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Pain d’épices

Sat, 9 November, 2024

⯆ JUMP TO RECIPE
Delicately sweet and intensely spicy, French pain d’épices, gingerbread, is simply gorgeous. And it keeps for ever, so you can make it in early December with the view of Christmas – if it lasts that long.

pain d'epices cuisinefiend.com

Panda piss

What can I say? The delectable French gingerbread is known in my house and amongst friends as ‘panda piss’. If you say ‘pain d’épices’ several times quickly, without a trace of proper French pronunciation or accent, you’ll see why.

In spite of this less than charming moniker, it is a revered bake with everyone I’ve served it to. And with good reason: it is fragrant with spices, moist with honey and savoury enough to be eaten for breakfast, buttered and spread with more honey.

It is nowhere near as sweet as for instance Polish piernik, which is based on the French original. It is less sweet than German Lebkuchen, English gingerbread cakes or Scandinavian honningkake/kage. It is, quite simply, a refined and sophisticated product.

French gingerbread cuisinefiend.com

As ancient as pain d’épices

Pain d’épices probably has roots in the ancient Egyptian and Roman honey cakes, as discovered by archaeologists and still good to eat. That’s a joke, but honey has such excellent preserving qualities it makes pain d’épices keep well if not better for weeks.

This bread is likely to have been brought to Europe from the east: in China they baked wheat and honey breads as far back as 10th century. It could have travelled west with Genghis Khan to the Middle East, and into France with the crusaders in 12th and 13th century.

French pain d'epices cuisinefiend.com

Spice bread

Pain d’épices literally means ‘spice bread’ and it is beautifully spiced indeed. The spice mix recipe is not set in stone: in many countries a gingerbread spice mix is available to buy, like the English mixed spice or the German Lebkuchengewürtz.

It’s nicer and more interesting to combine your own though, using fresh spices and making it inimitable. However, make sure there’s ginger and star anise in the mix: that’s what will give the bread a festive, Christmassy flavour.

It is also more of a proper bread rather than cake, unlike what the Americans call ‘bread’ but is in fact a loaf cake, be it banana or coconut.

Pain d’épices as I already said is bread-style savoury: you would never guess it contains almost a pound of honey. I have no idea how, but the honey seems to lose its sugary qualities and instead give the bread just a lovely texture, heft and long shelf life.

And in the perfect albeit ethically suspect combo, the French serve it as a base for cubes of foie gras.

Rye flour addition is traditional and it enhances the flavour and ‘breadiness’ by giving it a nutty, earthy taste. And for the ultimate experience, try spreading it with homemade date butter.

French gingerbread cake cuisinefiend.com

How to make this French gingerbread

And on top of it all, it’s fabulously easy to make. You won’t need an electric mixer, just a saucepan and a bowl. It’s not cheap though, because the better quality the honey, the tastier the bread and good honey is expensive.

You can happily use set honey for this recipe because it will be warmed up in a saucepan with the brown sugar, in order to melt the latter which won’t take long or require the honey to get very hot. So almost straight away it can be mixed with lightly beaten eggs and milk, to complete the wet part of the recipe.

The dry ingredients are mixed in a bowl, with both flours, all the spices, baking powder and orange zest. And then the two need to be combined but lightly, so that the flour is all incorporated but the batter is still quite lumpy and not overmixed.

It is prudent to use a loaf tin lined with parchment, for insulation and ease of extraction.

Pain d’épices bakes for about an hour, then cools for longer before it can be wrapped in foil and stored until the following day. And it gets better the longer it sits.

unmoulding pain d'epices cuisinefiend.com

Recipes for pain d’épices

I have trawled through and tested various French and English recipes and the winning one is both, as it’s Richard Bertinet’s, the French baker living and working in the UK (with a notable mention of Sunday Baker).

Some recipes feature only honey (only! haha! considering the amount!), but I like the small addition of brown sugar for the molasses-like hint of flavour.

French spice bread cuisinefiend.com

More gingerbread recipes

Sticky cranberry gingerbread cake with molasses and maple syrup. Easy to make, sweet, spicy and tart, it's just perfect for the festive season.

Gingerbread cake with marmalade or jam filling and maple syrup glaze. This is an easy recipe for traditional gingerbread cake, sticky and spicy, with stem or crystallised ginger pieces. The perfect holiday or pre-holiday cake and it’s stupidly easy to bake.

This is the best and easiest recipe for lebkuchen or gingerbread cookies. Traditional lebkuchen recipe, for gingerbreads covered with lemon icing and coated in chocolate. Lebkuchen are honeyed and spiced biscuits and great fun to ice and decorate.

More French bread recipes

Buttery and barely sweet brioche, home baked breakfast fit for a king. Paper-thin glossy crust and the softest, meltiest crumb hiding inside, waiting only for a lick of good jam.

Pompe à huile, sweet olive oil brioche traditionally served in Provence, South-East France, at Christmas. With orange flavour and a strange name (‘oil pump’), it’s one of 13 Provençal Christmas desserts.

Pain de mie is a white sandwich loaf with soft crust baked in a special Pullman tin. Pain de mie, white with a small addition of wholemeal flour makes a tasty sandwich loaf.

honey and spice gingerbread cuisinefiend.com



Pain d’épices

Servings: 14Time: 1 hour 10 minutes

INGREDIENTS

  • 340g (1 cup) good quality honey
  • 40g (3 tbsp) soft dark brown sugar
  • butter for the tin
  • 125g (1 cup) plain flour
  • 125g (1 cup) dark rye flour
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • 2 tsp cinnamon
  • 1 tsp ground star anise
  • 1 tsp grated nutmeg
  • 1 tsp ground cardamom
  • ½ tsp ground ginger
  • ¼ tsp ground cloves
  • ¼ tsp black pepper
  • zest grated from 1 orange
  • 2 eggs
  • 100ml (6 tbsp) whole milk


METHOD

1. Place the sugar and honey in a saucepan and warm up until the sugar dissolves, set aside to cool. Preheat the oven to 180C no fan/350F/gas 4. Butter and line with parchment a 25cm/10 inch long loaf tin.

warming up honey cuisinefiend.com

2. Place the flours, baking powder, all the spices and orange zest in a large bowl, and stir to combine.

dry ingredients cuisinefiend.com

3. Break the eggs to a separate bowl and whisk in the milk. Pour in the cooled honey mixture and whisk together.

dry and wet ingredients cuisinefiend.com

4. Pour the wet ingredients into dry and stir with a spatula to combine until no dry flour is visible; don’t overmix.

pain d'epices batter cuisinefiend.com

5. Pour the batter into the prepared tin and transfer into the oven. Bake for 50-55 minutes until a skewer inserted in the centre of the cake comes out clean.

baking pain d'epices

6. Cool for 15 minutes then remove with the parchment onto a wire rack to cool completely. When cold, wrap the loaf in foil and best keep overnight before slicing. Pain d’épices will keep for a month.


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Hello! I'm Anna Gaze, the Cuisine Fiend. Welcome to my recipe collection.

I have lots of recipes for you to choose from: healthy or indulgent, easy or more challenging, quick or involved - but always tasty.


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