Classic Profiteroles Recipe
Light, crisp choux shells filled with silky cream or ice cream and finished with a glossy sauce—that’s the simple elegance of profiteroles. They look impressive on a dessert plate but are straightforward enough to make at home when you follow a clear process. I love these for dinner parties because you can bake the shells in advance and finish them just before serving.
This recipe uses prepared components: choux pastry dough, Bavarian cream, vanilla ice cream, and two sauces (caramel and chocolate). I’ll walk you through assembling the profiteroles so everything comes together without stress. There are options for serving warm, chilled, or frozen depending on the occasion.
Below you’ll find the essentials, a step-by-step assembly guide based on the provided directions, tips to avoid common mistakes, storage notes, and some party-friendly variations. Keep your components ready, and you’ll have beautiful profiteroles in no time.
The Essentials

What you need at a glance: baked choux shells made from the choux pastry dough recipe, a smooth Bavarian cream, vanilla ice cream, and both caramel and chocolate sauces for coating. The recipe calls for half portions of some components—plan quantities accordingly if you’re scaling up.
Tools: piping bags with appropriate tips, a baking sheet lined with parchment, and a stable surface for assembly. Temperature matters—sauces should be warm but not scalding, and fillings cold or slightly softened depending on the desired finish.
From Start to Finish: Classic Profiteroles Recipe
Ingredients
- 1 choux pastry dough recipe — makes the shells; choux must be piped and baked until firm and dry.
- ½ Bavarian cream recipe — rich filling option that chills and sets; use for a refined, creamy center.
- 1 vanilla ice cream recipe — alternate filling; softens slightly when scooped so it nests into the bottom shell.
- ½ caramel sauce recipe — for dipping tops; warm to pouring consistency but not too hot or it will melt ice cream.
- ½ chocolate sauce recipe — alternate or additional coating; warm to glossy consistency for dipping.
Instructions
Follow these steps in order. I keep the original sequence from the source directions but rewrite each step for clarity and usability.
- Make the choux pastry dough according to your choux pastry dough recipe and have it ready for piping. The dough should be smooth, glossy, and pipeable.
- Fit a piping bag with a 1A or a similar round baking tip and transfer the choux dough into it. Work quickly while the dough is at the right consistency.
- On a sheet tray lined with parchment paper, pipe rounds of dough. Squeeze about 2 tablespoons of dough per profiterole while slowly lifting the bag straight up to create a neat mound. Space the mounds about 1½ to 2 inches apart to allow for expansion.
- Bake on the middle rack of a preheated oven at 400°F (200°C) for 30 to 35 minutes, or until the profiteroles are evenly browned and feel firm to the touch. Do not open the oven during the early part of baking or they may collapse.
- Remove the shells from the oven and set them aside to cool completely to room temperature on a wire rack. Cooling fully helps them dry out inside and makes slicing easier.
- Once cooled, slice each profiterole in half horizontally. Aim to leave a thinner bottom piece and a larger top piece so the top can be dipped and sit attractively over the filling.
- Arrange the bottom halves on a sheet tray lined with parchment. Using either a small ice cream scoop (about 3 tablespoons total per profiterole) or a piping bag fitted with a 357 or similar decorative tip, add 3 tablespoons of filling to each bottom shell. You may use either the ½ Bavarian cream or the vanilla ice cream recipe depending on whether you want chilled/soft or frozen profiteroles.
- Warm the caramel or chocolate sauce to a pourable but not hot temperature—warm enough to coat but not so hot it melts the filling instantly. Dip each top half into the warm sauce so it is coated; allow excess sauce to drip off briefly.
- Place each coated top onto its filled bottom, gently pressing so the top adheres to the filling. If using ice cream as the filling and you want frozen profiteroles, assemble quickly and transfer to the freezer to firm up. For chilled serving, keep assembled profiteroles in the refrigerator until ready to serve.
- You can serve profiteroles immediately after assembly for a contrast of warm top and cool filling, chill them in the refrigerator for a softer, cream-filled version, or freeze them and enjoy straight from the freezer as an iced dessert.
Why Cooks Rave About It
Profiteroles combine textures—crisp choux, creamy filling, and glossy sauce—that create a satisfying bite. They’re versatile: swap fillings or sauces depending on taste or season. Because the components can be prepared ahead, they’re practical for entertaining.
Also, choux pastry is forgiving when you understand the basic techniques. Once you master piping and baking to a dry interior, you can use the same shells for many desserts beyond profiteroles.
Quick Replacement Ideas

- Use whipped pastry cream or stabilized whipped cream in place of Bavarian cream for easier prep.
- Swap vanilla ice cream for chocolate, coffee, or salted caramel ice cream for a flavor twist.
- Replace caramel or chocolate sauce with fruit coulis or a warm nut praline sauce for variety.
Prep & Cook Tools

