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Pain au chocolat

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Place of origin
  
Variations
  
Pain aux raisins

Serving temperature
  
Hot or Cold

Variation
  
Pain aux raisins

Pain au chocolat Pain au Chocolat Tiny Cakes Most sought after bakery in Waterloo

Alternative names
  
Chocolate bread, chocolatine

Type
  
Viennoiserie sweet roll

Main ingredients
  
Similar
  
Chocolate, Croissant, Viennoiserie, Brioche, Baguette

Baking mad monday pain au chocolat


Pain au chocolat ([pɛ̃ o ʃɔ.kɔ.la], Pain de chocolat chocolate bread, also known as chocolatine in the south-west part of France and Canada, is a type of viennoiserie sweet roll consisting of a cuboid-shaped piece of yeast-leavened laminated dough, similar in texture to a puff pastry, with one or two pieces of dark chocolate in the centre.

Contents

Pain au chocolat Pain au chocolat chocolate croissants made from scratch

Pain au chocolat is made of the same layered doughs as a croissant. Often sold still hot or warm from the oven, they are commonly sold alongside croissants in French bakeries and supermarkets.

Pain au chocolat httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Homemade butter croissants and pain au chocolat


Origins

Pain au chocolat Pain au chocolat French Food Online Wholesaler Shop London

Legend has it that Marie-Antoinnette introduced the croissant to France, but croissants and pains au chocolat are a relatively modern invention. The word croissant, which refers to a plain form of pain au chocolat shaped like a half-moon or "crescent", made its entry in the French dictionary in 1863. The type of pastry, called "viennoiserie" in French, was introduced in the early 19th C. when August Zang, an Austrian officer, and Ernest Schwarzer, an Austrian aristocrat, founded a Viennese bakery in Paris located at 92 rue Richelieu.

Pain au chocolat Pain au Chocolat Tripagency

Originally, croissants and pains aux chocolat were made from a brioche base but later evolved to incorporate a buttery flaky dough ('pâte feuilletée).

International distribution

They are often sold in packages at supermarkets and convenience stores, or made fresh in pastry shops.

Pain au chocolat Pain au chocolat Tres bon painauchocolatjpg 16851128

In Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco, the Netherlands, Belgium, Norway, Ireland and the United Kingdom they are sold in most bakeries, supermarkets and cafés.

Pain au chocolat Petits Pains au Chocolat recipe Epicuriouscom

In Germany they are sold less frequently than chocolate croissants but are both referred to as "pain au chocolat".

In Belgium (flemish region, bruxelles and some parts of wallonia) they are sold in most bakeries and are referred as "couque au chocolat".

In Portugal and Spain they are sold in bakeries and supermarkets as napolitanas (from Naples).

In Mexico they are also most commonly found in bakeries and supermarkets, and are known as chocolatines.

In El Salvador and Brazil they are referred to "croissant de chocolate".

In New Zealand they are commonly referred to as "chocolate croissants" and are sold freshly baked in most bakeries and supermarkets.

Controversies

In 2012, Jean-François Copé created a turmoil when he said that "thugs" living in French suburbs were "prying pains au chocolat out of the hands of children during Ramadan".

References

Pain au chocolat Wikipedia