On-line Guide :: Celebrating French Cuisine: La Galette des Rois
SEARCH
English    French

Search Our On-line Guide

CATEGORIES:
Guest Info
Muse Mag
Go & Do
Eats & Drinks
Your apartment
LOCATION:
ENTRIES:
KEYWORD: 
ie: vegetarian, beach

Back to All On-line Guide Listings

On-line Guide: Celebrating French Cuisine: La Galette des Rois

Posted Jan 2022 in Eats & Drinks

Share

5652998914_637c3db06e_b.jpg
Courtesy of Steph Gray/Flickr

As the New Year begins, you will notice French boulangeries, patisseries and even supermarchés fill up their shelves with a special cake. Much more than just a cake, this pastry is a beloved tradition with roots that go back as far as the Roman Empire. But what is this fantastic creation called?

It is the one and only: Galette des Rois!

The cake's origins are in the ancient Roman Festival Saturnalia, once held at the end of December through to January in honour of Saturn, god of Agriculture. This festival of revelry saw usually forbidden activities, like gambling, temporarily allowed. However the major tradition, as with many celebrations of the period, was the role reversal between master and slave. The slave would be crowned “the king of the day” and designated a cake. The tradition changed drastically over time during so much that eventually a Galette des Rois even recorded to have been eaten at the royal banquets of Louis XIV!

Finally, in 1801, the Concordat set the date of Epiphany as the 6th of January, establishing the long running tradition of the Galette des Rois in France, not dissimilar to how we celebrate shrove Tuesday in the UK.

The Galette des Rois or king cake is still eaten on 6 January today, and not only in France: it is also commonplace in Spain and even celebrated in the southern states of America where the legacy of 18th-century French colonialism remains a part of the culture.

Three different types of Galettes exist in France:

The cake is made with a hidden lucky charm inside: originally, the charm was a bean but it has since evolved and was replaced at the end of the XIXth century with a porcelain trinkets, and today even plastic trinkets are used. Many people collect the charms each year as a hobby.

You can find ingredients and recipe for making your own on galette on chef Raymond Blanc MBE website.



totop