King Cake, Baby. Find the baby Jesus and the party is on you next year.

King Cake, Baby!

N’Orleans is based on many things-voodoo (Yes, don’t @ me), literature, magic (the other kind), food, and tradition.

King Cakes have their own tradition which is putting a nekkid baby inside the cake.

The person who gets the baby in the slice of cake is charged with making the next year’s King Cake.

King Cake

A Mardi Gras tradition since 1870-ish.  The colors of the sugar represent Justice, Faith, Power and are Purple, Green, and Gold.  

As much pastry as coffee cake, King Cake is a delicious treat and a lot of fun.  If you prefer to keep the plastic baby out of the cake, that is fine.

This recipe is enough dough for two King Cakes.  It can easily be halved, or make them both and meet some friends you don't know yet.

Course Dessert
Cuisine French, New Orleans
Prep Time 3 hours
Cook Time 35 minutes
Total Time 3 hours 35 minutes
Servings 8 people
Author Dann Reid

Ingredients

Pastry

  • 227 g Milk 8 oz
  • 57 g Butter 5 oz
  • 10 g Instant yeast 3.25 T
  • 151 g Room Temperature water 5.33 oz
  • 114 g White sugar 4 oz
  • 2 each Eggs
  • 1.5 t Salt
  • .5 t Freshly grated nutmeg
  • 814 g All-purpose flour 28.6 oz

Filling

  • 228 g Light Brown sugar 8 oz
  • 1 T Ground Ceylon Cinnamon
  • 2/3 C Chopped pecans
  • 2.6/ g All-purpose flour 2.6 oz
  • 80 g Raisins 3 oz
  • 114 g Melted, cool butter 4 oz

Icing

  • 1 C Confectioner's sugar
  • 1 T Hot water

Instructions

Mix the Pastry

  1. Heat the milk to take the chill off. Remove from the heat.

  2. Scale all the dry ingredients into a work bowl.

    Add the milk and the water to the mixing bowl of your stand mixer, add the eggs, butter, and the remaining ingredients and mix on low for 4 minutes.

    Move the speed to medium and mix until the dough start to become smooth and almost cleans the bottom of the bowl.

  3. Lightly butter a large bowl, place the dough in the bowl and turn to coat with the butter. Cover with plastic wrap and let rise in a warm place until doubled in volume, about 2 hours. When risen, de-gas and divide dough in half.  Let dough stand 15 minutes.

  4. Preheat oven to 375 degrees F (190 degrees C). Grease 2 cookie sheets or line with parchment paper.

  5. To Make Filling: Combine the brown sugar, ground cinnamon, chopped pecans, 74 g flour and 80 g raisins. Pour 114 g melted butter over the cinnamon mixture and mix until crumbly.

  6. Roll dough halves out into 12 X 8 rectangles. Spread the filling evenly over the dough and roll up each half tightly like a cinnamon roll, beginning at the wide side. Bring the ends of each roll together to form 2 rings. Carefully place each cake on a prepared cookie sheet. With a serrated knife, make cuts through the top layer of the cake on the evens as the face of a clock. Let rise in a warm spot until doubled in size, about 45 minutes.

  7. Bake in for 10 minutes, then reduce the oven temperature to 350 degrees. Bake an additional 20-25 minutes or until internal temperature reaches 180 degrees F.

  8. Frost while warm.

Icing

  1. Mix the confectioner’s sugar with just 1 tablespoon of hot water. If the icing is too thick, add a teaspoon of hot water to the icing until it is just spreadable. Sprinkle Mardi Gras colored sugar on top, alternating so each of the three colors gets on.

Recipe Notes

Part of what makes King Cake so much fun is to see who find the baby.

The sugar colors also have a story.

That they are three represents the 3 kings bringing gifts to baby Jesus.  The colors also mean something. Purple for royalty-I've seen some suggest justice, green for faith, and gold for power.

The baby inside means various things to various people, usually that person has to bring the King Cake next year.

There is a lot of fun history about King Cakes.

For the sugars, you can find them with the baby at this link from Amazon.

Here is a link to my Cinnamon Roll page.  Here you can see some pictures and read a good description about how to fill and roll the dough.

To decorate your King Cake with all the flair of Bourbon Street, you can pick up colored sugar at my Amazon affiliate link.  An affiliate relationship means when you purchase through the link, I earn a small commission at no cost to you. Get your sugar here

If you wish to add some carnival atmosphere to your party, Amazon also has some beads.

N’Awlins Style Pralines

Pecan-Pe-Khan-Pralines

Peecans are things truckers use.

That’s Prah-leens to you

These things are about as sweet as sweet can get .  Add some pecans and well, that’s the best thing this side of Heaven.

Candy making is a fickle art, and sugar can be an unforgiving medium.  Cooking sugar is a one way street and if it goes to far, well, add some butter to it and invent a new dish or make trash.  The trash part was kind of a joke, but the point is important: please have a good digital thermometer for candy work.  A few degrees up or down can make all the difference between success and rage.

Enough!

Baking paper, sometimes called parchment paper, or a silicone baking mat is very useful for this recipe.  In the words of Walter White

Let’s Cook!

N'Awlins Praline

Maybe my most favorite N'Awlins treat that isn't buried on confectioner's sugar.  They always remind me of a walk in the Quarter.

Course Dessert, Treat
Cuisine N'Awlins Cooking
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 16 minutes
Total Time 21 minutes
Servings 8 people
Author Dann Reid

Ingredients

  • 2 C Granulated Sugar
  • 2.5 C Pecan Halves
  • 3/4 C Buttermilk
  • 1 oz Butter
  • Dash Salt
  • 3/4 teaspoon Baking Soda

Instructions

  1. Prepare a jelly roll pan or sheet pan with parchment paper or a silicone baking mat.

  2. Place the first 5 ingredients in a 4 qt sauce pot, place on medium high heat.  Add the thermometer and stir frequently until the sugar starts to liquify.

  3. As sugar starts to liquify, stir constantly working carefully around the stem of the thermometer.

  4. Cook the mixture to 235 Degrees F.  Remove the thermometer, making sure not to burn you or drip the hot caramel from the end.  Add the baking soda and stir.  The caramel will rise rapidly.  The stirring will help keep it managed and mix well the caramel.

  5. Stir until the caramel starts to get stiff.  Using a service spoon or a tablespoon from your dinner set, reach to the bottom of the pot, scoop some of the pecans and caramel and place that onto the prepared sheet pan.

  6. Scoop and place pralines until the pan is gone.  You might have some caramel left over.  Hide it from everyone until they are gone then put that on ice cream and don't ever tell anyone.  It is your secret.

  7. The pralines should be cool to the touch and set in about 10 minute.  If everyone has been good, they can have 1.  One.

Pralines are, of course, good enough to eat by themselves, but, sometimes some real food is required. So, in keeping with the theme, here is a recipe for Corn Maque Choux, a traditional Creole dish. It is an excellent corn side with nearly anything. Not spicy but very flavorful. It can be served with crab cakes. These as they are presented are not spicy but that is an easy fix if you like that kind of thing.

If finding a source for crab in your part of the world just isn’t going to work, check The Crab Place. They are an affiliate and when you buy through them by clicking on the link, I earn a commission at no cost to you.
Buy Crab Cakes Online
Another affiliate for kitchen equipment is Kerekes. Here is a digital thermometer for your candy making needs. Same as before, when you purchase through the link, I earn a commission at no cost to you. CDN Digital Candy Thermometer

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