Vegan Cream Puffs Recipe (2024)

January 26, 2021 / Recipes, Sweet

Vegan choux pastry recipes are almost non-existent! Once we found out about how Just Egg‘s new formula is more suitable in baking recipes, we experimented with using it to make vegan cream puffs. This was our first time ever having cream puffs as vegans! We use this base recipe for making vegan eclairs, vegan Saint Honoré, vegan red velvet croquembouche, vegan Paris-Brest, and even savory vegan gougères (cheese puffs) as well. This is a small batch recipe, so feel free to double the recipe.

Once the dough is baked, the puffs are hollow inside for easy filling! You can use this recipe with our vegan pastry cream recipe or vegan chocolate pastry cream recipe.

Sep 2022 Update:When we started creating these recipes, Just Egg was on version 2 of its formula, and they are currently on version 4. You can see “V4” on the bottle near the best-by date. The past few times making the vegan elcairs, they have been deflating and coming out very greasy, which might be due to the formula change. So I experimented making some new changes to the recipe to get it working again. I haven’t made the cream puffs in a while, but I assume they could benefit from the updated recipe as well. These changes will also probably apply to all our choux-based recipes, it will just take some time to edit each recipe.

If you try this recipe, leave us a comment below to let us know how it goes. We would love to hear from you!

Vegan Cream Puffs (Choux Pastry)

Little Lighthouse Baking Co.

These simple cream puffs are crispy with a slight chew. And the best part is that filling them is easy because they're hollow inside!

4.7 from 9 votes

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Course Dessert

Cuisine French, Vegan

Servings 30 small cream puffs

Equipment

Ingredients

  • ¼ cup water (60g)
  • ¼ cup unsweetened soy milk (60g)
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract (optional)
  • ½ tbsp sugar (6g)
  • 2 tbsp vegan butter (28g)
  • ½ cup all-purpose flour (65g)
  • ½ cup Just Egg (125g)
  • 2 tbsp unsweetened soy milk (30g) (to mix with the Just Egg)

Instructions

  • Prepare your filling. If using our pastry cream recipe, prepare it first and place it in a piping bag in the refrigerator.

  • Prepare and gather the ingredients for the choux pastry. Using the second listed amount of soy milk, mix it together with the Just Egg. Set aside for later.

  • Combine the water, soy milk, sugar, vanilla extract (if using), and butter in a small saucepan on medium heat. Mix it with a rubber spatula until the butter dissolves and then leave it for a few minutes until it starts to simmer.

  • Once the liquid ingredients begin to simmer, carefully add in all the flour. Turn the heat to low. Continue to mix until the flour is incorporated and no white flour spots remain. The mix will thicken into a dough and almost form a ball. It should come off the sides of the pan easily. This shouldn’t take more than about 3 minutes.

  • Scoop the dough out of the pan and into a mixing bowl or the bowl of a stand mixer. Avoid using a plastic bowl as the dough will be hot. Smash the dough down and flatten it to help release the heat. Leave it to cool for a few minutes. Alternatively, you can mix the dough over some ice or some ice packs to help it cool more quickly. You can also mix the dough for a few minutes in a stand mixer with a paddle attachment.

  • Once your dough is just barely warm or room temperature, add in the Just Egg mixture a few tablespoons at a time. The amount is up to you. We’re just trying to avoid mixing a ball of dough sitting in egg soup—that would be more difficult to mix! Mix it with the rubber spatula and allow it to fully incorporate in between each addition. The final consistency should just barely run off the spatula and look pipe-able. Add more soy milk a tablespoon at a time if your mixture is still too thick.

  • Preheat the oven to 400° F.

  • Line a half sheet tray with parchment paper or a silicone baking mat. Scoop the choux mixture into a piping bag with a 1/2 inch opening or smooth tip.

  • Pipe small mounds of batter, about 1 inch wide, by keeping the tip close to the parchment paper. If you make them 1 inch wide, they puff out to a little less than 1.5 inches after baking. This method gets you about 30 small cream puffs. If you would like bigger ones, pipe bigger mounds, you will just end up with fewer puffs. You can wet the tip of your finger and gently flatten the little tips that will form when you pipe the choux puffs.

    NOTE: Unlike traditional non-vegan choux, these do not puff as much.

  • Place the baking tray into the middle rack of the oven. Allow the puffs to bake until evenly golden brown. It could take from 40-45 minutes. Do not open the oven door while they are baking! This will lower the temperature of the oven and could interrupt the production of the steam inside the puffs that they need to… puff. You can check on their color in the final few minutes of baking.

  • Once the puffs are golden brown, turn off the oven and leave the oven door open a crack for 10 minutes to allow the inside of the puffs to continue to dry out while also cooling down.

  • Remove the baking tray from the oven. The puffs will still be warm. Poke a hole in the bottom of each puff with a small sharp knife. Rotate the tip of the blade when you insert it to make the hole. This allows the remaining steam to escape and helps to prevent them from deflating.

    NOTE: Bake for closer to 45 for a more hollow center and crispier outside.

  • If you are filling your puffs with pastry cream, use a piping bag with a small tip. Insert the tip into the hole on the bottom of each puff. You will feel the cream push back a bit when you’ve filled each hole with enough of the pastry cream. Wipe off any excess cream from the hole. Repeat on each puff.