- Piping bags and tips: 1A (round) for choux, 357 (or similar) for decorative filling.
- Baking sheet(s) lined with parchment paper for even baking and easy cleanup.
- Wire rack to cool baked shells evenly without sogginess.
- Small ice cream scoop (approx. 3 tablespoons) or piping bag for portioning filling.
- Saucepan or microwave-safe bowl to warm sauces gently to a pourable consistency.
Mistakes That Ruin Classic Profiteroles Recipe
- Underbaking the choux—shells will collapse or be soggy inside. Bake until browned and firm.
- Opening the oven too early—sudden temperature changes can deflate the shells.
- Dipping tops in sauce that’s too hot—this melts ice cream and ruins the texture contrast.
- Overfilling shells—fills will spill and make assembly messy; stick to about 3 tablespoons per bottom.
Holiday-Friendly Variations
For the holidays, swap vanilla ice cream for spiced eggnog or cinnamon ice cream. Use a salted caramel sauce and sprinkle crushed toasted pecans on the coated tops for crunch. For a festive look, drizzle white chocolate over the chocolate-coated tops or dust with edible gold dust for an elegant finish.
Cook’s Commentary
I prefer assembling just before serving when using ice cream so you preserve the contrast between crisp shell and cold filling. If you need everything ready in advance, fill shells with Bavarian cream and keep them chilled; dip tops in sauce just before guests arrive to keep the shine.
When piping choux, hold the bag steady and lift straight up to get rounded mounds. If the tops brown too quickly in the oven, lower the rack slightly or reduce temperature by 10–15°F and extend the bake a few minutes to dry them through.
Shelf Life & Storage
Baked choux shells: store in an airtight container at room temperature up to 2 days; they will begin to soften over time. For longer storage, freeze shells in a single layer in a freezer-safe bag for up to 1 month and re-crisp in a 300°F (150°C) oven for a few minutes.
Filled profiteroles: with Bavarian cream, store assembled in the refrigerator up to 2 days. With ice cream filling, it’s best to freeze assembled profiteroles and store them in the freezer; eat within 1 month for best quality.
Ask & Learn
Question: Can I make choux from frozen dough? Answer: I recommend piping and baking directly from freshly made dough for best rise and texture. Frozen piped dough can collapse when thawed. If you must freeze, freeze baked shells only.
Question: Can I pipe smaller or larger profiteroles? Answer: Yes—adjust bake time accordingly. Smaller will bake faster (watch closely), larger will need extra time to dry through.
Make It Tonight
Plan: make the choux shells first and bake until golden. While they cool, prepare the Bavarian cream or soften your vanilla ice cream slightly if you plan to scoop it. Warm the sauces gently at the end. Slice the shells, fill the bottoms with 3 tablespoons each, dip the tops in your chosen sauce, and assemble. Serve immediately for a warm-top/cold-center contrast, or chill/freeze depending on the finish you prefer.
These profiteroles are a reliable crowd-pleaser—beautiful, textural, and ready to adapt to the flavors you love. Happy baking.

Classic Profiteroles Recipe
Ingredients
- choux pastry dough recipe
- 1/2 Bavarian cream recipe
- 1 vanilla ice cream recipe
- 1/2 caramel sauce recipe
- 1/2 chocolate sauce recipe
Instructions
- Prepare the choux pastry dough according to the referenced choux pastry recipe and allow it to cool slightly so it is pipeable but not hot.
- Fit a piping bag with a 1A (about 1/2 inch) or similar round tip and transfer the choux dough to the bag.
- Pipe rounds of dough about 2 tablespoons each onto a parchment-lined baking sheet, spacing them evenly.
- Bake on the middle oven rack at 400°F (204°C) for 30 to 35 minutes, or until the puffs are browned and firm on the outside.
- Remove the baked profiteroles and let them cool to room temperature on a wire rack.
- Slice each profiterole in half horizontally, keeping the bottom slightly thinner than the top.
- Place the bottom halves on a tray and fill each with about 3 tablespoons of filling: use Bavarian cream or a scoop of vanilla ice cream, applied with a small scoop or a piping bag fitted with a decorative tip (e.g., #357).
- Warm the caramel or chocolate sauce until pourable but not hot, then dip the top halves into the warm sauce to coat.
- Place the coated top halves onto the filled bottoms to assemble each profiterole.
- Serve assembled profiteroles immediately, or freeze them assembled if desired; alternatively store filled profiteroles in the refrigerator until serving.
Equipment
- piping bag and round piping tip (about 1/2 inch)
- Baking Sheet
- Parchment Paper
- Oven
- scoop or small spoon
- Mixing bowls
- Spatula
Notes
- You can make profiteroles up to 2 days ahead if kept separate from fillings and toppings.
- Store profiteroles, fillings, and sauces separately in the refrigerator for up to 5 days.
- Profiteroles freeze well for up to 3 months when covered.
- They can be served with powdered sugar and a drizzle of warm honey instead of sauces.
- You will likely get about 16 profiteroles per standard baking sheet.
- Expect leftover caramel or chocolate sauce in many cases.
