at 170 for 13 minutes this made them not as soft then I followed the rest of the recipe and it turned it great!” I hope that helps
Hi Natasha! i made 3 batches of your recipe…but when my croissants came out of the oven they had flattened? what could i have done wrong?
Hi Sarah, I haven’t seen that happen with fully cooked croissants. I wonder if maybe there was too much syrup on them? Did they seem squishy and collapsing before they went into the oven?
Hi Natasha, they were soft after dipping in the sugar syrup. Does that mean i used too much sytrup? or maybe they needed to be out to dry longer? I used costco croissants and had them sit out overnight. I’ll try the recipe again!
Hi Sarah, it sounds like they were too wet – just a quick dip is all that’s needed. I let mine sit out uncovered overnight from Costco and it works well.
Hi, do you think you could freeze these?
Hi Jo, I’ve never tried freezing them so I can’t make a recommendation. If anyone tried freezing these, please share your results.
Yep! I make heaps of these and wrap them in parchment paper, cling wrap and into a zip lock bag. Then I just take them out, cook them and they’re amazing 🙂
Do you freeze them before baking? Or bake, then freeze, then reheat?
Can I double or triple the recipe?
I’ve made these before and they are sooo delicious- now that the liquor store is closed I can’t buy rum. Have you tried with vanilla? Does it produce similar results? I’m trying to come up with something for Mother’s Day. Unless you have other recommendations! Thank you!
I’m so glad you enjoyed that Mary. Vanilla will work. See our note in the recipe “4 Tbsp rum (optional, but highly recommended. You can use 1 tsp Vanilla extract instead)” I hope that helps
So does that mean only use 1tsp of vanilla or 4 tsp of vanilla? Thanks!
You can use 1 tsp Vanilla extract instead of rum.
Thank you Natasha! I was looking for an almond filling recipe and came across your “quickie” almond croissants. I used your filling recipe, blanched my own almonds and ground them in my mini-processor. It was moister than almond flour for sure and grittier but I have to say that after baking you could not tell! I used the filling to put into a danish braid recipe that I had used with pecans in the past. After recently tasting an almond croissant at a market I was hooked and have been hankering to try something similar but without making the croissant myself. Your solution is genius and I will try that with my leftover filling. The danishes turned out so highly addictive that I just can’t stop eating it!!! We are doing a LOT of new recipes. This one is a definite keeper!! One important addition, I had to add 1 tsp of almond extract to the filling to get more almond taste. Then it was like marzipan madness in my mouth!
I’m so glad you enjoyed this recipe, Linda! Your idea is very creative, I can picture it! Thank you for sharing that with us.
These were amazing!!! We have a bakery that sells these but it’s sooooo far away. So I wanted to try these and see if I could have them at home and oh my gosh these were just like the bakery! I think next time I’ll brush on the sugar syrup instead of dipping it because some were a little soggier than others. I also doubled the filling on some and that was great! Thank you so much for the recipe! Will definitely use again and again!
You’re welcome Lisa! I’m so glad you enjoyed this recipe!
I made these over the weekend for the first time and it came out great! The steps were easy to follow and pictures were helpful. I am new to baking so it’s been a fun learning experience. A few things I noticed:
– I had the perfect amount of almond cream but ended up with a fair amount of leftover syrup. I had 8 croissants and dipped each side once (inside and out), so maybe I could have added a little more? That’s just practice I think. I felt guilty because I didn’t know what to do with the excess.
– When I re-assembled I kind of just placed the tops on and applied the cream and almonds but they fell apart a little when handling after baking, so I think I could have “smushed” them together better. I was afraid of too much seeping out.
– I took a risk and put some dark chocolate morsels inside a few of them and it worked out really well (for us at least). I thought about melting and drizzling it on top but was running out of time, so maybe next time.
So great to hear that it was a success! Thank you so much for sharing some tips and suggestions.
Hi Natasha,
Thanks for sharing the recipe. I made this this morning with small croissant and came out well. I skipped the sliced almonds and the powdered sugar but still came out well.
I’m so glad you liked that!
Just made them; came out great, but I will be adding some almond paste to the next batch.
I’m so happy you enjoyed that. Thank you for sharing that with us!
These are soooo good! I’ve made them 4 times over the last 6 weeks.
I’m so glad to hear that! Thank you for sharing that amazing review!
I have Almond flour…..do I need Almond meal? Can’t WAIT to try these!
Great question, Carol. We used Almond Meal as the base.
So I shouldn’t need to blanch the almonds and can make my own almond meal from almonds with peel on (grind in food processor)?
Hi Sarah, most almond flours have the peels removed or it will change the consistency and color of your almond flour. Do a quick google search of how to make almond flour – its very simple to do.
I googled the difference and it seems they are pretty much the same thing.
