This is the breakfast I make when my parents are visiting and I want them to think I spent hours at a French bakery. Cream cheese puff pastries are buttery flaky squares of store-bought puff pastry cradling a sweetened vanilla cream cheese filling, topped with fresh fruit or jam if you like, baked until impossibly golden and crisp. 35 minutes from freezer to plate. Looks like you stopped at a French bakery, costs $4 to make at home.
Fun fact: puff pastry was invented in 1645 by Claude Gellée, a French painter and apprentice pastry chef in Lorraine, France. The recipe was so revolutionary — using over 700 alternating layers of dough and butter — that it was a state secret for decades. Modern frozen puff pastry from brands like Pepperidge Farm makes 200 layers, while DuFour brand (made with real butter) makes 600+. Store-bought is a kitchen miracle that turns 10 minutes of work into bakery-level pastry.
Why this recipe works
- Keep pastry cold. Cold butter in the pastry creates steam pockets that puff up. Warm pastry = flat dense squares. Work fast.
- Score a border. Cutting a 1/2-inch border around each square (without cutting through) creates a “bowl” that rises around the filling, holding it in place.
- Egg wash for color. Brushing only the borders with egg wash gives them that deep golden bakery sheen — egg-washed filling looks weird and rubbery.
Nutrition information
- Calories: 340 kcal per pastry
- Protein: 5 g
- Carbohydrates: 28 g
- Fat: 22 g
- Sugar: 12 g
- Calcium: 6% DV
Pro tips for bakery-perfect pastries
- Keep everything cold. If kitchen is hot or pastry warms up, refrigerate 10 minutes before baking. Cold butter = flaky layers.
- Don’t overfill. Too much filling overflows and burns. 1 1/2 tbsp per pastry is the sweet spot — leftover filling makes great bagel spread.
- Bake one sheet at a time. Two sheets in the oven blocks heat circulation — uneven puffing. Bake one sheet at a time on the middle rack.
- Use parchment, not just greased pan. Pastry can stick or slide. Parchment guarantees easy release and clean bottoms.
Frequently asked questions
Can I make them ahead?
Yes — assemble pastries entirely (with filling and egg wash), refrigerate up to 24 hours covered, then bake straight from the fridge. Adds 2-3 minutes to bake time. Perfect for brunch parties.
How long do they keep?
Best within 4 hours of baking. Refrigerator 2 days (covered) but pastry softens. Reheat at 350°F for 5 min to re-crisp. Not great for freezing baked — make ahead unbaked and bake fresh.
Can I freeze them unbaked?
Yes — freeze fully assembled (no egg wash) on baking sheet until firm, then transfer to ziplock. Freeze 1 month. Bake from frozen at 400°F adding 5-7 min to baking time. Apply egg wash just before baking.
Why didn’t my pastry puff up?
Either pastry got too warm (butter melted before baking), oven wasn’t hot enough (need 400°F), or you cut all the way through when scoring. Score halfway, not through.
Can I use crescent roll dough?
It works but isn’t the same — crescent dough is denser and less flaky. If using, unroll into rectangle, press seams together, cut into squares. Bake at 375°F for 15-18 min.
What’s the best brand of puff pastry?
DuFour (real butter, $10/box) is the gold standard — taste like French patisserie. Pepperidge Farm (Crisco-based, $5/box) is widely available and works perfectly. Whole Foods 365 brand is a budget winner with butter pastry.