Apple Cream Puffs with Craquelin
A bakery-style fall dessert that feels fancy, tastes nostalgic, and comes together with simple ingredients.
There’s something magical about creating a dessert from scratch. Creating something from nothing. Especially creating a dessert that feels fancy, and special. Cream Puffs at first glance seem intimidating to most, but I promise you… they are not as hard as they seem, and SO fun and rewarding to make! They always feel like the kind of dessert you’d pick up from a bakery case—golden, crackly tops; crisp shells; that cloud-like filling inside—but the truth is, they’re much more approachable than they look. And this fall-inspired version might be my favorite yet.
These Apple Cream Puffs layer a crisp craquelin top over light choux pastry, a silky apple diplomat cream, and a spoonful of quick caramelized apples tucked inside. Every component is simple on its own, but together they create a dessert that feels cozy, elegant, and just special enough for the holidays.
If you love apple pie, silky pastry cream, and desserts that make your whole kitchen smell like fall, these little puffs check every box.

Why You’ll Love These
• Bakery-worthy results with straightforward steps
• Craquelin guarantees a perfectly crackled, even rise
• Apple diplomat cream is rich, silky, and not too sweet
• Quick caramelized apples add texture and warmth
• The components can be made ahead, making assembly stress-free
• Great for gatherings—impressive, hand-held, and easy to serve
Ingredient Highlights
Craquelin:
A thin cookie-like disc made of butter, sugar, and flour. It melts over the choux as it bakes, giving each puff that signature golden, crackled top and helping the shells rise evenly.
Apple Diplomat Cream:
A classic pastry-cream base blended with apple butter, brown sugar, cinnamon, and freshly whipped cream. It’s velvety, structured, and tastes like a lighter, silkier version of apple pie filling.
Caramelized Apples:
Quick, glossy, gently spiced apples that hold their shape. They bring sweetness and texture without making the puffs soggy.
Choux Pastry:
The base of every cream puff—light, crisp, hollow shells that stay sturdy enough to hold generous scoops of filling.

Step Overview
Make the Apple Pastry Cream
Cook the pastry cream base with apple butter, brown sugar, spices, and cider, then chill until completely cold.Make the Caramelized Apples
A quick stovetop cook to soften and lightly caramelize the apples without turning them mushy.Make & Freeze the Craquelin
Roll thin, freeze completely, and cut circles to sit on top of each piped choux mound.Make the Choux Pastry
Cook the panade, beat in the eggs gradually, pipe into rounds, and top each with a frozen craquelin disc.Bake Until Deep Golden
High heat for the rise, then lower heat to dry and crisp the shells. Finish by venting and cooling completely.Make the Whipped Cream & Fold into the Pastry Cream
This transforms it into diplomat cream—smooth, airy, and perfectly pipeable.Assemble the Puffs
Slice tops, add diplomat cream, spoon apples into the center, add more cream, and place the lid slightly off-center for that rustic bakery look.
Storage & Make-Ahead
• Unfilled shells: Store in an airtight container up to 1 day, or freeze up to 1 month. Re-crisp at 350°F for 5 minutes before filling.
• Diplomat cream: Refrigerate up to 2 days. Whisk gently before using.
• Caramelized apples: Refrigerate up to 2 days; drain excess liquid before using.
• Assembled puffs: Best enjoyed the same day; refrigerate up to 24 hours.
• For the cleanest results, assemble within 3–4 hours of serving.
I wanted these cream puffs to feel like a cozy fall twist on something classic—light, crisp shells with a creamy, apple-forward filling that tastes like a mix of apple pie and pastry shop custard. They’re surprisingly simple, make-ahead friendly, and always impress. Whether you’re serving them for a fall dinner, Thanksgiving dessert board, or just because it’s apple season, these little puffs bring all the warmth and comfort of the holidays in every bite.


Apple Cream Puffs
Ingredients
Method
- Heat 250 ml (1 cup) whole milk in a saucepan until steaming.
- In a bowl, whisk 3 egg yolks + 60 g (¼ cup + 1 Tbsp) granulated sugar + 15 g (1½ Tbsp) cornstarch until pale.
- Slowly whisk in the hot milk to temper.
- Return mixture to pan; cook over medium heat, whisking, until thickened and bubbling (2–3 minutes).
- Off heat, whisk in 30 g (2 Tbsp) butter + 100 g apple butter + 2 Tbsp brown sugar + ½ tsp cinnamon + pinch nutmeg + 1 Tbsp apple cider.
- Strain, cover with plastic wrap touching surface, and chill 2 hours.
- Melt 14 g (1 Tbsp) butter in a skillet.
- Add 150 g (1 cup) diced apples + 25 g (2 Tbsp) brown sugar + 1 tsp cinnamon + pinch salt.
- Cook 4–5 minutes until glossy and tender.
- Stir in 1 tsp cornstarch during last 30 seconds until juices thicken.
- Transfer to a plate and cool fully.
- Mix 60 g (¼ cup) softened butter + 75 g (⅓ cup) brown sugar until smooth.
- Add 75 g (½ cup + 1 Tbsp) flour + pinch salt; mix into a dough.
- Roll between parchment to ⅛-inch thick.
- Freeze while you prepare the choux pastry
- You will cut into 2-inch circles after you pipe out your choux pastry.
- In a saucepan, bring to a boil:
- 120 ml (½ cup) water + 120 ml (½ cup) milk + 113 g (½ cup) butter + 12 g (1 Tbsp) sugar + ½ tsp salt.
- Add 125 g (1 cup) flour all at once; stir 2–3 minutes until dough pulls from sides.
- Transfer to mixer; beat 1–2 minutes to release steam.
- Slowly add beaten eggs (about 3–4 eggs total), checking for the “V-shape” batter test after each addition.
- Mix in ½ tsp vanilla if using.
- Pipe 2-inch mounds on a silicone mat.
- Top each with a frozen craquelin disc.
- Bake 15 min at 400°F, then 15–25 min at 350°F until deep golden.
- Pierce each puff, turn off oven, crack door, and dry inside 10–15 min. Let cool completely.
- Whip 120 ml (½ cup) heavy cream + 1½ tsp powdered sugar + ½ tsp vanilla to medium-stiff peaks.
- Whisk your chilled pastry cream to loosen.
- Fold in half of the whipped cream gently.
- Fold in the remaining whipped cream until smooth and airy.
- Chill 1 hour before piping.
- Slice tops off cooled puffs.
- Pipe a layer of apple diplomat cream inside base.
- Spoon in 1–2 tsp caramelized apples.
- Add a little more diplomat cream.
- Replace tops slightly off-center.
- Dust with powdered sugar.
- Bake until deep golden; pale puffs will collapse.
- Craquelin ensures even rise and a perfect crackly top.
- Always chill pastry cream completely before folding into whipped cream.
- Re-crisp empty shells at 350°F for 5 minutes if made ahead.
- Caramelized apples should stay slightly firm for texture contrast.
Notes
- Unfilled shells: Store airtight up to 1 day or freeze 1 month; re-crisp before filling.
- Diplomat cream: Refrigerate up to 2 days; whisk before using.
- Caramelized apples: Refrigerate up to 2 days; drain excess liquid.
- Filled puffs: Best served same day; fridge up to 24 hours.





