
In the United States, National Croissant Day recognizes a flaky pastry enjoyed at every meal. Croissants are a buttery, crescent-shaped rolls that are crispy on the outside and soft on the inside.
- 1683 – The first recorded origin of the croissant comes from the Battle of Vienna, to celebrate the defeat of the Ottoman attack on the city, with the shape referring to the crescents on the Ottoman flags.
- 17th Century – The first recipe for croissants appeared in “Le Pâtissier françois” by François Pierre de La Varenne, better known as ‘puff pastry.’
- 1770s – Fifteen-year-old Marie heads from Vienna to France to marry and the (highly debated) story goes that she introduces the croissant to her new homeland.
- 1800s – The first documentation of the croissant in France was in an upscale patisserie named the ‘Boulangerie Viennoise.’
- 1837 – Boulangerie Viennoise (known as “Zang’s”) is a Paris bakery known for its Austrian-style baked items. This bakery only operates for two years, but its impact would change the world of French baked goods forever, as it is likely responsible for introducing the “kipferl”, which eventually becomes the croissant.
- 1869 – the croissant was established enough to be mentioned as a breakfast staple,
- 1872 – Charles Dickens wrote (in his periodical All the Year Round) of “the workman’s pain de ménage and the soldier’s pain de munition, to the dainty croissant on the boudoir table.”
- 1910s – While the idea of Viennese-style pastries was embraced by the French decades earlier, it wasn’t until this time that the treats were made using puff pastry combined with yeast, which changes the texture into something more like the flaky, layered treat of today.
- 1915 -Sylvain Claudius Goy – a French baker, penned the recipe for croissants we all know and enjoy today.
- 1920 – The Croissant became the French national product.
- 1920s – As the process for making these pastries is a bit labor intensive and expensive, they continue to be a luxury good for some time. Finally, around the time of WWII, the croissant became more available to the masses
- 1939 – Credit for the croissant we know today is given to an Austrian military officer, August Zang. In 1939 he opened a Viennese bakery in Paris introducing France to Viennese baking techniques.
- 1981 – Sara Lee introduced a frozen croissant in 1981, which soon outpaced its famous pound cakes in sales. Burger King, Arby’s, and other fast-food chains followed with croissant breakfast sandwiches and savory stuffed croissants.
- 1984 – The New York Times article declared, “The Americanization of the croissant” had begun.
- 2013 – The French newspaper Le Figaro named the croissant from bakery Pierre Hermé the best in Paris in 2013. It also won in 2006.
- 2013 – Chef Dominque Ansel came up with the cronut — a deep-fried croissant/doughnut combination that became all the rage at his New York bakery.
- 2016 – In February 2016 Tesco, a UK supermarket, said all its croissants will be curve-less. That’s despite the fact that its name literally means ‘crescent’.
- Legend surrounds this pastry, as is often the case with a popular, worldly treat. What is known, is that crescent-shaped breads have been found around the world for ages. One of these was the Kipferl which originated in Austria as far back as the 13th century. This nonlaminated bread is more like a roll.
- Each croissant roll is made of 50 or more thin layers of pastry & butter.
- According to legend, it was Marie Antoinette (Austrian Princess who married Louis XVI), who introduced the croissant to France.
- Since Starbucks bought French baker Pascal Rigo’s San Francisco-based La Boulange, the chocolate croissant has become the coffee chain’s bestselling pastry.
- The croissant started as a luxury product, but by the end of the nineteenth century, it was middle-class (the rich preferred a good brioche).
- Before the modern croissant, puff pastry was used as a garnish or shell, not to eat on its own.
- The chocolate croissant is called pain au chocolat, as it is not in the shape of a crescent.
- It’s estimated that around 85 percent of croissants sold in French bakeries are industrially manufactured.
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