Bossche bol


A Bossche bol, sometimes called chocoladebol in its city of origin, is a pastry from the Dutch city of 's-Hertogenbosch. It is effectively a large profiterole, about 12 cm in diameter, filled with whipped cream and coated entirely or almost entirely with chocolate fondant icing.

Eating

Bossche bollen are usually eaten as an accompaniment to coffee, etc., rather than as a dessert.
They are traditionally eaten with the fingers, which can be quite messy. The best way to avoid spillage is by eating the pastry upside down, so that the hard layer of chocolate serves as a bottom. It is also possible to use a knife and fork.

History

Even before the start of the 20th century, a predecessor of the Bossche Bol was being sold in Den Bosch by baker Lambermont, who had a store in a building called "De Kat" on the Vischstraat number 61b. The ball made by Lambermont resembled a moorkop and was filled with custard.
In 1920 a baker from The Hague called Henri van der Zijde took up shop in the same street on number 25 and invented a variation filled with whipped cream and covered with real chocolate, which his heirs see as the first real Bossche Bol. In the twenties Lambermont started selling a chocolate ball much like this one.
The name "Bossche bol" only became common when the treat became popular outside of the city. The exact recipe varies between bakers, although the recipe that is acknowledged as the "real Bossche Bol" is the one made and sold by the confectionery Jan de Groot.

Similar foods

There is a version of the Bossche Bol twice the size, called a reuzenbol.
A similar but smaller Dutch pastry is called a moorkop—a profiterole which is usually not glazed with chocolate, but with a chocolate-flavoured glaze made with cocoa powder. Sometimes a puff of whipped cream is added to the top of a moorkop. Many other regional chocolate-coated marshmallow treats such as the German Mohrenkopf exist.