It would be nice to know its history
It would be nice to know its history
From what I know, it was invented in the glory of Polish Hussars Victory over Ottomans in Battle of Vienna 1683y.
Or its only the legend? 😮
https://www.ice.edu/blog/brief-history-croissant
Who knows! Who knows...
Not sure if it's real video or made after the battle in some IT tent, but...
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=0MuX3t2Io50&pp=ygUOSHVzc2FycyB2aWVubmE%3D
From what I know, it was invented in the glory of Polish Hussars Victory over Ottomans in Battle of Vienna 1683y.Or its only the legend? 😮
https://www.ice.edu/blog/brief-history-croissant
Who knows! Who knows...
Not sure if it's real video or made after the battle in some IT tent, but...
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=0MuX3t2Io50&pp=ygUOSHVzc2FycyB2aWVubmE%3D
What I have always heard is that it was invented in Vienna/by an Austrian, but the recipe certainly has changed because when I see other countries "croissants", they don't really look like the ones in France.
Funnily and to support that idea, in French, croissants, pain au chocolat etc. are not pastries but "viennoiseries" which can be more or less translated into "Vienna thing".
What I have always heard is that it was invented in Vienna/by an Austrian, but the recipe certainly has changed because when I see other countries "croissants", they don't really look like the ones in France.Funnily and to support that idea, in French, croissants, pain au chocolat etc. are not pastries but "viennoiseries" which can be more or less translated into "Vienna thing".
Huh, so it really is somehow related to Vienna. Nice to know.
uuuhhh, i thought they came from France, sounds logical to me, bause in france almost every bakery you enter has them, and in france you also have the Maringues, and in france there is a village called Maringues