Conchas: Mexico's beloved pan dulce (2024)

Ather Texas bakery, Comadre Panadería, Mariela Camacho isknown for her conchas, a staple Mexican pan dulce she's loved since she was a child. Here, she writes about this beloved bread and shares colorful variations to make at home.

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Go into any panadería, and you’ll find a huge selection of items to choose from. Though there may be thousands of varieties of pan dulce (sweet breads), none are more ubiquitous or as much of a staple to the Latinx diaspora as the concha.

Conchas are enriched sweet breads topped with crumbly cookie "shells." (Conchameans shell in Spanish.) If you aren’t of Mexican heritage or didn’t grow up in places with large Latinx communities, you may have never heard of them, or perhaps dismissed them as a dry, too-sweet bread with a stale food-colored topping.And I completely understand, because I’ve had that experience too. But I’m here to say that not all conchas are dry and overly sweet, and at their best they’re truly beautiful.

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I’m happy to be a part of a generation of bakers reviving and reclaiming this beloved pan dulce. My family is from Aguascalientes and Zacatecas in central Mexico, and while visiting as a kid, I recognized a difference in taste from the pan dulce I enjoyed in California and Texas. (Yes, even as a 7-year-old I could taste the difference! Some would say I was always meant to be a panadera.) Even as an adult, it was clear: The conchas in Mexico were better. They were fresh, the wheat had more flavor, the shell had subtle spices, and the bread had a bite to it.

So what happened to the conchas here in the United States? I don’t know for sure, but my assumption as a professional baker isthat panaderías have had to make sacrifices because of cost.Operating a food business is brutal, and it’s even more difficult with the odds against you as a person of color in a system that doesn't care if you succeed or not. Many Latinx-owned bakeries struggleto make a living while keeping their prices affordable fortheir community. As a result, there’s significant pressure to use industrialized practices and products to increase shelf life and profit margins, instead of emphasizing pre-colonial values of sustainability and nutrient-rich ingredients.

How I'm reclaiming conchas in my baking

In 2017, I decided to start my own pop-up panadería, a project that stemmed from mydecade of baking experience, my love for being a first-generation kid in the U.S., and a desire to make more nutritious food available to folks whose basic right to healthy food had been stripped away. And of course, the first thing I did when starting my panadería was develop a concha recipe.

Bit by bit I adjusted my recipe. I subbed in whole grain and stone-ground flours for nutrition and flavor and used traditional unrefined sugars like panela and piloncillo instead of white sugar. I also used the highest quality (locally produced when possible) butter and eggs I could get my hands on. The result was a concha that was less sweet and more flavorful.

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For the beautiful, bright-colored shells that top my conchas, I ditched the artificial dyes and added color and flavor with fruits, veggies, flowers, and spices. The shell has been the trickiest part to nail, but it offers me an outlet to get creative.

I emphasize quality ingredients, but it’s still a struggle for me to feel great about any ingredient sourcing, because at its roots our American food system is built on stolen land and stolen labor. So I do my best to support folks I feel are respectful to their workers, understand their responsibility asland-owners and support sustainability, and treatanimals humanely.

Want to adapt your concha recipe?

The King Arthur recipe for Cinnamon Conchas is a great foundation to experiment with concha variations. I make a few tweaks: I like to substitute either a whole wheat or white whole wheat flour for the all-purpose flour in the starter. Both work welland makethe concha dough a bit easier to shape, since it can beon the stickier side. In the dough itself, I also replace half the all-purpose flour with white whole wheat, which lends a good bite without creating too much chew. In addition, I like to make my life easier and work with the dough cold, so after it’s doubled in size at room temperature, I stick it in the fridge for 12 to 24 hours.

For the shell topping, you can use the granulated sugar the King Arthur recipe originally calls for —which yields a light crunch and eliminates the need to have two different sugars on hand —or substitute the same weight in confectioners’ sugar, which is more standard in conchas.

If you’re using granulated sugar, try pre-infusing it with raw ingredients like herbs, spices, flowers, or citrus peels for added flavor. For example, I like to mix the sugar with mezcal and orange zest, dry it out overnight, then use it the next day to make the shell after it re-crystallizes. If you’re using confectioners’ sugar, try replacing some of the total quantity with freeze-dried fruit powders or other powdered ingredients like matcha, cocoa, or spices. Add as much or as little as you like to get the flavor you want. There are endless possibilities.

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The concha’s sweet enriched dough and cookie shell is a combo that has created variation after variation. Panaderías love variety in their pan dulce, and bakers often find a way to take very similar components of an item and tweak them to create something fun and different.

Here are a couple of notable pan dulce relatives of the concha that are easy and fun to try using the recipe for Cinnamon Conchasas a base, though there are countless more.

Nube: Make a cloud-like twist

Nube means cloud, and as far as I can tell it gets its name from its broken-up white shell, which resembles a cloud. To make this pan dulce, follow the recipe for the shell, minus the cinnamon. I like to add 1/4cup (27g) shredded coconut and 1/2teaspoon vanilla extract. Break the topping mixture into little chunks, place it on your dough after brushing with egg wash, and sprinkle with sparkling sugar. As the rolls proof, you can add on some more chunks if you feel theyneedit!

Chilindrina: Go bright and beautiful with turmeric

The chilindrina's shell is usually in a shade of orange or yellow; it's also thicker than on a concha and no pattern is cut on top. You can add crunchy large granules of sugar too. (I like sparkling sugar for this.) To get the color, I added some single-origin turmeric instead of cinnamon to the shell. A little goes a long way, so start with 1/4teaspoon and add more as needed. The topping cracks as the rolls proof and bake, and they turn out beautifully.

