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  • - This is the Cronut,

  • one of New York City's most legendary desserts.

  • This hands down might be

  • one of the best things

  • I've ever eaten in my life.

  • The doughnut-croissant hybrid was created

  • by world-renowned pastry chef Dominique Ansel in 2013.

  • Now if you aren't familiar with Chef Dominique's desserts

  • he is famous for his frozen s'mores,

  • his watermelon soft serve, his cookie shots,

  • his DKA, but really the famous one is the Cronut.

  • We're here at 7:00 a.m. to get in front of the line

  • so we can get a head start.

  • The Cronuts are extremely limited in quantity

  • and very very popular

  • and I want to see what all the hype is about.

  • Let's go!

  • - So, when I first launched the Cronut, it was in 2013

  • for Mother's Day in May.

  • - [Herrine] The team at Dominique Ansel Bakery

  • wanted to create a doughnut-shaped dessert

  • for the occasion but didn't have

  • any recipes for doughnuts

  • so chef Ansel made a laminated dough,

  • similar to a croissant, to fit the bill.

  • It took him over two months

  • to perfect his Cronut recipe.

  • A food reporter from Grub Street

  • tried the pastry by chance and it went viral.

  • People started lining up outside the next day

  • and traffic to the bakery's website went up 300%.

  • It's been six years now

  • and the Cronut obsession still isn't over.

  • - First in line this morning.

  • (laughing)

  • We really wanna try the Cronuts.

  • - We waited since 7 o'clock.

  • - One hour, yeah, we have to have

  • the whole New York experience

  • and that's why we're getting a Cronut today.

  • - [Herrine] So what makes the Cronut so iconic?

  • First of all it's limited in quantity.

  • You're not guaranteed one, hence the lines.

  • Every day by noon, all 500 to 600 of them are sold out.

  • This is partly because making the Cronut

  • is such a painstaking process.

  • It takes three days from start to finish.

  • Chef Ansel finally revealed the home-cooked version

  • of the recipe in his cookbook in 2014

  • and it proves just how much work goes into making them.

  • The proofing and ganache are the most time-consuming parts.

  • You're honestly better off just buying one.

  • At the bakery, each Cronut is proofed, then deep-fried.

  • It's filled with two different fillings.

  • Then it's rolled in sugar and glazed.

  • The team changes the Cronut flavor every month,

  • and no flavor is ever repeated.

  • - The reason why I keep limiting the quantities

  • just because I want to preserve the quality.

  • I always tell everyone that I don't want my creation

  • to kill my creativity.

  • - When we visited in July,

  • the Cronut of the month was

  • Meyer lemon and wildflower honey.

  • I've been wanting to try this since 2013

  • and here we are mid-2019, first bite of the Cronut.

  • It is so crunchy.

  • This hands down might be one of the best things

  • I've ever eaten in my life.

  • Wow, that's so good. That is so good.

  • It definitely for me tastes more like

  • a croissant than a doughnut.

  • It's denser than a doughnut

  • and it has these little very thin layers

  • like you get from a croissant and it's extremely buttery,

  • but still very light and airy.

  • Do I have powdered sugar like everywhere on my face?

  • - [Cameraman] Sort of.

  • - I can see why people line out the door

  • two hours before opening just to have this dessert now

  • because it's fluffy, it's airy, it's buttery,

  • it's crunchy, it's all of the adjectives that you want

  • in a dessert just embodied in this one,

  • one thing. One Cronut.

  • - [Cameraman] Nice.

  • - It is messy though.

  • This rightfully owns the title of

  • the best dessert in New York City.

  • - [Ansel] A lot of people ask me if I knew

  • that this was going to happen and, you know,

  • what I was expecting, of course I didn't know (chuckling)

  • of course, no one can plan for this.

  • - [Herrine] In a city where new food trends are popping up

  • almost every day there is still no signs

  • that the Cronut's popularity is slowing down.

  • The obsession has spread throughout the world

  • with copy-cat Cronuts and recipes found everywhere.

  • Even Dunkin' Doughnuts introduced it's version in 2014.

  • Imitation may be the best form of flattery,

  • but the best place to get the Cronut

  • is where it all started,

  • Dominique Ansel Bakery in New York City.

- This is the Cronut,

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