Pan dulce, literally meaning "sweet bread", is the general name for a variety of Mexican pastries. They are inexpensive treats and are consumed at breakfast, merienda, or dinner. The pastries originated in Mexico following the introduction of wheat during the Spanish conquest of the Americas and developed into many varieties thanks to French influences in the 19th century.[1]

Pan dulce
Pan dulce at a shop in Mexico City
Pan dulce at a shop in Mexico City
TypeSweet bread
Place of originMexico
Pan dulce comes in different shapes, colors and sizes as pictured above.

Types

edit
 
Pan dulce

The creative contribution of French baked goods to Mexico's cuisine peaked in the early 20th century during the dictatorship of Porfirio Díaz. Skilled Mexican bakers adopted French techniques to create new bread designs with colorful names. Today it is estimated that there are between 500 and 2,000 types of bread currently produced in Mexico. Among these are:

  • Alamar
  • Almohada
  • Antaño
  • Barquillo
  • Barra para rebanadas
  • Beso
  • Bicicletas
  • Bigote
  • Bísquet
  • Bocado
  • Budín
  • Burrita
  • Calabaza
  • Calvo
  • Calzón
  • Canasta
  • Caracol
  • Cemita
  • Chafaldrana
  • Chamuco
  • Chicharrón
  • Chilindrina
  • Chimistlán
  • Chirimoya
  • Chirindolfo
  • Cocoles
  • Colchón
  • Concha
  • Congal
  • Coyota
  • Cuerno de mantequilla
  • Cuerno de vapor
  • Donas
  • Doroteo
  • Elote
  • Empanochada
  • Galletas de coco
  • Gendarme
  • Guarapo
  • Gusano
  • Gusarapo
  • Hojaldra
  • Ladrillo
  • Manita
  • Mexicano
  • Moño de danés
  • Mundos
  • Neblina
  • Nopal
  • Novia
  • Ojo de Pancha
  • Oreja
  • Pachucos
  • Pan catarino
  • Pan de caja
  • Pan de elote
  • Pan de feria
  • Pan de muerto
  • Pan de pueblo
  • Pan de pulque
  • Pan de royal
  • Pan de yema
  • Pan decorado con letras
  • Pan en forma de corazón
  • Pan en forma de tornillo
  • Pan mestizo
  • Pan redondo bordado
  • Pan redondo o moreliano
  • Pan típico de nuez
  • Panquecito
  • Pechuga
  • Piedra
  • Polvorón
  • Puerquito de piloncillo
  • Rebanada
  • Regañada
  • Reja
  • Rehiletes
  • Rieles
  • Rosca de reyes
  • Roscas de canela
  • Soles
  • Tanas
  • Tecoyota
  • Trenza
  • Yolanda
  • Yoyos

Besos

edit

A beso (kiss), from Mexico, is made by creating round domes on the top with a drop filling of jam in the middle.[2]

Campechanas

edit

Campechanas are rectangular or round glazed Mexican pastries (referred to as hojaldre, Mexican millefeuille). They are crisp, flaky, and have a shiny caramel colored finish. Champechanas are a very common pan dulce.[3]

Conchas (shells)

edit
 
A concha sweet bread bought in Mexico City

Conchas (shells) are known for their shell-like shape and sugar shell pattern on the top. This is the most common of a genre of bizcocho (egg dough) that is topped with a plethora of toppings elaborated out of sugar crust. Although the classic shape is shell-like, it can also be shaped like a snail and the cookie-dough topping can be stamped to be in the pattern of squares as well. Some are sprinkled with different types of sugar or sesame. Each shape and presentation has a different name; there are dozens. Classic colors are chocolate, vanilla, egg, or pink, but they can be made in any food color available. The dough is traditionally flavored with vanilla or orange blossom (flor de azahar), and can be mixed with anise seeds or cinnamon. Other names include arracadas, potosinas, and novias. The concha is a Mexican creation from the 19th century. It is not related to Japanese melon pan or Hong Kong pineapple buns, but is visually similar. [citation needed]This is one of the most famous Mexican pastries and widely recognized in the United States. It is also referred to as "pan de huevo" (egg bread) in other Latin American countries, such as Chile, where they are eaten during tea time or at the beach.[4] They are known as cemitas in Honduras, and as bizcochos in Spain.

Cuernos (horns)

edit

Cuernos (horns) are a Mexican pastry that is known for their horn-like shape. This pastry has garnered many comparisons to the French croissant.[5]

Empanadas (turnovers)

edit

Empanadas (turnovers) are a pastry more commonly served in Cuba and South America but also have a place in Mexican cuisine. They are filled with meat or other ingredients such as cheese or vegetables of different sorts. They are also filled with fruit such as pumpkin or apple.[6]

Marianas

edit

Marianas are small vanilla sponge cakes that are coated with raspberry jam and coconut along the outside. The top part of Marianas are usually filled with icing or fruit filling.[7]

Marranitos / cochinitos / puerquitos (little pigs)

edit
 
Cochinitos sold by a street vendor at a fair in Cuajimalpa, Mexico City

Marranitos / cochinitos / puerquitos (little pigs) are pig-shaped pastries sweetened with piloncillo and spiced with cinnamon. The bread has erroneously been called "gingerbread pig" because the finished result looks similar to gingerbread. However, ginger isn't used to make the pastry.[8]

Orejas (ears)

edit

Orejas (ears) are flaky and sweet Mexican pastries that are shaped like an ear and are very common at bakeries.[9] They are very similar to a French Palmier.

