I’ve been binge watching The Great British Baking Show on Netflix recently and I’m pretty sure it’s the best cooking show I’ve seen. I just love how nice the competitors are to each other and how great they are at baking crazy and complicated baked goods. Plus, I love that there isn’t any American-sized prize. It’s just for the love of baking!
On one episode – I can’t remember which exactly – they were making a bunch of different Eclairs and one of the competitors made a savory one. It dawned on me that an eclair is really the same size as a hot dog bun and the idea kind of stuck around in my brain until I had to try to merge the two together.
It turns out (as with most things) I’m not the first to try this. Apparently there is a chocolate eclair stuffed with a hot dog, but that sounds pretty odd to me. My version is 100% savory and works perfectly. The bun ends up being crunchy on the exterior but oh-so light and airy. And you can top it with whatever you want!
I was completely giddy making different versions of these Eclair Hot Dogs, but trust me when I say that these are NOT a gimmick. They are very, very delicious.
Eclair Hot Dogs
Equipment
Ingredients
Choux Pastry:
- 1 cup water
- ½ cup unsalted butter
- 1 teaspoon kosher salt
- 1 cup bread flour
- 4 large eggs
Other Ingredients:
- 8 hot dogs
- Egg Wash, 1 egg + 1 Tbsp. water
- Sesame seeds
- Diced onion
- Diced pickles
- Ketchup
- Mustard
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 425 degrees F. In a medium pot add water, butter, and salt and heat until butter is melted. Then turn heat down to low and stir in flour with a wooden spoon. Stir for 3-4 minutes over low heat until the dough is in a single ball that’s shiny and soft and not sticky at all. There should be a very thin film on the bottom of the pan. A spoon should stick straight up in the dough.
- Transfer the dough to a stand mixer with the paddle attachment. Beat on medium speed for 3 minutes just to cool down the dough. Then add eggs one at a time. Finished choux dough should almost hold its shape. If you pick it up with the paddle, it should hold a “V” shape.
- Transfer dough to piping bag or sturdy plastic bag.
- Pipe dough onto a baking sheet lined with parchment paper. Pipe it into 5-6 inch buns, leaving a good amount of space in between each one.
- Press hot dogs right into the middle of each bun. Then brush buns with egg wash and sprinkle with sesame seeds.
- Bake Eclair hot dogs for 12 minutes at 425 degrees F. Then reduce temp to 375 and bake for another 20 minutes. Then reduce to 300 degrees and bake for a final 10 minutes.
- When hot dogs are done, drizzle them with ketchup and/or mustard and sprinkle with diced onions and pickles. Serve while warm!
Nutrition
Did you make this recipe?
Eclair Hot Dogs
Let’s start with the dough because that’s really the only slightly difficult part of this recipe. Personally, I find choux dough to be easier to make than many other types of dough so I’m not sure what the great big fuss is about it. You just have to make it in two stages. The first stage is in a pot and the second is in a mixer.
I think it freaks people out because the idea of cooking a dough is odd.
But it’s not hard so dive in.
Start by adding water, butter, and salt to a medium pot over medium-high heat until the butter is melted. Then stir in the flour with a wooden spoon. Bread flour is best, but you can use all-purpose flour as well.
Stir this over low heat for a few minutes until the dough comes together in a shiny, smooth ball of dough. It should be really soft, but it should pass “the spoon test” meaning that you should be able to stick a spoon in it and the spoon will stand up for at least a few seconds.
Next, it’s time to add the eggs, but if you add the eggs now they will scramble because the dough is so hot. So add the dough to a mixer and mix the dough with the paddle attachment for a few minutes just to cool it off.
Then add the eggs one at a time!
After four eggs, the dough should be really smooth and shiny and just barely hold its shape. If you pick the mixer out of the bowl, the dough should hold a “V” shape on the paddle.
It’s done!
Making the Hot Dogs
You can pipe choux dough into any shape you want so I tried a bunch of different ways of putting hot dogs in it. I tried some where the hot dog was completely covered with dough. Some where I just pressed the hot dog into the dough and some that I just baked without a hot dog and cut those open like a true hot dog bun.
Before baking, I recommend brushing the dough with egg wash and sprinkling on some sesame seeds.
Baking choux dough at a few different temps (first hot and then colder) gives best results. You want to start it off hot so a bunch of steam builds up and it rises. Then you want to do a lower temp which will dry out the dough without burning the crust.
I do:
- 12 minutes at 425 degrees F.
- 20 minutes at 375 degrees F.
- 10 minutes at 300 degrees F.
The results are pretty great.
Which Shape Worked Best?
I had high hopes for the hot dog that was completely encased in dough, because that most closely resembled eclairs, but it didn’t work really. There was just too much dough on it and the dough kind of separated from the dog. Tasty, but not the best.
Turns out the version that worked the best was also the easiest. Just press the hot dog into the dough and as it bakes the dough rises up around the dog, basically making a bun.
Biting into the Eclair Hot Dog is awesome. The dog is salty and crispy and the dough has this beautiful crackly crust on it but is light and airy on the inside.
These are NOT as hard to make as real eclairs. They don’t need to be perfect and you don’t have to make a filling or glaze or anything. They are just a fun little twist on an American classic that I hope you try.
I absolutely loved cooking them AND eating them.
Kiara
You continue to be one of the most creative bloggers around. Love this idea!
Nick
Hey thanks! Honestly I feel like I’ve been a bit more in the quick-and-easy category these days with two kiddos but still love to bust out some weird new stuff occasionally. :)
Karl
“Chocolate eclair stuffed with a hot dog…”
Perhaps “chocolate” as in mole poblano?
Stephen
Yes! This sounds awesome on an all beef dog or roasted, shredded chicken. There is a chain market local to southern California and they have a delicious, prepared dark mole on the fresh salsa bars. Get it!