A croissant)
is a buttery, flaky, viennoiserie pastry named for its crescent shape.
Croissants and other viennoiserie are made of a layered yeast-leavened dough.
The dough is layered with butter, rolled and folded several times in
succession, then rolled into a sheet, in a technique called laminating. The
process results in a layered, flaky texture, similar to a puff pastry.
Crescent-shaped
breads have been made since the Renaissance, and crescent-shaped cakes possibly
since antiquity.
Croissants
have long been a staple of Austrian and French bakeries and pâtisseries. In the
late 1970s, the development of factory-made, frozen, pre-formed but unbaked
dough made them into a fast food which can be freshly baked by unskilled labor.
The croissanterie was explicitly a French response to American-style fast food,
and as of 2008 30–40% of the croissants sold in French bakeries and patisseries
were baked from frozen dough.
Croissants are
a common part of a continental breakfast in France.
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