Gougeres are French Cheese Puffs served with pre dinner cocktails, as finger food at parties, and in place of boring bread rolls to dunk into soups and stews. One of the best things I ate in France!
Simple to make, they reheat 100% perfectly – but the best part is smugly telling your friends “they’re French, darling” (I hear this in a posh British accent😂).
Gougeres recipe – French Cheese Puffs!
This Gougeres recipe comes to you via the hostess of a charming bed & breakfast called La Saura in Burgundy, France. We had a week long stay there just a couple of months ago, using it as our home base to explore the region.
And after a long day of sight seeing, there are no words to describe our delight when we arrived back at the villa to be greeted with a pile of warm cheese puffs, fresh out of the oven, washed down with sparkling Kir Royales.
So very chic. So French!!
What Gougeres taste like
They’re crusty on the outside, soft and hollow on the inside, and they’re very, very cheesy. Essentially, they are the savoury cheesy version of everybody’s favourite Profiteroles!
As with profiteroles, I’ve been tempted to pipe something into the hollow centre. But to be honest, these cheese puffs have enough flavour as they are – certainly plenty of cheese – so anything more would just make it overly rich.
Plus, the light-as-air texture is the signature feature of Gougeres! (Also, here’s how to pronounce Gougeres 😂)
What you need for Gougeres (Cheese Puffs)
Here’s what you need to make Gougeres. It’s adapted from this recipe (it’s in French!), with the minor change being an increase in cheese (under instruction from Jocelyn the B&B host who gave me this recipe!😂).
Best cheese for Gougeres
The cheese that is traditionally used is gruyere, Emmental or Comte. I’ve also made these with Swiss, cheddar and tasty (Aussie/NZ cheese) and they came out just as good. So I imagine they will be just fine with any other cheese as long as it’s the melting sort (ie not feta, parmesan, ricotta).
Also, I’d recommend avoiding mozzarella – it doesn’t have enough flavour or salt.
IMPORTANT: Grate the cheese yourself, unless you’re fortunate enough to be living in France in which case you have access to the finely shredded Emmental sold at the shops. Typically, store bought grated cheese is thicker than shredding your own, so it might weigh down the batter and prevent your Gougeres from puffing up which would be so sad. 😢
How to make Gougeres
These French Cheese Puffs are as fabulously easy to make as they are to eat. The part where the egg is mixed in does require some vigorous mixing to incorporate the egg fully – it’s a good arm work out! If you want to take a more leisurely path, just use an electric beater. 🙂
How to serve Gougeres
Ah, the best part – how to eat them!!
In France, they are served as appetisers and on the side of meals in place of boring old dinner rolls.😉
With Meals
Gougeres are placed on tables in bread baskets before the meal is served, to nibble on then to dunk into soups and thick stews, and mop plates clean. Here are a few suggestions for dishes to create your own French Provincial extravaganza!
Pre dinner nibbles
Serve them as finger food at parties, or pre dinner nibbles with cocktails – specifically, Kir Royales (French champagne cocktail) if you want to be on theme!
In fact, the actual Gougeres in the photos and most of the ones in the video (some fell into my mouth🤷🏻♀️) were taken to a Christmas party the next day. They go soft after they cool down, but a few minutes in the oven was all they needed to resurrect their perfect crispy exteriors, so they are 100% perfect for making ahead! – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
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French Cheese Puffs (Gougeres)
Ingredients
- 1 cup (250ml) water
- 80g / 5.5 tbsp butter , unsalted, cut into 1.5 cm / 0.5" cubes
- 1 cup (150g) flour , plain / all purpose
- 3/4 tsp salt , kosher/cooking salt
- Pinch nutmeg (powder or freshly grated)
- Pinch black pepper
- 4 eggs (~60 - 65g / 2oz each)
- 200g / 2 cups Gruyère cheese , freshly shredded (Note 1)
Topping
- 50g / 1/2 cup Gruyere cheese, extra , freshly shredded (Note 1)
- 1 egg yolk , for brushing
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 220°C / 425°F (200°C fan). Lightly grease 2 trays then line with parchment / baking paper.
- Place water, butter and salt in a saucepan over medium high heat. Bring to a boil until butter is full melted.
- Remove from stove, add flour, salt, pepper and nutmeg. Mix until incorporated.
- Return to stove on LOW heat and mix for 1 minute (this dries the mixture out, see video for before/after).
- Remove from stove, leave for 2 minutes.
- Add 1 egg, mix vigorously until incorporated - batter splits at first, but it always comes together!
- Add 3 more eggs, one at a time, mixing until incorporated before adding the next. Good arm workout! (Or use electric beater)
- Stir in 2 cups cheese.
- Drop 1 tablespoon mounds onto trays (small cookie scoop is ideal, otherwise use a measuring tablespoon and a teaspoon to scrape out. Can make larger - good for dunking!)
