Chocolate Cramique comes from northern France and Belgium. Bakers there have made it for generations. It is part of daily life, not a festive dessert.
Cramique is a soft, lightly sweet bread. It sits between brioche and milk bread. Eggs, butter, and milk give it a rich texture. Bakers add chocolate chips, raisins, or pearl sugar to the dough.
In Belgium, cramique is especially popular in Flanders and around Brussels. People eat it for breakfast or in the afternoon. They slice it thick and spread butter on it. Many enjoy it with coffee or hot chocolate.
In northern France, near the Belgian border, cramique shares the same roots. French bakers usually make it a bit less sweet. The bread still serves the same purpose: comfort and simplicity.
Today, chocolate cramique stands as a small but delicious example of how regional food traditions ignore political borders, evolving instead through local tastes, ingredients, and habits—warm, simple, and meant to be eaten fresh.
More bread ideas: