French Dip Crescents for the win! I love a French Dip. I love a Crescent Roll. The two together? Marriage made in food heaven!
If ever there was the perfect food where fancy met frugal and high brow met high fives, this French Dip Crescents Rolls recipe is it. Try it with our Easy Au Jus Sauce. Serve alongside some baked buffalo chicken dip and bacon stuffed mushrooms for your next party!
French Dip Crescents
French Dip Crescents
Click the button above to save this recipe!
French Dip Crescent Ingredients:
- Crescent roll dough – I find brand name and generic both work just fine.
- Roast beef – Thinly sliced.
- Swiss or provolone cheese, cut into equal sized pieces.
- Optional – Horseradish Sauce, Au Jus for dipping (click here for my Easy Au Jus recipe!)
How do you make a French Dip Croissant?
⭐ First, unroll crescents onto a large parchment lined baking sheet.
⭐ Next, spread a small dab of horseradish on each crescent, then place a slice of roast beef and a piece of cheese on each crescent.
⭐ Then, roll crescents starting from the wide end and ending at the narrow end and bake until crescents are a golden color.
⭐ Finally, serve with your favorite dipping sauces.
Scroll down to the printable recipe card toward the bottom of this article for ingredient measurements and detailed cooking instructions.
Preparation
Can you make French dip crescents ahead of time?
I prefer these warm straight from the oven, but you can definitely make them ahead if you’d like. My kids enjoy them in their packed lunches so sometimes we’ll fix a big batch on Sunday to use all week.
What type of meat for French dip crescents?
Usually we use deli roast beef but you could also use leftover prime rib, leftover grilled rib eye, or even oven broiled flank steak.
Storage and leftovers
How long do French dip crescent sandwiches last?
These will keep in the refrigerator for up to 5 days. Store in an airtight container for best results.
Can you freeze them?
Yes, this is a great way to make packed lunches easy. Make a large batch and store them in the freezer for up to a year. Store in an air tight freezer safe container. Reheat in the toaster oven or microwave, if desired.
Tips, tricks, and frequently asked questions
What are French Dip Crescents?
A harmonious (read = delicious) marriage of the classic French dip sandwich with the snacktasticness of crescent rolls and just a touch of prime rib for good measure. There are never leftovers when I serve this (and while I don’t generally condone speaking in such definitives, I mean never quite literally).
Who invented French Dip Crescents?
(TL;DR – me). So, I have to laugh a little about this recipe. The idea for it came to me on one of those lingering trips to the grocery store right after my daughter (#4) was born.
You know, the ones where you finally get away by yourself and just can’t quite bear the idea of returning home to the chaos just yet.
Anyway, I circled back around to the deli for the third (okay, fourth) time, and spotted the expensive lunch meat. Which was decidedly out of budget at the time. I was thinking nostalgically about our pre-baby long lunch days at a favorite local joint.
I always got the french dip. Mmmmm.
And *boom* there it was. A moment of pure culinary genius. When I got home with the ingredients, hubby did the “you spent way too much on unnecessary groceries” deep sigh, and I apologized profusely. Because, it really wasn’t in the budget. But I hustled, and got the recipe online, and we enjoyed the crescents and forgave ourselves for the small indulgence.
When I woke up the next morning though, a nutty thing was happening. My site was going crazy! People loved this recipe! Like really REALLY loved it. That was over 9 years ago and this is still one of my most visited recipes. So, that lunch meat? Totally worth it.
What to eat with French dip crescents (serving suggestions)
We like to serve these with our favorite dipping sauces. I’m partial to au jus or blue cheese dressing and my kids really like this curry mustard sauce.
They’re great as a soup and sandwich type meal with creamy tomato soup and a side of tropical fruit salad. Don’t forget the peanut butter chocolate chip cookies for dessert!
More recipes made with crescent rolls
- Bratwurst Crescents with Curry Mustard
- Croissants with Ham and Cheese
- Two Minute Garlic Knots
- Banana Honey Blue Cheese Crescents
- Balsamic Strawberry Crescents
- Mini Apple Pie Pockets
- Mini Cherry Pie Pockets
Tools we love!
