Banbury
Cakes
Banbury cakes are oval parcels of butter puff pastry filled
with currants, brown sugar and other dried fruit, then flavoured with spices
and rosewater. Although delicious straight from the bag, the full taste and
aroma of the cake is best appreciated by leaving them for a few minutes in a
warm oven before serving.
Apart from the distinctive flavour the most
remarkable quality of these cakes is that they keep fresh for over a month. It
was this quality that led to them being exported all over the world during the
eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
One of the first recorded recipes
for these delicious flat oval cakes is in "The English Hus-wife" published in
1615.
Traditionally Banbury cakes were sold in bags of three. The
origins of this custom are as obscure as those of the cakes themselves but it
is generally accepted that both the Banbury cake and its later cousin the
Eccles cake are based upon a confection that the Crusaders brought back from
the Holy Lands and it has been suggested that the custom is a reference to the
Holy Trinity.
Families in Banbury kept their recipes secret but when
one of the last Banbury bakers stopped making them he sold his recipe to Tim
Bennett the master baker at Palace Cuisine. Tim has now re-introduced these
cakes on a commercial basis.
Our Banbury cakes are available in trays,
individual packs of three or in woven baskets for counter display.
Traditional hand made bread &
pastries from a responsive family bakery