While modern puff pastry was developed in France in the 17th century, related laminated and air-leavened pastry has a long history. In Spain, likely built upon Arab or Moorish culinary traditions, the first known recipe for pastry using butter or lard following the Arab technique of making each layer separately, appears in the Spanish recipe book ('book on the art of cooking') by Domingo Hernández de Maceras, published in 1607. Hernández, the head cook of a college of the
University of Salamanca, already distinguished between filled puff pastry recipes and puff pastry tarts, and even mentions leavened preparations. Francisco Martínez Motiño, head chef to
Philip II of Spain (1527–1598), also gave several recipes of puff pastry in his published in 1611. In this book, puff pastry is abundantly used, particularly to make savoury game pies. , or "palm leaf", design The oldest known documented recipe for puff pastry in France was included in a charter by Robert,
bishop of Amiens in 1311. The first recipe to explicitly use the technique of (the action of encasing solid butter within dough layers, keeping the fat intact and separate, by folding several times) was published in 1651 by
François Pierre La Varenne in . Modern French puff pastry was then developed and improved by the chef M. Feuillet and
Antonin Carême. The method is sometimes considered the idea of the famous painter
Claude Gellée when he was an apprentice baker in 1612. Historical evidence for this is negligible, but it is retained as culinary lore. The story goes that Lorrain was making a type of very buttery bread for his sick father, and the process of rolling the butter into the bread dough created a
croissant-like finished product. ==Production==