Galette des Rois |
Our collection of feves |
As if we haven’t already eaten
enough over the Christmas period the French have a special cake to mark twelfth
night called Galette des Rois. Hidden in the cake is a small ‘feve’, a porcelain
figure (often depicting nativity characters, although film and Disney
characters are also common). Traditionally it falls to the youngest member of
the family to decide who gets which slice of cake and the finder of the figure
then wears the golden crown. The school dessert around the 6th
January is usually galette des rois and the tradition seems to be the finder of
the ‘feve’ has to provide another galette for the lunch table for tomorrow, and
so it goes on until the shops have exhausted their supply of galettes (which
have been available since before Christmas). I am unsure of the roots of this
tradition, and I may be a bit cynical here, but I feel sure it has stemmed from
the retailers! It is also common to be invited by any groups or organisations that
you are a member of to partake in a slice of galette and a glass of cider, as a
gesture of friendship. This year I decided to make my own and it was delicious
and so much easier than I expected, I don’t know why I haven’t tried it before.
Here is the recipe if you fancy giving it a go.
2 equal circles of puff pastry
(pâte feuilletée). In France we are lucky to be able to get this handily cut
into perfect circles. This is a bit of a cheat, but I do make my own short
crust pastry, honest.
Place one circle on a baking tray
(I used my 33cm/13” pizza tray) lined with greaseproof paper.
For the frangipani filling:
80g caster sugar
100g softened butter
3 large eggs beaten (I used our
duck eggs)
140g ground almonds
Cream together the butter and
sugar until pale and fluffy, the butter will need to be softened for this.
Gradually beat in the egg and then mix in the ground almonds.
Place this mix in the centre of
the pastry, leaving a 2cm gap at the edge, hide your ‘feve’ and cover with the
second circle of pastry. I brushed the edge of the base with some beaten egg to
help bind the edges and then made sure there was a good seal between the top
and bottom layers. Gently score a crisscross pattern on the top and then brush
with beaten egg.
Bake at Gas 6 (200) for about 30
mins until risen and golden. Serve warm or cold, it is delicious either way.
This post has been linked to Lou Messugo's #AllAboutFrance click here for more posts.
This post has been linked to Lou Messugo's #AllAboutFrance click here for more posts.
Well, I managed to get to the computer, dad is sleeping off a Carvery meal(been out with C&F),so caught up with your Blog. Galette sounds good, shame we can't share it for my birthday. love Mumxx
ReplyDeleteWow Mum, welcome! Am impressed you worked the comments out xxx
ReplyDeleteHello from Le Morvan, Burgundy. Your post has helped explain why my French teacher bought cidre and a Galette along to the class. I was a bit puzzled about cidre at 11am...but in France its always apero hour!! http://moncoeurestdanslacampagne.blogspot.com
ReplyDeleteMorning Delia, thanks for stopping by and so glad I was able to help. It is a lovely gesture of kindness isn't it! We are partaking in some on Saturday evening for Ed's dance class.
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