Pain d’Epices- a honey sweet spice cake

Nothing like a little frost on a Sunday morning to bring out the baker in us all. So when Julia Leach, the Kitchen-at-Camont’s fall intern, fell under the Pain d’Epices spell, we turned on the oven and began a day learning about dough, pastry and good smells. Here in Gascony, Pain d’Épice or Spice Bread is thought of as a foreign treat- from the north, another region, a taste of winter. Usually, I buy thick slices of honeyed pain d’epices made near Rocamadour from Kakou & Francoise at the Saturday market and serve it in the Gascon way with duck rillettes or thin slivers of foie gras. Dense, solid and studded with walnuts or candied orange peel, prunes or even chocolate chips, this honey bread is made by a former beekeeper turned patissier specialist in the Lot at la Noyeraie des Abeilles.

With that tasty inspiration at hand, we turned to a monograph on the subject published by Les Editions du Coq a l’Ane and signed and prefaced by the late Bernard Loiseau. I found it one year in Dijon, one of the spice cake centers of France and have hoarded it since waiting for a chilly baking sort of day. All secrets lie within this thoroughly researched and well written book, from history and folklore to dozens of recipes. From the sucrée- actual recipes for dozen’s of versions of honey spice bread, to the salée-including a killer looking Lapin au Pain Épice for rabbit with cream, mustard and pain d’epice breadcrumbs.

But first things first, I chose this basic recipe “like in Dijon” to honor the book, the source and inspiration to cook regionally. We used local honey, mixed flours and upped the spices some. Results? Perfect! A chewy caramelized crust, moist but substantial density and just right balance of honey, spice and orange flavors. Have fun!

Adapted from Le Pains d’Épice by Lise Bésème-Pia.
Le Pain d’Epice Comme a Dijon.
- 250 gr wheat flour (we used half white wheat flour & half whole wheat; rye and buckwheat are traditional choices as well)
- 125 gr honey-
- 125 gr sugar
- 200 ml warm milk
- 1 tsp spices (1/4 teaspoon each of cinnamon, ginger, allspice or cloves, & anis)
- 1 tsp of baking soda
- zest from one orange
Place the flour in a bowl. Add the sugar and spices. Melt the honey with the warm milk and add to the flour. Whisk together and work the batter (not using machines much here, we whisked by hand for 10 minutes). Then add baking soda and whisk again until well mixed, stir in orange zest. The batter should be smooth and fluid. Pour into a well-buttered loaf pan (22 cm or 8-9 inch) set on a baking sheet. Place in cold oven; turn on and set at 180′C or 350′F. Bake for 45 minutes, then lower heat to 150′C or 300′F for another 15 minutes; total baking time 1 hour. Remove from oven, cool some, remove from pan, cool some more. Then attack with knife and fork with good coffee or tea at hand! A taste of honey for you sweet things…







hi,
i like my desserts subtly sweet. Is it ok to halve the amount of sugar and honey, or totally eliminate the sugar and have the full amount of honey? thanks heaps
Since this is a honey based recipe, I think you’ll find it less ‘sweet’ than an all sugar cake. Why not experiment and try all honey first and if that is still too sweet, reduce the amount some. But don’t forget, the honey also supplies the texture and staying power of this delicious traditional ‘cake’- bonne chance!
love what you do….. maybe next year I can spend some kitchen time together !