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The Flavor Bender   ›   Recipes   ›   Delicious Desserts   ›   Pastry Recipes   ›   Chouquettes Recipe (French Sugar Puffs)

Chouquettes Recipe (French Sugar Puffs)

Author:

Dini Kodippili







Jump to Recipe


Posted: 7/2/2020
Total Time1 hour hr
Quick and Easy Recipes
Pastry Recipes

Chouquettes are little morsels of delight. These French pastries are round, airy choux pastry, with custard-like insides, and a sweet, crunchy pearl sugar topping on the outside. Elegantly simple and delicious.

Chouquettes are fast and easy to make, and addictively delicious!

An overhead view of a batch of chouquettes on a wire rack
Contents
 [hide]
  • What are chouquettes?
  • How to make chouquettes
  • Tips for perfecting this recipe
  • How to serve chouquettes
  • How to upgrade this chouquettes recipe

Let’s start with the important question.

What are chouquettes?

These are little choux pastry puffs that are baked with Swedish pearl sugar on top.

The pearl sugar is generously sprinkled on top before the pastry is baked.

The result is a puffy, light choux pastry, with an addictively crunchy sweetness on the outside.

Fair warning though, it is SO easy to gobble these babies up one after another. You’ll need a heavy dose of self-restraint to stop from turning into a chouquette yourself.

A close up of the inside of a chouquette

How to make chouquettes

There are only two components to this sweet, simple snack.

  1. Choux pastry
  2. Swedish pearl sugar

Choux pastry

I adore making choux pastry! I could make it with my eyes closed. OK, maybe not quite, but I’ve made it hundreds upon hundreds of times over many years, it’s pretty much muscle memory for me by now.

Choux pastry is a very simple dough, and the fact that these chouquettes don’t even need a filling means that these babies can enter my gullet after being baked that much sooner.

I have a separate post on all the basics of choux pastry, with plenty of troubleshooting tips. You can use that recipe and guide to get perfect results for your choux pastry too.

How to tet for the right consistency for choux pastry - Finger test - make sure the sides of the trough doesn't fall into the trough.
Here’s just a quick run down of the choux pastry recipe

Melt the butter and milk in a saucepan, along with a pinch of salt and sugar. Bring the mixture to a boil.

Add the flour (off heat), and stir to form a dough. You will need to cook it for a few minutes to get the right consistency.

Let it cool and then add the eggs (a little, or one egg at a time), just until you get the correct, pipeable consistency.

Store any unused pastry dough in a piping bag, or ziploc bag to prevent the dough from being exposed to air and forming a skin. You can also store the dough in an air-tight container, as long as you place a plastic wrap over it, touching the surface.

It’s very easy to make choux pastry, if you know what to look for at each step. If you’re new to making choux, I highly recommend reading my in-depth post on how to make choux pastry.

Make sure to line a baking sheet with parchment paper or a silicone mat. The sugar pearls that are on the tray will melt and caramelize, so a lined pan is easier to clean.

Piped choux pastry wth a long pointed tip on a parchment lined baking tray
Flattening the pointed tops of the choux pastry

Swedish pearl sugar

Pearl sugar is compressed sugar crystals, formed into large pieces. The large, round-ish particles don’t melt inside baked goods, and retain a nice crunch.

Pearl sugar usually comes in two sizes.

  • Swedish pearl sugar – smaller compressed sugar particles.
  • Belgian pearl sugar – larger compressed sugar particles.

For chouquettes, the smaller pearl sugar (Swedish pearl sugar) is used, because the chouquettes are small themselves. You can have more of the smaller pearl sugar covering a surface area (compared to the larger ones), resulting in a more crunchy texture in the final baked product.

Belgian pearl sugar is used for Belgian waffles. These larger sugar pearls have a bigger crunch, and hide well in larger “baked” goods; like the thick liege waffle.

An image of Swedish pearl sugar
Swedish pearl sugar

Baking chouquettes

If you’ve made profiteroles before, then these will be eeeaaasy.

I prefer to make chouquettes slightly smaller than the profiteroles that I usually make. So that these will be bite-sized desserts that can easily be popped in to your mouth. They will also bake faster.

Once you’ve piped the choux pastry on a tray, keep the remaining choux pastry in the piping bag.

Generously sprinkle the tops of the choux pastry with Swedish sugar pearls. It’s important that they’re sprinkled with pearl sugar densely, because as the pastry bakes and expands, the sugar pearls will spread out as well.

