Let me walk you through the experience of eating a fresh gougère. It's surprisingly light as you pick it up, almost insubstantial and still hot from the oven. The crispy shell crunches as you pull it open, releasing a puff of savory steam. Then you hit the middle: soft, eggy, and indecently cheesy. Two bites and it's gone. You're going to want to make a batch of these soon, trust me.
Gougères are based on the classic French pâte à choux, which was the first pastry we were taught to make in culinary school. Believe me, if newbie culinary students still scared of whisks can make this dough, so can you.
The recipe is very straight forward. No tricks or potential snags here! It's important to cook the dough for a few minutes before adding the eggs; this dries it out and makes it more able to absorb the eggs. Adding the eggs in four additions also helps work them into the dough more easily and evenly. The two different baking temperatures help the gougères to first puff and then dry into crispy globes.
I have yet to make gougères for a dinner party and not be met with gasps of delight as I emerge from the kitchen with the still-steaming tray. I love serving them as an alternative to dinner rolls, but they are also light enough to be an appetizer without ruining people's appetite. For potlucks or picnics, I've also stuffed the gougères with deli meat and a few greens to make quick, bite-sized sandwiches.
Anyway you do it, you can't go wrong. Scout's honor.

Gougères
What You Need
Ingredients
1 cup (8 ounces) water
8 tablespoons (4 ounces/1 stick) unsalted butter, cut into several pieces
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon dry mustard powder (optional)
1 cup (5 ounces) all-purpose flour
4 large eggs, lightly beaten
1 1/2 cup (6 ounces) grated cheese, like gruyère or cheddar
Equipment
2- to 4-quart saucepan
Long-handled spoon
Standing mixer (optional)
Baking sheets
Instructions
Makes about two dozen
1. Boil the Water and Butter: Combine the water, butter, salt, and mustard (if using) in a 2- to 4-quart saucepan and bring to a rolling boil.
2. Add the Flour: Once all the butter has melted, remove the pan from heat and add the flour all at once. Stir vigorously until the mixture comes together and resembles mashed potatoes.
3. Cook the Dough: Return the pan to medium-low heat and stir for 3-5 minutes to dry out the dough. The dough is ready when it glistens and is thick enough to hold a spoon upright. Some starch buildup on the bottom of the pan is normal.
4. Add the Eggs: Transfer the dough to the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment. (The following steps can also be done with a hand mixer or by hand with a stiff spatula.) Beat the dough on a medium-low speed for one minute until it stops steaming and is just warm to the touch.
Continue beating and add the egg in four additions. Wait for each addition to be absorbed and for the dough to smooth out before adding the next. Scrape down the sides of the bowl if needed between additions. In the end, the dough should come together in a very smooth, creamy batter. Beat in the cheese.
5. Bake the Gougères: Heat the oven to 450°F. Scoop rounded tablespoons of dough onto sheet pans lined with silicone mats or parchment paper. Space them at least an inch apart.
Bake the gougères for 5 minutes and then turn the heat down to 350°F. Bake for another 20-25 minutes, rotating the pans once during baking. The finished gougères will be puffed, deep golden-brown, and dry to the touch (the cheese may still be bubbling a bit). They will also feel light and hollow when picked up.
6. Cool the Gougères: Transfer the sheet pan to a cooling rack. Serve warm or room temperature. Leftovers can be stored in the refrigerator and re-crisped in a warm oven before serving or frozen for up to three months.
Additional Notes:
• Freeze for Later: To have gougères on hand for later, try freezing them shaped but un-baked. Scoop and then freeze them directly on the baking sheet. Once frozen, you can transfer them to a freezer storage container. Bake them directly from the freezer while still frozen, and let them bake for the longer end of the time range.
• Bigger or Smaller Gougères: Make the gougères any size that appeals to you. Teaspoon scoops are a fun party snack or soup topper while double-sized gougères are nice for making sandwiches or as part of a brunch spread.

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(Images: Emma Christensen)










Red-and-Pink-Stripe...