  • Feel free to top your puffs with some powdered sugar, chocolate ganache, or caramel.

More From Us

Vegan Red Velvet CroquemboucheVegan Saint Honoré DessertVegan EclairsVegan Gougères (Cheese Puffs)

Vegan Cream Puffs Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Why do my cream puffs collapse after baking? ›

If the puffs collapse it means there was too much moisture in them. So either you did not dry the dough enough, or they were not cooked enough. To avoid this I recommend drying the dough really well (see below) and cracking the door of the oven open when the choux are baked. My cream puffs are soft.

Why are eggs essential in cream puffs? ›

Eggs: are the leavening (rising) agent. Yolks add fat for a tender and light texture and also act as an emulsifier for a smooth, even textured finished product. The proteins in the eggs add to the structure of the cream puff.

Is choux pastry the same as cream puffs? ›

Pate a Choux or Cream Puff Pastry--It's All the Same Simple Recipe. Whether it's called pate a choux, choux paste or cream puff pastry, the recipe is the same. This simple mixture of butter, water, salt, flour and eggs, when properly combined, bakes into golden brown cream puff and eclair shells.

How long will homemade cream puffs keep? ›

Avoid sprinkling the top with confectioner's sugar until just before using, since it tends to absorb into the puff when it is refrigerated. You can store them in any airtight container in the refrigerator for 2-3 days, and can freeze even filled puffs for several weeks.

How do you keep cream puffs filled crispy? ›

Returning puffs to a turned-off oven after they've baked helps keep them crisp.

Why must water come to a boil when making cream puffs? ›

Water and Butter

Too much fat and it will interfere with gluten production, and your cream puffs will collapse. Follow the recipe carefully! The water and butter mixture has to be boiling before adding any more ingredients because the heat is necessary to swell the starch granules in the flour.

What makes cream puffs not rise? ›

Choux pastries (i.e. cream puffs, eclairs, etc.) won't rise if the oven temperature is too low. For the pastries to rise properly, the temperature needs to be really high at first so that the steam builds up inside of the dough and causes them to rise and hollow out.

How to keep cream puffs from deflating? ›

You need to start your cream puffs at a high temperature, like 400°, to generate steam which helps provide lift. After about 10 minutes or so you need to reduce the temperature to about 350° and hold the pastry at that temperature long enough for the interior of the shells to completely dry.

Why do my cream puffs taste eggy? ›

Choux pastry tastes eggy: This is normal, for the most part! Choux pastry is mostly eggs, so you're definitely going to taste them here. If you're really tasting the eggs, then you may have added them in the while the dough is too warm.

What do the British call cream puffs? ›

Outside the United States, however, especially in the UK or Australia, profiteroles are more commonly used as a generic term for cream puffs as they can be filled with creams and sauces that go beyond whipped cream.

What is the fancy name for cream puffs? ›

A profiterole (French: [pʁɔfitʁɔl]), cream puff (US), or chou à la crème ( French: [ʃu a la kʁɛm]) is a filled French choux pastry ball with a typically sweet and moist filling of whipped cream, custard, pastry cream, or ice cream.

What is a profiterole vs cream puffs? ›

Cream puffs bigger than one's palm are not unusual these days. Profiteroles, though also round, tend to be slightly smaller (and daintier) as well as more uniform in size. They're designed to hold just the right amount of ice cream or other filling without becoming unwieldy.

Can I eat cream puff left out overnight? ›

They can stay out for about 4 hours but then need to be refrigerated. How long will the cream puffs be good for? We usually recommend consuming the cream puffs the same or next day, after 2 days they will start to become soggy, especially if your refrigerator has a lot of humidity in it.

Can I make cream puffs the night before? ›

Can you make cream puffs ahead of time? Filled cream puffs are best when eaten the same day they're made. However, you can pre-make the pâte à choux and the filling separately, waiting until just before serving to combine them. Pastry cream can be stored in the refrigerator for up to three days.

How do you make cream puffs not fall? ›

Cream puffs usually collapse for one of the following reasons:
  1. Your oven wasn't properly preheated or is not at the right temperature. High heat is critical for getting these puffs to rise and bake up structurally sound.
  2. You opened the oven door during the baking process. ...
  3. You removed them from the oven too soon.
Jan 17, 2023

How to stop choux pastry collapsing? ›

Potential pitfall: Soggy or collapsed profiteroles

The choux pastry must set fully in the oven – the humidity trapped inside the hollow interiors will soften the crisp outer shell given half a chance. Once they are baked to a golden-brown, open the oven door to briefly release any steam.

How do you keep puff pastry from collapsing? ›

How to stop pastry shrinkage
  1. Don't overwork the dough. When flour combines with liquid, proteins in it form elastic strands of gluten. ...
  2. Go easy on the liquid. ...
  3. Chill it. ...
  4. Don't trim the rim of the pastry before baking. ...
  5. Fill it up. ...
  6. Get the temperature right. ...
  7. If all else fails…

What causes a cake to collapse after baking? ›

Cakes sink in the middle due to several reasons. One reason is that the cake batter might be too moist, causing it to collapse during baking. Another reason could be that the oven temperature is too low, leading to uneven baking. Opening the oven door too frequently while baking can also cause cakes to sink.

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