An image of an active shot of sprinkling Swedish pearl sugar on the choux pastry

Once the chouquettes are baked, let them cool down to room temperature. And then devour them immediately!

These are perfect just the way they are. Cue the Bruno Mars song…

Choux pastry generously coated with pearl sugar, before baking

Tips for perfecting this recipe

Make sure you get the choux pastry dough right. Pipeable but not runny consistency, and glossy. All the tips and secrets for that are in this post on making perfect choux pastry.

Get the size of the chouquettes right. Piping them at the appropriate size might take some practice, but it’s easy. You can watch the video here to see how I pipe consistent shapes (I count up to 2 when piping these chouquettes).

When piping, keep the tip just below the surface to avoid poop emoji shapes. 🙂 Then flatten the tip with a little water to prevent them form burning.

Sprinkle with pearl sugar generously. There will invariably be some extra pearl sugar that end up on the baking sheet instead.

Since these are smaller pastries, I prefer to bake them at one specific temperature. So no changing temperatures halfway through the baking process.

Freshly baked chouquettes on the baking tray

Allow the pastries to get some color during the baking process. If you take them out while they are only a light golden color, the insides might not have dried enough, and this can lead to collapsed and flat chouquettes.

Don’t forget to prick the cases to allow excess air to flow out of the hot pastry puffs. This also prevents the pastries from collapsing or getting soggy.

The insides of your chouquettes should be airy, soft, and custard-like, with a crisp shell on the outside. If you find that the insides are raw, then consider these possibilities,

  • Was the dough pipeable, or was it hard to pipe (too thick)? If so, the pastry wasn’t light enough to expand and the insides remained raw.
  • Did you pipe larger choux patries? If so, you will need to increase the baking time to cook the insides through.
  • Still raw? Maybe your oven runs a little hotter, and you may need to reduce the temperature slightly to get the pastries to bake all the way through.
A plate of chouquettes

How to serve chouquettes

They can be served just the way they are.

The soft, milky interior, and crisp outer pastry shell are delicious, but the crunchy sugar pearls put these babies over the top!

But if you’d really like to, you can fill these with a little whipped cream for an upgraded version of cream puffs (French cream puffs).

Just like choux pastry, cream puffs, classic eclairs, profiteroles, choux au craquelin, and even delicious churros, these are also great when served with a thick, luscious mug of French hot chocolate (Parisian hot chocolate)!

Classic chouquettes, served in a paper cone that is placed flat on a cloth napkin on a table.

How to upgrade this chouquettes recipe

THIS is the fun part! 🙂

You can easily upgrade these chouquettes with some simple changes.

  • Brown butter chouquettes – replace the butter with browned butter to give these a lovely flavor boost. See my in-depth post on how to make brown butter.
  • Or add some lemon extract to the dough to turn these into lemon chouquettes.
  • Scrape some fresh vanilla (or use good quality vanilla extract) to make these chouquettes very vanilla forward.
  • Sprinkle some sea salt flakes along with the pearl sugar for a sweet and salty treat.
  • Fill the chouquettes with whipped cream for French cream puffs, or you can opt for a pastry cream (vanilla pastry cream or chocolate pastry cream) if you like too.
Chouquettes served on a plate in the background, with a few focused in the foreground

Recipe

5 from 12 votes

Classic Chouquettes

Author: Dini Kodippili
Yield: Makes between 28 – 35 chouquettes, depending on the size.
Cuisine: European, French

 Difficulty: 

Easy
These perfect chouquettes are easy to make with this step by step recipe. They are deliciously addictive little French pastries, with a soft, airy, custard-like inside, and a crisp outer shell studded with Swedish pearl sugar!
EASY – This recipe is very easy. You don't need a filling for these, they are perfect just the way they are. You do require one specialty ingredient, however – Swedish pearl sugar. This gives the chouquettes their characteristic sweet, crunchy exterior.
US based cup, teaspoon, tablespoon measurements. Common Measurement Conversions. Weight measurements are recommended for accurate results. You can toggle between METRIC and US UNITS using the toggle button below the ingredients list.

US based cup, teaspoon, tablespoon measurements. Weight‌ ‌measurements‌ ‌are‌ ‌recommended‌ ‌for‌ ‌accurate‌ ‌results whenever available.

