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A bolillo (Spanish pronunciation:) (in Mexico) or pan francés (in Central America) (meaning "French bread") is a type of savory bread made in Mexico and Central America. It is a variation of the baguette , but shorter in length and is often baked in a stone oven .
Mexican doctors, writers, cooks and anthropologists explain the origins behind eating the a bolillo, or roll, after one is scared. There's science to back it up.
Cart selling bolillos (crusty rolls) in San Juan de los Lagos, Jalisco. In the 20th century, there has been some industrialization of bread making, with the leader in this field being Bimbo. This multinational has production facilities in sixteen cities in the world, which has had some success in exporting Mexican bread styles.
A crusty french-style sandwich roll is often called a birote, this form of sandwich rolls typically found in Jalisco. [2] The word telera comes from a similar bread from Andalusia. [3] The term telera also means a either a plow pin or a corral and comes from Vulgar Latin *tēlāria. [4] A tortero is one who is in charge of a sandwich roll. [5]
The bread machine makes it a snap to turn out this attractive loaf that gets its zip from cayenne pepper, pepperoni and Mexican cheese. —Dusti Christensen, Goodridge, Minnesota Get Recipe
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De tacos, tamales y tortas (2013), Mexican historian José N. Iturriaga explains that guajolota was born in the city of Puebla at least two centuries ago,8 and that this original recipe differs slightly from the current guajolota, since it used "bazo" bread and was filled with a red enchilada (dried red chiles) and shredded pork meat.
In Mexico, a torta is a kind of sandwich, [15] served on one of two types of white sandwich rolls. The first is similar to a small baguette, and may be referred to as a bolillo, birote, or pan francés depending on region. The second is a flat, oblong, soft roll also called a sandwich roll, also referred as a telera.