crissant - significado y definición. Qué es crissant
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Qué (quién) es crissant - definición

AUSTRIAN PASTRY
Croissante; Croissants; Gipfeli; Croissance; Crissants; Crissant; 🥐; Croisant
  • Baked croissants
  • The original Boulangerie Viennoise in 1909 (when it was owned by Philibert Jacquet). The bakery proper is at left and its tea salon at right.
  • Cross-section, showing texture
  • Croissant rising
  • A Kipferl, a precursor to croissants
  • Unbaked dough
  • [[St. Martin's croissant]] from [[Poznań]], Poland

Croissante         
·adj Terminated with crescent;
- said of a cross the ends of which are so terminated.
croissant         
(croissants)
Croissants are small, sweet bread rolls in the shape of a crescent that are eaten for breakfast.
...coffee and croissants.
N-VAR
croissant         
['krwas?croissant]
¦ noun a French crescent-shaped roll made of sweet flaky yeast dough, eaten for breakfast.
Origin
C19: Fr. (see crescent).

Wikipedia

Croissant

A croissant (French pronunciation: [kʁwasɑ̃] (listen)) is a buttery, flaky, viennoiserie pastry inspired by the shape of the Austrian kipferl but using the French yeast-leavened laminated dough. Croissants are named for their historical crescent shape, the dough is layered with butter, rolled and folded several times in succession, then rolled into a thin sheet, in a technique called laminating. The process results in a layered, flaky texture, similar to a puff pastry.

The modern croissant seems to have been created by the French chef Sylvain Claudius Goy.

Crescent-shaped breads have been made since the Renaissance, and crescent-shaped cakes possibly since antiquity. Kipferls have long been a staple of Austrian, and French bakeries and pâtisseries. The modern croissant was developed in the early 20th century when French bakers replaced the brioche dough of the kipferl with a yeast-leavened laminated dough. In the late 1970s, the development of factory-made, frozen, preformed but unbaked dough made them into a fast food that could be freshly baked by unskilled labor. The croissant bakery, notably the La Croissanterie chain, was 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 many European countries.