Common Measurement Conversions
Prep: 30 minutes mins
Cook: 30 minutes mins
Cool down: 20 minutes mins
Total Time: 1 hour hr
Print Recipe Rate SaveSaved!
Makes: 30 Chouquettes

Ingredients:
 

Choux pastry
  • 240 mL milk 8 fl oz / 1 cup
  • 115 g unsalted butter, cubed and at room temp. 4 oz / 1 stick
  • 135 g AP flour 4.7 oz / 1 ⅛ cup, spoon and leveled
  • 4 large eggs you may not use the whole amount
  • ½ tsp sea salt use less if using table salt or fine salt
  • 2 tbsp white sugar
  • ½ tsp vanilla extract optional
Topping
  • 1 cup Swedish pearl sugar you may not need the whole amount.

Instructions:
 

Chouquettes
  • Preheat oven to 375°F. Prepare 2 baking trays by lining them with parchment paper.
  • Place the salt, milk, sugar, and butter in a saucepan, and heat over medium heat, stirring occasionally.
    240 mL milk, 115 g unsalted butter, cubed and at room temp., ½ tsp sea salt, 2 tbsp white sugar
  • When the milk is starting to boil (butter should be melted at this point), add the flour in one go and vigorously mix in the flour while the saucepan is off heat, so that it absorbs all of the milk (use a wooden spoon or spatula to do this).
    135 g AP flour
  • When the flour has absorbed the water and it's coming together as a dough, return the pan to the stove (medium heat). Cook the dough for 1 – 3 minutes while you mix and move it around in the pan. Do this until you get a dough that pulls away from the sides of the pan. If you gather all of the dough on one side of the saucepan, you should be able to stick a tablespoon in the dough and it should stay upright, and the texture of the dough should look like mashed potatoes. This is the correct consistency.
  • Transfer the dough into a bowl, and let it cool down slightly for a few minutes. In the meantime, whisk all the eggs in a jug. The eggs should be whisked to mix the yolks and egg whites.
    4 large eggs
  • Add the vanilla extract to the dough, and then add the eggs in 4 – 5 additions, while mixing each portion into the dough well, between additions. You can use a handheld mixer or a whisk to do this. For larger batches, you can use a stand mixer.
    ½ tsp vanilla extract
  • Only add enough eggs to get the right consistency (i.e. a dough with a glossy sheen, and a pipeable consistency. You may or may not use up all of the eggs).
  • Place the dough in a large piping bag.
  • Pipe small, circular mounds of choux pastry dough, using a piping bag fitted with a large round tip (I use Wilton 1A or 2A tip, or you can snip the pastry bag to create an opening instead). The triangular pastry mounds are about 1 inch at the base, and roughly ¾ inch in height.
  • Flatten the tips of the pastries with a wet finger to prevent burnt tips.
  • Once you’ve piped one baking tray, leave the remaining dough in the pastry bag. Only pipe the choux pastry dough just before you’re ready to bake the second tray (otherwise the dough will form a skin when exposed to air).
  • Generously sprinkle the tops of the piped dough with Swedish pearl sugar. Make sure the sugar pearls are slightly pressed into the dough.
    1 cup Swedish pearl sugar
  • Bake in the preheated oven for about 20 – 25 minutes (in the center of the oven), or until the choux pastry shells puff up and are golden brown on top. Do not open the oven door, at least until you have reached the 15 – 17 minute mark.
  • When the chouquettes have turned a beautiful, deep golden color, remove them from the oven. Immediately (and carefully) prick each of the pastries with a toothpick, or skewer, or the tip of a small, sharp knife, and let the choux pastry cases cool completely in a draft-free area. The pastries should form a nice crust, with white sugar pearls studded on the surface.
  • Repeat with the remaining dough.
  • When the cases are at room temperature, they are ready to be served (and devoured!).

Recipe Notes

Chouquettes are best eaten as soon as they are made. They do not keep well. 
If you do have leftovers, they will get soggy as they are stored, so you can reheat them in the oven to “recrisp” them. 
Tips for perfecting this recipe.
How to upgrade the flavor of these chouquettes. 

Nutrition Information:

Serving: 1pastry Calories: 60kcal (3%) Carbohydrates: 5g (2%) Protein: 1g (2%) Fat: 4g (6%) Saturated Fat: 2g (13%) Cholesterol: 31mg (10%) Sodium: 51mg (2%) Potassium: 24mg (1%) Fiber: 1g (4%) Sugar: 1g (1%) Vitamin A: 139IU (3%) Calcium: 14mg (1%) Iron: 1mg (6%)

“This website provides approximate nutrition information for convenience and as a courtesy only. Nutrition data is gathered primarily from the USDA Food Composition Database, whenever available, or otherwise other online calculators.”

