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Cheese Danish

Chef Christophe is here to teach you how to make his classic cheese danish recipe with super flakey danish dough and a creamy and sweet cream cheese filling.
Course Breakfast
Cuisine French
Prep Time 3 hours
Cook Time 20 minutes
Chilling time 30 minutes
Total Time 3 hours 50 minutes
Servings 28 danishes
Calories 120kcal

Equipment

  • 1 Rolling Pin
  • 1 five wheel steel cutter or a ruler (optional)

Ingredients

Danish Dough Ingredients

  • 280 grams high gluten flour (bread flour)
  • 8 grams salt
  • 45 grams sugar
  • 60 grams egg yolks
  • 5 grams instant dry yeast
  • 60 grams milk
  • 45 grams water
  • 150 grams butter for lamination

Cream Cheese Filling

  • 140 grams cream cheese softened
  • 40 grams powdered sugar
  • 60 grams heavy whipping cream

Instructions

Making The Danish Dough

  • In the bowl of your stand mixer, add your flour, salt, sugar, and yeast all together with the hook attachment.
  • Add your room temperature egg yolk, milk, and water then mix for 4 minutes on low speed. 
  • Mix for about four minutes at medium-low speed until it forms a pliable dough. (I mixed for closer to 8 minutes in my Bosch.)
  • Test your dough using the window method. This means to take a piece of your dough and stretch it thin until you can almost see through it without tearing any holes. 
  • Take your dough out of the mixer and shape it into a ball and leave it to rest in a bowl for 1 hour or until it doubles in size. Make sure to cover the dough with a towel and place it in a warm area to keep the humidity inside the bowl.
  • While your dough is resting, place your softened butter onto a sheet of plastic wrap. Fold the edges of the plastic wrap to make a 4"x6" rectangle.
  • Roll the soft butter so it fills the rectangle evenly. Place the rectangle of butter into the fridge to firm up.
  • Once your dough rises, roll the dough with a floured rolling pin into a rectangle ( 8” x 6”) and place it in the freezer covered with plastic wrap for at least 30 minutes.
  • Place the butter in the center of the dough and give the dough a book fold by folding each end towards the middle the mimic the look of a book. 
  • Roll your dough out once again to form a long rectangle (8"x 6").
  • Create another book fold by folding each end of the dough in half to where the ends meet in the middle.
  • Place your dough back on the sheet pan and cover it again with plastic wrap. Let your dough rest in the freezer for another 30 minutes.
  • Repeat the book folding process once more.
  • Rest your dough in the freezer one last time for 30 minutes.
  • Once your dough is frozen, roll your dough into a rectangle about 20” x 7”.  
  • Cut the ends of your dough to create sharp edges.
  • Roll the dough from top to bottom with your hands to form a spiral shape. Dust away the access flour on the dough as you fold. 
  • With a sharp knife, Cut small 1” tall pieces. These are your danishes. Pro Tip: You can use a 5-wheel stainless steel cutter to cut each danish accurately.
  • Take the cut end of one of your danishes, and fold it under the center to the opposite corners. Then press down firmly on the danish with your hand. This will create that classic danish shape. 

Making The Cream Cheese Filling

  • Place your softened cream cheese into a large bowl.
  • Add your room temperature cream on top of your cream cheese little by little while mixing the cream cheese with a spatula until it becomes the consistency of mayonnaise or butter.
  • Add your powdered sugar on top and mix until it forms a cream cheese frosting consistency. This is your danish filling. Set it aside until you are ready to use it. You can also make this ahead of time and store it in the fridge.

Assembling The Cheese Danish

  • Place the danishes on a large baking sheet with parchment paper underneath. Cover the sheet with plastic wrap, then proof them in a warm area (80º-90ºF) for one hour, or until they double in size. 
  • Once your danishes are proofed, remove the plastic wrap, and create a small hole in the center of each one using your fingers. Pro Tip: wear gloves when creating holes in the center to create clean circular holes.
  • Brush a thin layer of egg wash around just the sides of your danishes with a pastry brush, making sure to leave the top plain since this is where we will pipe our cheese filling. 
  • Place your cream cheese filling inside a piping bag, then cut off the tip. 
  • Fill the center of each pastry with the cream cheese filling. Fill them to your liking.
  • OPTIONAL: This is the time you can get creative and add any other fillings you’d like. Use any jams, fresh fruit, or fillings that you’d like and spoon them on top of the cream cheese mixture. My raspberry or peach filling is a perfect addition to these danishes and you can fill them in many different ways! 
  • Bake your danishes at 360º F (182º C) for about 15 to 20 minutes, or until they are nice and golden brown. 
  • Leave them to cool then dust them with powdered sugar. Serve them right away as you’d like! The danish pastries are best freshly baked but can last in the fridge for up to a week if they are kept tightly wrapped or in an airtight container. 

Video

Notes

Cream Cheese:  For these Cheese Danishes, we are using cream cheese but you may also use other cheeses that are easily spreadable or pipeable such as ricotta or burrata.
Instant Yeast: Instant yeast is a great ingredient to use when baking any bread because they have smaller particles to help the yeast dissolve more quickly. This makes it great if you don't want to leave the dough to rise for a long time. You can find this at your local grocery store.
High-Gluten Flour: Bread flour works best for this recipe to get that brioche-like texture on the inside. You can also use all-purpose flour, but it has a lower protein content, making the bread less elastic.
Using a Scale: I suggest purchasing a kitchen scale if you don't already have one to make the best scratch recipes. One cup of flour can vary from scoop to scoop depending on how packed the flour is, humidity, and the type of flour, which can ruin your recipe. All my cake recipes (except doctored box mixes) use a scale.
Practice Mise en Place: (Everything in its place) which means you measure everything before you start mixing so you don't accidentally forget something or add any ingredients out of order. I use a set of medium and small pyrex glass bowls I got from goodwill for this and it makes things SO much easier.

Nutrition

Calories: 120kcal | Carbohydrates: 11g | Protein: 2g | Fat: 7g | Saturated Fat: 5g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.4g | Monounsaturated Fat: 2g | Trans Fat: 0.2g | Cholesterol: 42mg | Sodium: 163mg | Potassium: 16mg | Fiber: 0.3g | Sugar: 3g | Vitamin A: 267IU | Vitamin C: 0.01mg | Calcium: 13mg | Iron: 0.2mg