January 6 is the Twelfth Day of Christmas,
and according to the calendar of the Christian Church it is the Feast of the
Epiphany (or Three Kings Day, or the Day of the Magi) – the day which
commemorates the visit of the Three Kings to the infant Jesus. On a secular
note it is the traditional end of the Christmas season – the day to put
unwanted gifts into the furthest reaches of the highest cupboard and the ham
bone in the freezer ready for winter soup, and to take down the tree and the decorations.
There are of course a number of eating
traditions for the day. The tradition of a special cake on this day (the King
Cake) has been maintained in Europe, but seems
to have fizzled in England,
where it used to be called Twelfth Cake. As with so many celebrations, the
traditions of Twelfth Day
are the result of the grafting of the rules and requirements of the Church onto
the ancient pagan rituals that the newly-converted were reluctant to abandon,
precisely because they were
associated with so much fun and feasting.
It is traditional for a small item such
as a bean or coin to be hidden in the King Cake – a tradition that has its
roots in ancient fertility rites. The influence of the Church caused the bean
to be substituted with a small doll to represent the baby Jesus, but the
outcome was the same – whoever found the object in their slice of cake became
King or Queen for the day, and was entitled to lord it over everyone else. Becoming
King or Queen for the day in some places was an expensive honour, as it meant
being responsible for paying for the drinks, or for hosting the festivities of
Candlemas on February 2.
A variation of the tradition in the English county of
Gloucestershire was that the cake was made in the shape of a ring which was
placed over the horn of the best ox in the herd. The ox was then teased or
provoked until it tossed its head and threw off the ring of bread. Whoever was
nearest to the tossed bread was the ‘winner’ for the day.
A tradition associated with the
religious aspect of the day is that the cake is cut into one more piece than
there are guests, the extra piece being ‘for God’, and is given to the first
poor person to come to the house.
There are many variations of Twelfth
Day cakes. In France the galettes
des rois are flattish discs made from puff pastry or brioche dough, usually
with a frangipane or a fruit conserve. In Mexico the Rosca de Reyes is
wreath-like and decorated with colourful dried fruit. In some parts of Greece the Vasilopita
is associated not just with New Year but also with Epiphany. An English Victorian speciality at this time of
year was not a cake, but an Epiphany Tart.
Until the nineteenth century had been
underway for a few decades, leavening agents such as baking powder were not available,
and ‘cakes’ were sweet bread dough enriched with dried fruit. Fruit cakes –
because of their extravagant ingredients and their good keeping qualities -
are traditional at most of our
big celebrations. It
seems that no-one is equivocal about fruit cake – people either love it or hate
it. There is a story perpetrated by fruit-cake haters that says there were
originally four wise men bearing gifts who visited the infant Jesus – but the
fourth one was refused when it was found that his gift was a fruit cake!
The following recipe for Twelfth Cake,
from Cassell’s Dictionary of Cookery (circa 1870’s) is named for Lady
Caroline Lamb (1785-1828), the aristocratic novelist and lover of the poet Lord
Byron who described her as “the cleverest most agreeable, absurd,
amiable, perplexing, dangerous fascinating little being that lives now or ought
to have lived 2000 years ago.” I
have no idea why it is named in her honour, as it is highly unlikely that a
woman of her class ever set foot in the kitchen. There is no mention of a bean or trinket
being included in the cake – perhaps it was ‘understood.’
Twelfth
Cake, Lady Caroline Lamb’s.
Quarter of a peck of pure flour
carefully dried, three pounds of currants, a quarter of a pound of raisins,
half a pound of refined sugar, quarter of a pound of sweet and half and ounce
of bitter almonds blanched and sliced, two ounces of candied lemon-peel and
spices according to taste. Mix all thoroughly; then take one pint of cream and
put to it three-quarters of a pound of fresh butter washed in pure and
afterwards in rose-water; place in a gentle heat. Beat up the whites and yolks
separately of six eggs, and the yolks only of six more. Add to them a little
rose-water, two table-spoonfuls of cardamom brandy, half a glassful of old
Rhenish, hock, or champagne, quarter of a pint of fresh yeast, and a little
fine salt. Mix the liquids together, strain them, add the dry materials warm,
and mix the whole into a light smooth batter. Place it before a fire for twenty
minutes to rise, butter your hoop, and use what flour is necessary to make the
cake sufficiently stiff. Set it in the oven with some sheets of brown paper
well floured to prevent its burning. In about a couple of hours it will be
done. Ice it in the usual manner, and stick any ornaments you choose upon the
icing before it is dry.
There is a
description of an Epiphany Tart, and instructions for another nineteenth
century Twelfth Cake in a previous post here.
Quotation for the Day.
Preach not
to others what they should eat, but eat as becomes you, and be silent.
Epictetus
2 comments:
This is strange because the cake served in the U.S. South for Mardi Gras is called a king cake and also has a trinket baked into the cake.
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