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About

Dini Kodippili

Dini Kodippili is a professional food writer, recipe developer, food photographer, cookbook author, and baker. Dini has been featured on HuffPost, Cosmopolitan, Forbes, Delish, Food & Wine and more. Learn More

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23 responses

  1. may
    February 9, 2026

    Can the dough be made ahead of time and refrigerated until I’m ready to pipe and bake them?

    Reply
    1. Dini Kodippili
      February 10, 2026

      Hi May
      You can do this, but the dough might be too firm to pipe while chilled. So you may need to let it come to room temperature to make it easier to pipe.
      I hope that helps

      Reply
  2. Kitty
    December 12, 2024

    5 stars
    I found this recipe today and decided to make it asap. i dont have pearl sugar so i used crushed sugar cubes instead and they turned out really well!!

    Reply
  3. ChrisC
    May 4, 2024

    5 stars
    This is my to-go-to recipe for chouquettes. I’ve made them many times and they are consistently well received by family and friends. Thanks Dini! For the very detailed explanation

    Reply
    1. Dini
      May 4, 2024

      I’m so glad the instructions helped, thank you for letting me know Chris!

      Reply
  4. Jo
    December 31, 2023

    i’ve made choux pastry before but hadn’t ever seen milk used instead of water before–and now I know why. followed the recipe to the letter, weighed my ingredients, used a digital thermometer, and my pastry was liquid.

    DO NOT USE 4 EGGS.

    Jesus christ in agony on the cross, PLEASE, just use king arthur baking’s recipe for this. This came out a disaster. I’m sorry Dini, I’m sure it worked in your kitchen, but I just wasted like $30 bucks worth of food and my new years eve because I wanted crunchier choquettes. never again. I’m sure you don’t publish any of your negative reviews, but failure made me so irrationally angry. I just wanted some dessert, damn.

    Reply
    1. Dini
      December 31, 2023

      Hi Jo,
      It’s unfortunate that the recipe didn’t work in your hands. So let me take the time to explain and help, even if you seem unwilling to be helped.

      I’ve made choux pastry literally thousands of times (that is no exaggeration) over decades. It’s one of my favorite things to bake, which is why I even linked my comprehensive guide to making choux pastry. It’s also a recipe that is hard to mess up, unless you don’t follow the instructions properly. Which is what happened in your case.

      You are absolutely right in that, DO NOT use 4 eggs, IF you don’t need to. Only add enough eggs to get the right consistency. I have stated this multiple times in the recipe, I’m honestly not sure how to make this point any clearer, yet you missed it.

      The reasons why your chouquettes did not come out right could potentially be because of one or a combination of the following,

      1) Incorrect measurements – Adding too little flour or too much liquid will make a runny dough.
      2) Did not cook the dough long enough on the stove – If you don’t cook out enough water, this will make for a runny dough. Then when you add the eggs, the dough becomes runnier still and you end up with a soggy shapeless choux pastry, as I have clearly explained. Adding too little eggs in this instance will result in pastry that does not puff up well because the dough does not have enough eggs.
      3) Added too many eggs – As I have mentioned, only add enough eggs to get the right consistency. This is crucial with choux pastry.
      4) It wasn’t baked long enough – That’s the most obvious one. If the dough looks pale in color and isn’t crispy, it obviously needs to be baked longer. Depending on how large your chouquettes are (mine are small), it will take much longer to bake. Also, each oven is different. This is why, unlike other recipes, I take great care to point out all the indicators to look for, so you know when your choux pastry / chouquettes are done cooking.

      Also, milk is actually quite common when making choux pastry. It is optional, and I don’t add it to regular choux. However, since chouquettes have no sweet filling (unlike cream puffs for example), the milk adds more flavor to an otherwise plain dough.

      One of the more frustrating aspects of running a recipe website is receiving comments such as yours from readers who don’t follow clear instructions properly. Even more frustrating when there is such unwillingness to learn.

      Cheers and happy new year!

      Reply
      1. t newlee
        May 27, 2024

        Dini, I feel for you. I teach cooking classes and I think you did an excellent job of explaining the steps of making choux. There are so many variables in baking (humidity in the air, oven temps, flour quality, egg size, etc.) that without taking those into consideration, you’re destined to fail! That said, my classes have never had a choux failure 🙂 Keep up the good work!