- Brush with yolk, then top with a pinch of reserved Cheese for topping.
- Bake 25 minutes.
- Allow to cool for 15 minutes so they become crusty and inside dries out a bit.
- Serve warm as pre dinner nibbles, finger food at gatherings, or dunk into soups and stews!
Recipe Notes:
Nutrition Information:
Life of Dozer
Shopping for a new dining table. Dozer made it clear which one he approved of…
Rachael says
These are so delicious, just made a batch for a small dinner party tonight,to have alongside your brisket recipe. With a side of your no mayo coleslaw (a game changer). I used Norco natural elbo style cheese and they had great flavour! Thank you for another winner.
Pamela says
This looks so amazing! Add me to the list of people asking if you can make the batter ahead of time, refrigerate, and then bake when you’re ready. 🙂
Anna says
I’ve made these and frozen the scooped, uncooked dough. Cook them straight from frozen, they will just need a couple extra minutes. Great thing to stash in the freezer for last minute company!
Jeana Sheldon says
Just made my first batch!! So easy, so impressive! I doubt these will last long in my house..yum!
Chris says
Just made these and scaled it to a Serving size of 12. Dough was very loose and I had to add more flour and cheese, but they still came out as hard as hockey pucks. Threw them all out.
Nandita says
Just took a batch out of the oven. They look and smell delicious! Thank you for another great recipe. Happy holidays!
Ping says
Thank you for this delicious recipe! They turned out perfectly and gone within minutes.
Kris says
Hi Nagi,
Love your recipes. As I don’t like to mess around cooking when guests are gathered, can you please tell me if the French Cheese Puffs (Gougeres), can be made ahead and frozen, then reheated when needed?
Have a lovely Christmas and great New Year.
Jannet says
Every recipe of yours is mind blowing, your are very generous. Love you and Dozer. Thank you kindly xxx
Mallary says
I’d like to know if they freeze well? Thanks
Pam says
Is it possible after scooping and egg washing and adding cheese to put them back in the fridge before baking? I’d love to prep them and then bake them at the very last minute.
Gordon says
Typo in the first paragraph of the recipe. Should be “crusty on the outside” not “inside”.
nm says
Would fodmap flour make any difference with this?
Marlene says
Hi, Nagi! Made ½ recipe for a socially-distanced happy hour—yum! They were perfect! Thanks for telling us to grate the cheese finely; I did mine with a microplane grater. Using a cookie scoop Was a great idea; most recipes call for a piping bag, which is fussy and a pain. I used a small scoop and baked them 18 minutes. They were a lot easier than I remembered; hadn’t made them for many years and recall having problems. Not this time!
Eldijana Sarich says
I made those for the first time and they turned out perfect! Simple and easy to follow recipe. I agreed with other comments re:cheese as I used tasty light and it needed more flavour so I’ll try different cheese next time. Thank you Nagi, another recipe to keep 😊
J-Mom says
This is a marvelous snack!
I like cheese, baked goods and am carb/starch person. So I was excited to try. The first time, it puffed, golden brown with crusty outside. But when I tasted it, it was ?, ??, ???
I put the recipe on my mental back-burner for a while. But decided that the cheese was the problem. So next time, I just got a cheese I knew I liked, bypassing even Emmental and Comte. It was great!
I love blue cheese. If I could find a way to crumble it easily, I want to try but might be a killer for my waist/weight.
Carl Doubleday says
An absolute hit!
Thank you
Adding a bit of blue cheese with my latest batch
Nagi says
Perfect Carl!
Craig Dean Johnson says
Your gougeres recipe has instantly become my favorite party snack! I took a batch to a Christmas dinner party — they were gobbled-up in a flash. I am bringing another batch to a New Year’s Eve party. To-day’s batch were baked in a mini muffin pan. I seemed to have better luck getting the dough/batter into the mini cups than on parchment paper. They rose beautifully and I know your reheating instructions are spot-on. Thank-you, Nagi, for another superb recipe!
Azalea Logan says
Yum! I just made this and it’s delicious! I used pre-shredded sharp cheddar cheese and it baked and puffed up beautifully.
Thank you for this recipe, Nagi!
Delia says
Made this last week with emmenthal cheese and it tuned out fine but found the cheese bland. Made it tonight and used extra old cheddar, they didn’t puff up but tastes great. Is it the cheddar that caused it to not puff?
Nagi says
Hi Delia, possibly, I’ve used a cheddar blend and they have still puffed up though!
Maureen Anderson says
I made these cheese puffs to go with your broccoli soup. A big hit. My grandson ate many.
Deb Truner says
SUCCESS! I made them again today. They puffed beautifully and taste amazing. Thank You Nagi for another “keeper” recipe.
Nagi says
Wahoo!!!! I’m so glad they turned out for you Deb!