Piedras (rocks or stones)

edit

Piedras (rocks or stones) is a pastry made of old bread and is known to be as hard as a rock. Many people eat this with very hot drinks.[10]

 
Polvorones Rosas

Polvorones (wedding cookies)

edit

Polvorones (wedding cookies) are shortbread cookies, often eaten at weddings.[11]

Yoyos (yo-yos)

edit

Yoyos (yo-yos) are a Mexican pastry named after the yo-yo toy, and is shaped exactly like it, but does not have the string. It has a filling which usually consists of raspberry jam.[12]

Religious and seasonal pastries

edit

With the invention of pan dulce in Mexico, other significant breads were produced to celebrate special occasions and traditions, such as rosca de reyes and pan de muerto. These special breads are part of the traditional customs that have been around for centuries. The stories behind these special occasional breads derive from religious beliefs, the dominant being Roman Catholic.

Rosca de reyes

edit
 
Rosca de reyes en su caja

Rosca de reyes ("kings' crown") is a treat in addition to a gift that is given on Three Kings Day, Dia de los Reyes Magos, which is held twelve days after Christmas, the celebration date of the birth of Jesus Christ. This bread is symbolic in many ways, the most illustrative being its round shape which signifies the crown of the Magi. Baked inside is a small white plastic or ceramic figurine which represents the baby Jesus. The hidden baby Jesus symbolizes the secrecy of the location of Jesus as a child. The ruler of Jerusalem, King Herod, upon learning about the birth of the prophesied King of the Jews, ordered that all male infants be killed so that he could keep his crown. Whoever finds the small figurine is obligated to host a party for the celebration of the Dia de la CandelariaFiesta de la Candelaria – which occurs on February 2.[13][14]

Pan de muerto

edit
 
One of the many types of pan de muerto

Pan de muerto ('bread of the dead') is a special bread that is consumed and offered as a part of the Día de Muertos celebration in October and November. Day of the Dead is a lively and communal commemoration of the dead. The bread takes many different shapes, from skulls to animals to crosses and mummies. The traditional pan de muerto is shaped like a skull, round, with a little ball at the center top to represent a cranium. Following are the four bones to symbolize the four courses of the universe.[15][16] Pan de muerto consists of ingredients such as dry yeast, all purpose flour, eggs, butter and salt.[17]

Cultural significance

edit

Pan dulce is considered to be a Mexican cuisine. Other countries in Latin America and even Europe have adapted some of Mexico's pastries, but it is in Mexico that the creative new shapes originate. Today, pan dulce is seen in many parts of the United States, especially in places like California, Arizona, and Texas, as a result of migration.

Mexico

edit

In Mexico, pan dulce is typically consumed at breakfast or evening supper. It is usually accompanied by hot chocolate, milk (often warm), or coffee, and is dipped into the drink for better taste. It can also be eaten alone.

United States

edit

Pan dulce can be found in Mexican markets in many U.S. states. Though pan dulce may not be consumed as frequently, it is commonly consumed in Hispanic or Latino homes.

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Pan dulce". Taste Atlas. Retrieved April 13, 2024.
  2. ^ Popik, Barry. "Besos (Mexican pastry "kisses")". barrypopik.com. Retrieved 6 March 2017.
  3. ^ Popik, Barry. "Campechanas". barrypopik.com. Retrieved 6 March 2017.
  4. ^ Popik, Barry. "Conchas (Mexican shell-shaped pastries)". barrypopik.com. Retrieved 6 March 2017.
  5. ^ Popik, Barry. "Cuernos (Mexican horn-shaped pastries)". barrypopik.com. Retrieved 6 March 2017.
  6. ^ Popik, Barry. "Empanada". barrypopik.com. Retrieved 6 March 2017.
  7. ^ Popik, Barry (12 December 2008). "Yoyos or Yo-Yos (Mexican Pastries)".
  8. ^ Popik, Barry. "Marranitos or Cochinitos or Puerquitos (little gingerbread pigs)". barrypopik.com. Retrieved 6 March 2017.
  9. ^ Popik, Barry. "Orejas (Mexican pastry "ears")". barrypopik.com. Retrieved 6 March 2017.
  10. ^ Popik, Barry. "Piedras (Mexican pastry "rocks" or "stones")". barrypopik.com. Retrieved 6 March 2017.
  11. ^ Popik, Barry. "Pan de Polvo or Polvoron/Polvorones (Mexican Wedding Cookies)". barrypopik.com. Retrieved 6 March 2017.
  12. ^ Popik, Barry. "Yoyos or Yo-Yos (Mexican pastries)". barrypopik.com. Retrieved 6 March 2017.
  13. ^ "Three King's Day - January 6th - The Story of Los Tres Reyes Magos". mexonline.com. Retrieved 6 March 2017.
  14. ^ Gema Candelas Peña (1 January 2011). "El Regalo del Roscón de Reyes" [The Gift of the Kings' Crown]. Boletín de Interpretación (in Spanish) (25). Archived from the original on 6 March 2017. Retrieved 6 March 2017.
  15. ^ "Historia del Pan de Muerto". Sabor a México (in Spanish). 31 October 2012. Archived from the original on 10 February 2015.
  16. ^ "Pan de Muertos (Mexican Bread of the Dead) Recipe". allrecipes.com. Retrieved 6 March 2017.
  17. ^ Andrade, Mary J (2000). Through the Eyes of the Soul, Day of the Dead in Mexico. Hong Kong: La Oferta Review Newspaper, Inc. pp. 107. ISBN 0966587626.
edit
  NODES
HOME 2
languages 1
Note 1
os 59
visual 1