        Reply
    2. Chouquette chef
      April 27, 2025

      Mine were wonderful, you must be incompetent

      Reply
  5. Nikki
    August 19, 2023

    5 stars
    Oh my goodness. I am so happy. I have these when I travel in France and never thought I would get my choux mojo in the same way. Your recipe is brilliant. Just like in the patisseries on holiday. Thank you

    Reply
  6. Izzy
    February 12, 2023

    5 stars
    Hi Dini,

    Can I use regular sugar instead?

    Reply
    1. Dini
      February 14, 2023

      Hi Izzy
      Unfortunately regular sugar won’t work because it will melt and caramelize unlike pearl sugar.
      Hope that helps!

      Reply
  7. Sarah
    November 19, 2022

    5 stars
    These turned out fantastic!

    Reply
  8. Kyle
    October 11, 2022

    hey! question!
    can i make them in 2 inches?
    or do i have to be precise in 1 inch?

    Reply
    1. Dini
      October 11, 2022

      Hi Kyle
      You can make chouquettes any size that you like, but they are traditionally fairly small so that there is a good crunch to soft inside ratio. They don’t have to be exactly 1 inch, but around the same size will give you the best results.
      I hope that helps!

      Reply
  9. Shadi
    May 14, 2021

    5 stars
    These came out so perfectly! Thank you so much for sharing.

    Reply
    1. Kelvin
      July 8, 2022

      5 stars
      So I have to be honest with you… I made this and they were so beautiful . Airy and delicious. It was my first time. I thought they’d be too sweet but they were just perfect. On top of it all the pearl sugar was heavenly… Thank you for this recipe

      Reply
  10. Sam
    May 14, 2021

    5 stars
    These chouquettes were delicious! My family loved them!

    Reply
    1. Ari
      August 14, 2025

      5 stars
      I loved all the extra hints and tips! I was able to substitute AP flour with gluten free flour with little difficulty (I just had to work the dough together a bit more).

      Reply
  11. Jane
    July 26, 2020

    5 stars
    Hi Dini,
    Thank you for the recipe. I tried making this and it was superb. One quick question. After 3 days, the pearl sugar kind of dissolve/melted and we can’t see the speckles of white dots. Any tips to prevent the pearl sugar to melt?

    Reply
    1. Dini
      July 26, 2020

      Hi Jane
      I’m really glad you enjoyed this recipe! 🙂
      Pearl sugar does melt when exposed to humidity (just like regular sugar). The only way to prevent it from melting is to remove humidity, which unfortunately is difficult as the pastry itself has enough moisture that can dissolve the pearl sugar.
      Because of that these pastries are meant to be eaten within a day. After the first day, the sugar will start to become soggy and eventually dissolve. The longest I keep them is 2 days in an airtight container.
      So my recommendation would be to make smaller batches, if you’re not planning on finishing a batch within a day or two.

      Reply
      1. Jane
        July 27, 2020

        Hi Dini,

        Thanks for the quick response. Your guidance/advices on the choux pastry (eclair, cream puff, etc.) is one of the best we can find online.

        One quick question. If we use the pearl sugar used in the liege waffle and crushed them to smaller pieces, do you think they will still melt? I also note that some recipe calls for crushing the cube sugar.

        Thank you so much!

        Reply
        1. Dini
          July 27, 2020

          Hi Jane
          Since liege waffle pearl sugar is still made out of sugar, it would still have the same issue I’m afraid. The reason why the larger sugar crystals last longer is because of the size. So if crushed, it would still dissolve like the smaller pearl sugar.
          Sugar is unfortunately quite hygroscopic. It can’t help but absorb water and dissolve when it meets something that has moisture.
          Crushed cubed sugar might be a good replacement for those who can’t find pearl sugar, but I haven’t used it myself. However, sugar cubes dissolve more easily than pearl sugar. So it still would have the same issue of dissolving once baked into the choux, maybe even faster than pearl sugar actually.
          I hope that helps!

          Reply

Hey There!

Hi! I’m Dini, a third culture kid by upbringing and a food-geek by nature. I was born in Sri Lanka, grew up in New Zealand and lived in Australia, and then the US, before moving to and settling down in Canada. My food is a reflection of those amazing experiences!

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