Lazy Cream Horns Recipe (2024)

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Lazy Creams Horns Recipe creates a luxurious treat that brings home all the flavors of a traditional cream horn; the crispy pastry shell and the fluffy cream horn filling, without a lot of hard work.

Lazy Cream Horns Recipe (1)

The result is like a Napoleon pastry but rather than having whipped cream or even pastry cream in it, there’s the delicious cream horn filling. You’ll see these in stores across the country but they are often a bit soggy or stale. But that isn’t a problem when you make them yourself!

Does the oven need to be that hot?

I know, 400°F is hotter than most of the things we make but there’s a reason for it. If the oven is too cool, it won’t create the steam needed to cook the middle of the pastry.

Preheat the oven for at least 15 minutes after it comes to temperature to make sure it is hot enough for the job.

Lazy Cream Horns Recipe (2)

Ingredients

  • Frozen Puff Pastry
  • Egg
  • Coarse sugar crystals
  • Butter
  • Butter flavored solid shortening
  • Powdered sugar
  • Vanilla extract
  • Marshmallow fluff

You can use cream horn tubes or even cannoli tubes if you like. Make sure to cut and thawed puff pastry is cut into strips and wrap it around the tubes with no gaps.

Lazy Cream Horns Recipe (3)

How to Make Lazy Cream Horns & Cream Horn Filling

  1. Make sure the puff pastry is thawed before you start, this usually takes at least 40 minutes.
  2. Preheat the oven to 400°F and line a baking sheet with parchment paper.
  3. Place the thawed pastry onto a lightly floured surface and carefully fold it.
  4. Cut along the folds then cut each third into half to form rectangles.
  5. Put them on the baking sheet, keeping at least 1 inch between each one then lightly brush with a beaten egg.
  6. Sprinkle with the coarse sugar and pop into the oven until the pastry is puffed up and lightly browned, usually 5-7 minutes.
  7. Remove from the oven and set aside to cool completely.
  8. To make the filling while it cools, cream together the butter and shortening until light and fluffy, around 5 minutes.
  9. Mix in the powdered sugar, 1 cup at a time then add the vanilla and mix well.
  10. Add the marshmallow fluff and beat until incorporated, usually about 2 minutes.
  11. Slice the cooled pastry in half with a serrated knife and spread or pipe the filling into the bottom half, then replace the top.

You can store these at room temperature for up to 3 days.

These can be made in smaller pastries by cutting the puff pastry into smaller pieces.

Lazy Cream Horns Recipe (4)

Do you need to keep cream horns in the fridge?

With this recipe, you are making a buttery cream horn filing but it isn’t cream-based so you don’t need to keep them in the fridge. In fact, refrigeration can make the pastry a little soggy so a room temperature storage box is the best option.

Can you use real cream?

If you prefer a cream filling, you definitely can use that instead of the one shown here. Other people have used a filling that is closer to buttercream icing and reduced the marshmallow fluff involved. Or made it fluffier by adding more fluff. There’s plenty of options to try!

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Lazy Cream Horns Recipe (5)

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Lazy Cream Horns Recipe (6)

Lazy Cream Horns

All the cream horn flavor without all the work! Puff pastry filled with cream horn filling. No baking tubes required.

4.90 from 59 votes

Print Pin Rate

Course: Desserts

Cuisine: American

Prep Time: 15 minutes minutes

Cook Time: 5 minutes minutes

Total Time: 20 minutes minutes

Servings: 12 cream horn bars

Calories: 516kcal

Author: Beth Mueller

Ingredients

  • 1 box frozen Puff Pastry with 2 sheets thawed
  • 1 egg slightly beaten
  • Coarse sugar crystals I use decorator sugar
  • 1/2 cup softened butter
  • 1/2 cup butter flavored solid shortening
  • 2 cups powdered sugar
  • 1 tablespoon vanilla extract
  • 1 jar marshmallow fluff about 7 ounces

Instructions

  • Allow puff pastry to come to room temperature if it is not already thawed. Mine says 40 minutes minimum.

  • Preheat oven to 400 Degree F.

  • Line a baking sheet with parchment paper.

  • Unwrap puff pastry and place on a lightly floured surface.

  • Carefully unfold pastry.

  • Cut along the folds of the pastry.

  • Cut each third in half, forming rectangles.

  • Place rectangles on a baking sheet, allowing at least 1 inch between them.

  • Lightly brush each rectangle with beaten egg.

  • Sprinkle with coarse sugar.

  • Place in preheated oven and cook until pastries are puffed up and lightly browned. About 5 to 7 minutes.

  • Remove from oven and allow to cool completely.

  • While pastries are cooling, make the filling.

  • Cream together butter and shortening until light and fluffy, this may take up to 5 minutes.

  • Add powdered sugar, 1 cup at a time, mixing well after each addition.

  • Add vanilla and mix well.

  • Add marshmallow fluff and beat until incorporated and light and fluffy, about 2 minutes.

  • Slice cooled pastries in half using a serrated knife.

  • Spread or pipe filling onto the bottom half of the cut pastry and replace the top.

  • These can be stored at room temperature.