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Lima: Add a little lime

Lima is a lime-flavored pan dulce with a circle cut in the middle of the shell to represent the citrus. Instead of cinnamon, add tons of lime zest and lime oil to the shell and dough if you have access to it; if not, macerating lime peels with granulated sugar helps the lime flavor really come through.

Novia: Coil and dustwith sugar

A novia is made by rolling the dough into a long snake then coiling it up, almost like a cinnamon roll. I sometimes see the dough rolled in sugar orthe concha topping before it gets coiled, but I like to brush it with butter once it comes out of the oven and then roll it in sugar in place of the usual shell.

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Truly, the basic concha recipe is just a jumping off point for endless flavors and experimentation. Some of the conchas I’ve served include raspberry red chile, matcha, birthday cake, mezcal y orange, hazelnut, and a version full of chocolate chunks in the dough.

Lovers of pan dulce eat with their eyes as well as their soul, and they demand a steady stream of colorful and nostalgic flavors.I feel privileged and proud to represent and nourish my culture through this well-loved but often misunderstood sweet bread. To the concha skepticsout there, give it another chance: this special bread deserves it.

Cover photo by Liz Neily

Conchas: Mexico's beloved pan dulce (2024)

FAQs

Are conchas and pan dulce the same? ›

Let's talk about Mexican conchas which are also known as pan dulce! Sweet Bread literally translates to pan dulce in Spanish. While concha in English translates to seashell.

Is it Conchita or concha? ›

Conchita is also the diminutive of concha (seashell).

What do conchas symbolize? ›

Conchas have become a symbol of Mexican-American identity. The image can be found in art and merchandise all over. Conchas can now be found packaged in grocery stores across Central, South, and North America.

What does pan dulce represent? ›

Among other culinary themes and historical symbols, pan dulce represents a fair amount of Latin American baking creativity and breadways that have found their way to the city. Pan dulce's Hispanic roots stem from the Iberian Peninsula or "Islamic Spain," as it is sometimes called.

What does pan dulce mean in Spanish slang? ›

American Spanish, sweet bread.

Why are my conchas not fluffy? ›

If you want light and airy conchas, you can't rush the rising process. Make sure the dough about doubles in size during the first rise and then again once you've shaped the dough. I made this and let the dough rise about 2 hours the first time and 1.5 hours after the conchas were formed in a warm place.

What is the English word for concha? ›

Translation of concha – Portuguese–English dictionary

seashell [noun] the (empty) shell of a sea creature.

How to eat a concha? ›

They can be eaten for breakfast with hot chocolate, coffee or milk; snacked on as an anytime pick-me-up; or even split in half to make sandwiches. Yet there is a good chance that a concha bought at a bakery or store will have a stale bread base with a tasteless topping.

What is a Conchita in slang? ›

CoNchita means little shell. It also is a name, short for Consuelo. And that, in turn, tends to be seen as a nasty name, that means hooker, so it isn't used as an actual name anymore.

When should I eat conchas? ›

Mexicans traditionally eat Concha for breakfast or dinner, accompanied by hot chocolate or Champurrado. The latter is a warm, thick, chocolate-based Mexican drink made with corn- or maize flour and occasionally also containing anise seed or vanilla beans.

Who invented conchas? ›

It's likely that French pastry chefs brought over their recipes for brioche, a sweetened and enriched dough made from wheat flour, yeast, salt, sugar, milk or water, eggs, and butter. Brioche-like doughs exist all over Europe, and this bread base is the most likely origin of Mexican conchas.

Why are conchas different colors? ›

A concha's crust is typically composed of some kind of fat, sugar, and a little flour, traditionally made in one of three colors: white (vanilla), brown (chocolate), or pink. (Pink conchas are sometimes flavored with strawberry, but more often than not, they are simply dyed with food coloring.)

What is the difference between pan dulce and conchas? ›

Pan dulce translates to sweet bread in English, while the term concha translates to shell. If you have ever seen these beautiful pastries, the name makes total sense. These lovely loaves look just like the delicate, multi-colored shells found along the seashore.

Is pan dulce only Mexican? ›

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.

Who eats pan dulce? ›

Pan dulce, 'sweet bread' is a popular pastry in Mexico and in the Hispanic culture. “Mexico doesn't always… have the resources or money to buy good food sometimes so… bread is… another alternative…

What is another name for concha bread? ›

Conchas are traditional Mexican sweet bread rolls (a.k.a. pan dulce). Its name comes from the roll's seashell-like appearance.

What is another name for a concha? ›

In anatomy, a nasal concha (/ˈkɒnkə/; pl. : conchae; /ˈkɒnkiː/; Latin for 'shell'), also called a nasal turbinate or turbinal, is a long, narrow, curled shelf of bone that protrudes into the breathing passage of the nose in humans and various other animals.

Are conchas and melon pan the same? ›

I'd say that the melon pan falls somewhere in between a concha and a bolo bao. The texture of the enriched dough is sturdier than what you find with a pineapple bun, but softer and sweeter than a concha, and the cookie top is usually more solid and cookie-like than both its counterparts.

Is pan de muerto the same as conchas? ›

The bread base of a concha is the same dough used for Pan de Muertos, Rosca de Reyes, and Pan de Huevo. In fact, all of these breads mentioned are variations of Pan de Huevo. The toppings are simply changed for variety.

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