- Crescent Rolls – no need to use the name brand, if you store carries their own version feel free to use that as well!
- Creamy Horseradish Sauce – not everyone loves horseradish sauce, but I think it adds a nice kick to these French Dip Crescent Rolls!
- Au Jus Gravy Mix – we have our own simple recipe for au jus, but if you don’t want to bother, go ahead and grab a pack.
- Silpat Baking Mats – I cannot even begin to explain my deep and abiding love for silicone baking mats. Nothing sticks to them. Notttthhhhhhing.
Get our FREE Easy Casseroles Ebook!
Follow us below!Use #mamalovesfood on Instagram!
How to Make French Dip Crescents
French Dip Crescent
Ingredients
- 2 packages crescent rolls 8 count
- 1 pound deli roast beef thinly sliced
- 4 ounces Swiss or provolone cheese cut in 16 equal sized pieces
- optional: Horseradish Sauce
- optional: Au Jus for dipping click here for my Easy Au Jus recipe!
Instructions
- Unroll crescents onto a large cookie sheet.
- Spread a small dab of horseradish on each crescent, then place a slice of roast beef and a piece of cheese on each crescent.
- Roll crescents starting from the wide end and ending at the narrow end.
- Bake at 375 degrees for 11 to 13 minutes, until crescents are a golden color.
- Serve with Au Jus and enjoy!
Video
Notes
Nutrition
If you love French dips, try these French dip sliders next!
French Dip Crescents
Click the button above to save this recipe!
1-2012, 06-16-15
Jenn says
Oh yum!!!! Will be doing this!!
Liz says
Where do you get/how do you make your Au Jus? I've only been able to get some decent Au Jus when I cook my own beef (from scratch) for French Dip Sandwiches. Thanks!
Unknown says
for a quick fix, i found Au jus pre mix in the dried sauces. its not like the homemade, but it is pretty good….
Liz says
Never mind, I see now that the Au Jus in the recipe is linked. Please forgive me. 🙂
Anonymous says
I am one happy pregnant woman right now! This looks so yummy! I will be trying this TONIGHT!
Bo and Sarah says
Brilliant!
Anita says
what a super yum, awesome idea – thank you for sharing!
Anonymous says
I tried this today, & I had to cook them for over 30 minutes for the crescent dough to be done.
Anonymous says
did anyone feel like the dough was not done? or too mushy when dipped?
kay says
i made these tonight.. the bottom of each crescent came out very soggy though 🙁
MommyNamedApril says
@ Kay & anon – I've never had a problem with undercooked or soggy dough… Was your lunch meat wet?
Mom at Taste Test Kitchen says
We made this tonight for dinner and it was yummy. It was our first recipe we tried and blogged about!
Courtney Johnson says
OH I AM SO MAKING THIS TONIGHT!
Kelly says
We enjoyed making these… fun for my husband and I to work on together, and super yummy! We cheated and used au jus mix from the store, but it was just as good!
Jenna says
I made these the other night for my family. Deeeelicious! I thought there would be leftovers for lunch the next day. Nope! They were gone!
Alli says
I made these last night and after 25 minutes at 375 the middles were still too gooey to eat. Perhaps another shape would work better?
My hubby ate it anyway, but I could not. The ends were yummy, though.
Jenna says
Featured this yumminess on my blog today!
Katy says
I just wanted to let you know, we made this tonight and it was a slam dunk for dinners! I over cooked them a bit because I don't like even remotely undercooked dough, and they were fabulous. My boyfriend even told me that I should take a picture and post them on "that internet stuff you do." Thanks!! I love being a hero!
Molly says
This is incredible, I mean, I've seen many variations of cresent rolls, but this has to be the end-all-be-all of every one I've ever seen. Thanks for the awesome post, keep 'em comin!
Jacquie says
Would there be anything you could use instead of horseradish? Does it make that big of a difference to have no kind of condiment on there? I will be trying these this week without the horseradish.
Anonymous says
OMG! Awesome, awesome, awesome.
Thanks to my neice, Ashley, for showing me this recipe!