Does this in any way resemble the Brazilian pão de queijo? Looks awesome anyway.
When guests are coming, it really is convenient to have them frozen and ready to pop in the oven when people are about to get in. It works perfectly.
You can skip the mixer and all that stuff and beat the eggs into the dough straight in the pot and then fold in the cheese. The dough is really easy to work with.
I use a pastry bag to squeeze them out - you get the nice round shape and a little pouf on top.
I can't seem to get the texture right when I've made them in the past. Once they were prefect - light and fluffy - but the other times they've been pretty dense. What exactly is the texture of the dough supposed to be when you're done with the eggs? (Maybe a video?) Thanks!
I made cream puffs (which are just gourges with pastry cream inside) and each batch I made was deflated after they rested. I even pierced them to let the steam escape. :( At least they still taste good.
Mexposto: They do remind me a bit of pao de queijo even though the dough isn't cooked like with gougeres.
I'm addicted to the little Brazilian cheese balls. I like to make them and then stuff the leftover ones with tuna salad. Mmm mmm.
Tried these last week and they were divine! A definite keeper in my house. Thanks for the details.
@Zaydia - The texture of the finished dough should be smooth and creamy, like really creamy mashed potatoes. It should hold it's shape, but still have a little wobble. Also, be sure that you're drying out the dough before adding the eggs, and then thoroughly incorporating each egg addition before adding the next.
@SYGYZY - Hmm...I wonder why they were deflating? Gougeres have a little more structure because of the cheese (plus they tend to get pock-marked with holes when the cheese melts) so I find they don't need to be pierced after baking. With cream puffs, I usually pierce them and then put them back in a warm oven (300-degrees or so) for about 5 minutes to make sure they're thoroughly dried out.
Can these be made with coconut flour?
I love gougeres, even though they're a bit dangerous to have in my house, and inspired by the bakery Tartine in San Francisco I make an oversized black pepper version - they make wonderful super light "rolls" to hold sandwich fillings.
Can someone please give me a phonetic pronunciation? Thanks! :)
@sygyzy - I had a deflating problem too, until I learned a trick: use bread flour instead of AP flour! The bread flour has more gluten and creates a stronger structure. You can buy bread flour, or make your own: to create 1 cup of bread flour, just combine 1 tablespoon of gluten flour + enough AP flour to make the total volume equal 1 cup of flour. Ever since I started replacing the AP flour with my bread flour, my gougeres haven't collapsed. :)
Gougeres = goo-jers
Phonetics aside, I love gougeres! I made them once for a holiday home tour my Mom was hosting and one of the so-called 'guests' had the nerve to tell my Mom that she forgot to fill them! Classy.
Cool tips! You can skip the mixer and use pastry bag to squeeze out.
i don't think it's 'jers'. I think it's more of an 'air' sound, with a guttural 'r'.
that aside, i have my first batch in the oven. i hope they don't deflate, but even if they do...i'm gonna chomp them up. i also just used a spoon and spatula. no need to dirty up a mixer.
ok...The Kitchn, you've got to just stop. These things turned out perfectly. I'm not gonna get to stop cooking if you don't stop posting amazingly delicious recipes.
@Pumaunicorn -- Mu ha ha! Our epic culinary plot is working! Also, I'm so happy your gougeres turned out well. Happy chomping!
Yum! Made these today... and then ate nearly all of them (with some help...). Very easy to make, and very delicious. I don't mean to make them sound less fancy, but they taste like if Cheez-Its were warm, delicious little breads!
Oh! These look divine. Planning on trying them out soon!
Anyone ever try them gluten-free? (I'm assuming this possibly wouldn't work too well.)
I made a similar recipe for Easter and they were a hit. To the folks who are having trouble with deflating -- sounds like this can happen when they're undercooked? The recipe I used said one of the keys is to make sure these are truly golden brown before you take them out of the oven.
I'm fascinated by choux pastry! I've used the basic idea of it for all sorts of recipes with odd variations...
With semolina flour (roman gnocchi!), with masa harina,
with cornmeal.
With tapioca flour and turnips & sharp cheddar. Strange but tasty!
I just tried these - absolutely fab! I can't stop eating them....having with coffee! ummm!
Will these work without using parchment paper? Lightly greasing the cookie sheet, maybe? Don't think I'm going to make it to the store before I need to make these tonight!
BETHYH- Look at the Pao de Queijo recipe that was just posted, it's gluten-free :)
http://www.thekitchn.com/how-to-make-po-de-queijo-brazilian-cheese-bread-cooking-lessons-from-the-kitchn-176118?utm_campaign=topblock&utm_medium=web&utm_source=thekitchn-recipe
Made today and it turned out great - I had to add two extra eggs as it stiffened up so much that the mixer wouldn't move it.
Gougres are dangerous and I will not be left alone with them.
Yes, pastry bag is a good idea.
Goo-J-Air is the right pronounciation
Do not use an insulated cookie sheet ... you will get very tasty pancakes.
These remind me of Pão de Queijo, a typical Brazilian cheese bun, I prefer the Brazilian ones because they are made with tapioca flour and therefore gluten free.
Check the Brazilian "pão de queijo", it's gluten-free and so much better :)
Check the Brazilian "pão de queijo", it's gluten-free and so much better :)