Notes

  • These can be made in smaller pastries by cutting the puff pastry into smaller pieces.
  • Make sure the oven is hot. Once it has preheated, give it another 15 minutes to heat up.

Nutrition

Serving: 1g | Calories: 516kcal | Carbohydrates: 53g | Protein: 3.71g | Fat: 32.45g | Saturated Fat: 11.126g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 19.4g | Trans Fat: 1.44g | Cholesterol: 34mg | Sodium: 184mg | Fiber: 0.6g | Sugar: 27g

Tried this Recipe? Pin it for Later!Mention @PearTreeChefs or tag #PearTreeKitchen!

Elizabeth (Beth) Mueller

Elizabeth (Beth) Mueller is a food journalist, CEO of Pear Tree Kitchen, and co-creator of Food Blogger Help. She also has a bachelor’s degree in philosophy and a registered nurse licensed in the State of Oklahoma. When she has free time between writing, blogging, and cooking, she can be found volunteering as an RN with the Oklahoma Medical Reserve Corps.

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Lazy Cream Horns Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is cream horn filling made of? ›

Puff Pastry Horns (aka Italian Cream Horns) are scrumptious puff pastries wrapped around a metal horn and baked till golden and flaky. These little five ingredient wonders can be filled with whipped cream, custard or buttercream icing.

What can I use instead of a cream horn mold? ›

If you don't have horn moulds, use mini ice-cream cones instead. Wrap them in a layer of foil.

What's the difference between a cannoli and a cream horn? ›

However, they're not exactly the same thing. The cream horn has a puff pastry shell that's filled with sweetened whipped cream or custard. The cannoli, meanwhile, has a fried pastry shell that's filled with a ricotta mixture that tends to be denser than cream horn filling.

What is Bavarian cream filling made of? ›

Bavarian Cream is made from a Crème Anglaise base (milk, vanilla, egg yolks and sugar), thickened with Gelatine and lightened with Whipped Cream. Pastry Cream (or Crème Pâtissière) is relatively similar to a Crème Anglaise but is thickened on the stove with Cornstarch (or sometimes flour).

What is the real name for a cream horn? ›

Schaumrollen, or Schillerlocken (German: [ˈʃɪlɐˌlɔkn̩]), are an Austrian confection. They consist of a cone or tube of puff pastry filled with whipped cream or meringue. They are about 3 inches (7.6 cm) wide.

What is another name for a cream horn? ›

Creams horns are called cannoncini in Italy, kornedákia (Greek: κορνεδάκια) in Greece and Schaumrollen in Austria. In Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, cream horns are called Lady Locks or clothespin cookies.

What is a cream-filled pastry called? ›

A profiterole (French: [pʁɔfitʁɔl]), cream puff (US), or chou à la crème ( French: [ʃu a la kʁɛm]) is a filled French choux pastry ball with a typically sweet and moist filling of whipped cream, custard, pastry cream, or ice cream.

What's Holy cannoli? ›

“Holy” Cannoli are a Sicilian dessert. Sicilian pastry chefs form and fry dough rounds, they then fill them with a ricotta filling or sometimes, a cream filling. They are absolutely delicious, not too sweet and are just fun to eat treats.

What do Italians call cannoli? ›

In Italian, cannoli is plural; the singular is cannolo ( Italian: [kanˈnɔːlo]; Sicilian: cannolu, Sicilian: [kanˈnɔːlʊ]), a diminutive meaning 'little tube', from canna, 'cane' or 'tube'.

What is in a Swedish horn? ›

INGREDIENTS: DANISH MIX (ENRICHED WHEAT FLOUR [WHEAT FLOUR, NIACIN, IRON, THIAMINE MONONITRATE, RIBOFLAVIN, FOLIC ACID], SUGAR, DEXTROSE, PALM OIL, SOYBEAN OIL, NONFAT MILK, MONO- AND DIGLYCERIDES, CONTAINS 2% OR LESS OF: BETA-CAROTENE [COLOR], DEFATTED SOY FLOUR, DOUGH CONDITIONER [ASCORBIC ACID], EGGS, ENZYMES, ...

What is Boston cream filling made of? ›

Boston cream pie filling is traditionally made with vanilla pastry cream that tastes similar to a custard or a pudding. It's made with milk, eggs, butter, and vanilla and uses cornstarch to stabilize the mixture. It's cooked on the stove in a pan and is an easy recipe to make.

Are Boston cream and Bavarian cream the same? ›

Bavarian cream involves milk, eggs, sugar, and often vanilla extract, the same as Boston cream. But then the two ingredient lists diverge: Bavarian cream includes heavy cream and gelatin, while Boston cream involves cornstarch.

Why is it called diplomat cream? ›

Diplomat cream (crème diplomat in French) is a mixture of equal parts crème pâtissiere (pastry cream) and unsweetened whipped cream. Its history is unclear, but conventional wisdom says the name originated when French leaders served the cream—which they reserved for special occasions—to distinguished Bavarian visitors.

What is Holland cream made of? ›

The base of Holland cream is made by creaming together butter, shortening, and powdered sugar. Egg yolks are then added to the mixture and whipped until light and fluffy. Unlike custard fillings, Holland cream does not contain milk or cream.

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