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Vienna-related stories seem to have been popularized by a man named Alfred Gottschalk, for the first edition (1938) of the Larousse Gastronomique, though he opted for the 1686 recapture of Buda as the defining event. In 1853. the term "Croissant" first appears in print in "Precis théorique et pratique des substances alimentaires et des moyens de les améliorer, de les conserver et d'en reconnaître les altérations" by François Anselme Payen. He mentions something he calls "crossants." In 1863. Maximilien Paul Emile Littré lists, in his "Dictionnaire de la langue française Littré", as his twelfth and final possible definition for the word croissant: "Petit pain ou petit gâteau qui a la forme d'un croissant." In 1867, Jules Gouffé in "Le livre de cuisine" gives a recipe for crescent-shaped almond paste cookies (almond paste, egg white, sugar.) Harold McGee, in his On Food And Cooking, The Science and Lore of the Kitchen, page 567, cites Raymond Clavel, the French bread expert, who found evidence of them at the 1869 World Fair in Paris. They weren't however, French -- they were part of the Viennese specialties offered there, and they weren't what we'd accept today as a good croissant. They were just crescent shaped yeast rolls, without the pounds of butter in them. Clavel goes on to say that only in 1920 did bakers in Paris modify them to add the layers and layers of butter. Alan Davidson, the food historian, could find no printed recipe for croissants as we know them before the early days of the 1900s (Oxford Companion to Food:Oxford. 1999, p. 232.) Savoury fillings such as ham and cheese, spinach and feta cheese, etc, are an innovation of the last few decades of the 1900s, it appears. Tim Hortons Doughnut Shops in Canada began selling Croissants in 1983; in the same year, Arby's in Canada and the United States added them to their offerings as well. Literature & Lore In Mastering the Art of French Cooking, volume 2, 1970 edition, Julia Child gives a recipe for "croissants" that begins on page 96 and ends on page 103. Language Notes From "croissant de lune". Also called: Croissants (French); Gipfeli, Halbmond, Kipferl (German)
Other entries for:CroissantsAlmond Croissants Other entries for:BreadBagels, Biscuits, Bread Crumbs, Bread Improvers, Flat Breads, French Breads, Kalakukko Bread, Quick Breads, Quignon, Rusks, Sippets, Tartine, Toast, Unleavened Bread Related RecipesSausage and Cheesy Tomato Croissants |
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