Last week, while in Southern Spain, I had the wonderful opportunity to work in a bakery for an evening. Luckily it wasn't just any night: It was Jan. 5, the night that the Reyes Magos — the three wise men — bring Spanish children presents. The typical Spanish pastry that coincides with the holiday, called roscón de reyes or King's Cake, is consumed in mass quantities on the following morning.
I arrived to find the bakery, Confiteria La Piedra Escrita, crowded with people waiting to pick up their roscónes. Pascual, my pastry chef friend, quickly escorted me to the kitchen where his family was hard at work mass producing over 1000 cakes! The rest of the night was a whirlwind of rolled dough and whipped crema.
With spongelike layers and fluffy filling, this cake is a delicious dessert excellent for any occasion. There are four options for filling — whipped cream, chocolate whipped cream, meringue, and crema (a thick sugar-flour custard) — but my favorite is whipped cream. If you ever have one, you should pair with either coffee or champagne. To take a look at a gallery from my adventures in Spanish baking, and for a recipe to experiment in your own kitchen, read more.
Roscón de Reyes
From The Cuisines of Spain: Exploring Regional Home Cooking by Teresa Barrenechea
1/2 cup sugar, plus extra for sprinkling
Minced zest of 1/2 lemon
Minced zest of 1/2 orange
2 1/2 tsp. (1 envelope) active dry yeast
2/3 cup milk, heated to lukewarm (90°F to 100°F)
1/2 cup unsalted butter, at room temperature
3 eggs
3 tablespoons orange-flower water
1/2 tsp. salt
3 cups unbleached all purpose flour, plus extra for dusting
olive oil for preparing pan
1/2 cup candied fruits, finely chopped, optional
whipped cream, chocolate whipped cream, meringue, or pastry cream optional for filling
- In a food processor or blender, combine the 1/2 cup sugar and both citrus zests and process on high speed until you have a mixture of fine particle. Set aside.
- In a large bowl, dissolve the yeast in the warm milk and let stand for about 5 minutes, or until foamy.
- Add sugar-zest mixture, the butter, 2 of the eggs, the orange flower water, and the salt and stir with a wooden spoon until all the ingredients are well mixed.
- Add half the flour to the milk mixture and mix with your hands until well blended. Add the remaining flour and continue mixing until all the flour is incorporated.
- Knead the dough in the bowl for a few minutes until it is smooth, flexible, and no longer sticky.
- Cover the bowl with a kitchen towel and let the dough rest in a warm spot for about 1 hour, or until it has roughly doubled in size.
- Preheat the oven to its lowest setting and brush rimmed baking sheet with olive oil.
- Punch down the dough. On a floured work surface, using your palms, roll the dough back and forth until it forms a log about 30 inches long and 2 1/2 inches in diameter. Place it on the prepared baking sheet and bring the ends together to form a circle with a hole in the center 4 to 5 inches in diameter, forming a "crown." Alternatively, divide the dough in half and form 2 logs each 15 inches long and 2 1/2 inches in diameter. Form the logs into 2 crowns on the baking sheet.
- Fill an ovenproof bowl with water and place it at the rear of the oven.
- Place the baking sheet with the dough crown in the oven. Let the dough rise for about 1 hour, or until nearly doubled in size.
- Remove the pan from the oven and increase the oven temperature to 400°F. Break the remaining egg into a small bowl, beat until blended, and brush it onto the crown(s). Scatter the candied fruits evenly over the top(s), if desired, and sprinkle evenly with the sugar.
- Bake the cake(s) for 25 to 30 minutes, or until golden. Transfer to a wire rack and let cool on the pan.
- Transfer to a serving plate and serve at room temperature.
- If desired, carefully slice the cake in half lengthwise. Spread the inside with the filling of your choice and top with the other half of cake.
Makes 1 15-inch or 2 8-inch coil cakes.
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Nicoli
Ose tes Pensホes
Pedro Garcia
I don't think I'd like those cakes at all...
1Rosca de reyes!! yuuumi! here in mexico we use to eat on january 6, but the recipe here is different.
2Beautiful! Oh I want to make one so bad now!
3That looks like so much fun! And frankly, I like to eat anything that I'm supposed to pair with Champagne or Prosecco...
4Wow! What a cool opportunity party!
5Oh Party you are so lucky. What a day. When are you going to move to Spain? I am sure your family would love to visit you there.
6mmm... I've never tried those before, but they look tasty!
7I'm from northern Spain, in Barcelona, and we also eat "roscón". The tradition consists on hiding a little king and a little bean in the cake. Whoever gets the bean he has to pay for the cake and whoever gets the king will be lucky the whole year ; ) You usually eat it with your family, it's a nice tradition.
8it would be translated as "three wise men cake", it has nothing to do with the king but with the three wise men. By the way it´s normal to introduce inside it a little gift and a bean. If you find the gift, you become the crown (a tacky paper crown that´s given with the cake) and in case you find the bean, you have to pay the cake.
91. i had no idea you were in spain
10lucky you!
2. spanish cakes are the best! yum-o!
3. what an amazing chance of a lifetime!
luv it!
Umm I'll pass...
11pequeña and Oxymoron, if you take a look at the gallery you can see the little King figures that were stuck inside the cake. Unfortunately when I ate them, I didn't find one! However, I did give Pascual a mini nail polish to stick into the cake we were making for our friends!
12Espana! I'm so jealous!!!
13Oh yeah, I saw the kings and the beans, cool! To me it's better to avoid the filling, I like it better and it's lighter. That nail polish thing reminded me of when in Friends Monica forgets a nail polish on a kish.
14Party, what a cool thing to get to do. Those cakes are stunning. I'd love to try one, but I don't think I have the baking chops to make one.
15That sounds like such a fun adventure! I wanna go with you next time!
16Arriba para el panadero en Espana! Lots of goodies in Spain and the fashion is the Best!!
17This reminds me of in HS spanish class when each group had to make a signiature Spanish dish...I believe we sampled this...and it was delish!
18I bet that was so crazy but so fun!
19Hola Que Tal? Yes El Roscon es delicioso como no!Are you a chef? Do you like the Spanish flair in our kitchens? Well When we came here many years ago people would ask us what and how we cooked in my house kitchen that made our food taste sabroso! now that Im a bigger Girl I can only tell you that its freshness and the way you delicately touch the food with love and prideness! In the south we Malagenians love the Fresh of course and you?? Hasta Luego BIDDS626!!
20Hola 4Byrds Que Tal? Si Espana es muy Bonito Y Rico But We girls stay slim we walk alot and dance alot and try to shop alot!!But the thing is we doo have alot of fun! Youve got to see it to Believe it
21is the land of Sexiness! Hasta Luego !
Party, I heard you are a regular at Malaga.My favorite beach is down by there.
22Hola!Well la carihuela is just my back yard in TorremolinosIN Malaga my parents retired there.They wanted more home cooked meals!
23Hola!Well la carihuela is just my back yard in TorremolinosIN Malaga my parents retired there.They wanted more home cooked meals!
24In Puerto Rico, my mother would make this cake for "El Dia de los Reyes." (three kings day), and would insert wax-paper-wrapped number coins, the numbers where for an extra gift (usually it was envelopes containing $10, 15 or 20 dollars located in our Christmas tree) sort of the icing on the cake. Not only we get one gift from Santa in Christmas Day, but on January 6, we got the rest of our holiday gifts and a chance to pick the coin with the most money. It was owesome! We all took 50% and buy whatever we wanted, the rest we put it together to give to a needy family.
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