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This is how to make conchas at home! The post How to Make Conchas appeared first on Taste of Home. Step inside a panaderia, or Mexican bakery, and you'll find a bread case filled with colorful ...
Concha (Spanish, 'shell'), plural conchas, is a traditional Hispanic sweet bread with similar consistency to a brioche. [1] Conchas get their name from their round shape and their striped, seashell-like appearance. A concha consists of two parts, a sweetened bread roll, and a crunchy topping (composed of flour, butter, and sugar). [2]
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Other important flavorings include almonds, coconut, sesame, peanuts, walnuts, chocolate, tequila, rum, orange peel, strawberry preserves, quince jelly, apricot preserves, apple and pineapple. In some breads, which need to puff greatly, finely ground tequesquite (saltpeter or potassium/sodium nitrate) is used.
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.
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Candied orange peel. Candied fruit, also known as glacé fruit, is whole fruit, smaller pieces of fruit, or pieces of peel, placed in heated sugar syrup, which absorbs the moisture from within the fruit and eventually preserves it. Depending on the size and type of fruit, this process can take from several days to several months. [1]
When the dough is chilled, roll it out thinly (about 1/8-inch) on a floured surface. Cut out the dough with cookie cutters and arrange the cookies about two inches apart on a baking sheet.