These are great! They taste just like bakery almond croissants. I added almond, and vanilla extract to the filling, and they tasted fantastic.
Thank you for sharing the recipe.
That’s so great! I’m so glad you enjoyed that!
Thank you for sharing the recipe. I’ve made these several time and they are always a big hit. I’ll be making these in the morning for a nice treat since we can’t go anywhere. My boys are looking forward to them.
You’re so welcome. I’m glad that your boys loved this recipe! I hope that you love every recipe that you try. Stay safe and healthy.
You know this isn’t a real recipe right? It’s like saying “pepperoni pizza recipe” and they saying, first go to a restaurant and buy a pizza. Then come home and put pepperoni on it. You can’t start a recipe for croissants with day old croissants. Sorry. This is buying something from the store and putting stuff on it. Homemade biscuits with cranberries: go get a biscuit from the store, cut it open, and put cranberries inside. Not a thing. Not a recipe.
Hi Bill, as you will see in the copy above, this is exactly what bakeries do. They take day-old croissants and repurpose them. They don’t bake fresh croissants to make almond croissants. I’m sharing how easy it is to recreate this recipe at home. You are definitely welcome to make your own croissants if you prefer.
dont be a snob Bill, that’s like saying mac and cheese recipes arent recipes because they dont tell you how to make your own macaroni or how to make homemade cheese. Or or a salad recipe isnt a recipe because it doesnt tell how to grow your own vegetables. All recipes are recipes. This one is exactly a recipe I was hoping for, ain’t no way in hell am I going to be spending a day just to make an almond crossiant, I ain’t no bakery. It’s useful content and a very much appreciated recipe for people who dont have French bakeries nearby.
Cheer up bro, stay chill.
Agreed! There is no shame in taking shortcuts in the kitchen.
Or same goes for those people who use double cream when they cook fettuccini Alfredo or carbonara.
Also, my aunt is a pastry chef who studied in France. I asked her and she said this is how they do them. They even sell day old croissants. She also makes this really shiny glaze that she puts on top of the pastries but I don’t. I use the good old Karo corn syrup.
It’s true that this is how French bakeries make their almond croissants! We visited Paris for the first time a few months ago and I was surprisingly disappointed because I love almond croissants but so many of them we bought from patisseries there were really flat and soggy. Then a few weeks back, I watched a Youtube short where a woman who works at a French Bakery in France was showing her work, and she was demonstrating how they take their day old croissants, cover them with this almond cream paste stuff, and bake to make their almond croissants, and then it ALL made sense! This one is a legit recipe!
Whats a good brand of powered sugar you use? it seems all the ones I use just taste so bad
Hi Jess, we use C&H powdered sugar but you can also make your own powdered sugar. There are several tutorials online like this one.
Hello! What do I do with the left lover filling? It’s too much for 8 croissants.
Thank you.
HI Alina, we use it primarily for these croissants. If using smaller croissants, you can definitely fill more. Mine were the big ones from Costco. I have seen people make stuffed french toast with it. yum!
When we were in Paris, we had croissants exactly like these. When we returned to the US, we weren’t able to find a bakery that made “Parisian” style croissants. Thanks for posting this. These are the absolute best croissants!
Wow! I’m so happy you discovered this recipe! Thank you so much for sharing this with me Jessica!
My niece made these and they were so good, I have the ingredients and going to make them, seeing I go to church early on Sunday I wanted to prepare them ahead of time and just bake them in the morning to take to church ..she assembled everything ahead of time , even days before and put them in the freezer and takes one or two as she wants them and bakes to eat them fresh …so anyone wanting to make a full batch can take out only what they want for that day…have you ever done that?
I have not Dottie, that is so great that worked out for you! I’m happy you enjoyed that and than you for sharing this with me! I’ll have to give that a try
Can i use brandy instead of Rum? Has anyone here tried this….Im hoping it wont ruin the taste. And if i had no choice but to buy fresh crossiants and need to make them before they r about day old does the pre baking them in the oven method work well r are there other options?? Thanks Natasha!
Hi Inna, I haven’t tried brandy but I think it might work well. The recipe works best with day old croissants which aren’t as soft but it will still work with fresher ones. I suggest arranging them on a wire rack and letting them sit uncovered at room temperature as long as you can to dry them out a little before using.
Bought the croissant today as I have a hard time going to stores , can I freeze them and when they thaw do I have to wait a additional day to set them out so they can go stale ?
Hi Dottie, they should be perfectly fine to use once defrosted.
Natasha I been following this recipe for the past 3 years. I make them during the holidays as gifts to my friends, they all look forward to having them on Christmas morning at their doorstep, since I deliver them at midnight. Thank you for sharing your recipe!
That’s so sweet! Sounds like you have awesome Christmas Tradition to look forward to! Thank you for sharing that with us!
Wow, what a great idea! Love it 😍 I should do that !