In Germany, they are sold less frequently than chocolate croissants, but both are referred to as Schokoladencroissant or Schokobrötchen.
In the United States and sometimes in English Canada, they are commonly known as "pain au chocolat" or "chocolate croissants".[2]
In the Netherlands, they are sold at most cafés, supermarkets and bakeries and are commonly known as a chocoladebroodje.
In Belgium's Flanders region, they are sold in most bakeries, and referred to as chocoladekoek or chocoladebroodje/chocobroodje.
In Portugal and Spain, they are sold in bakeries and supermarkets, as napolitanas (i.e., "Neapolitans").
In Mexico, they are also most commonly found in bakeries and supermarkets, and are known as chocolatines.
In El Salvador and Brazil, they are referred to croissant de chocolate.
In Australia and New Zealand, they are commonly referred to as "chocolate croissants", and are sold freshly baked in most bakeries and supermarkets.
In Colombia, they are commonly referred to as "Cruasan de chocolate".
Origins and history
Legend has it that Marie-Antoinette introduced the croissant to France, but croissants and chocolatines are a relatively modern invention.[3] The word croissant, which refers to a pastry shaped like a half-moon or "crescent", made its entry in the French dictionary in 1863.[4] The type of pastry, called viennoiserie in French, was introduced in the early 19th century, when August Zang, an Austrian officer, and Ernest Schwarzer, an Austrian aristocrat, founded a Viennese bakery in Paris located at 92, rue de Richelieu.[citation needed]
Croissants and pains au chocolat were originally made from a brioche base, but this was later replaced by French bakers with a bread puff pastry (pâte feuilletée levée) to become the modern product.[citation needed]