Gâteau Basque


Gâteau Basque is a traditional dessert from the Northern Basque region of France, typically filled with black cherry jam or pastry cream. Gâteau Basque with cream is more typical in the Southern Basque region of Spain.

Description

Typically Gâteau Basque is constructed from layers of a wheat flour based cake with a filling of either black cherry jam or almond or vanilla pastry cream. It has been argued that only black xapata cherries native to the Basque Country should be used.
The type of dough used may vary a little. If butter is warmed before mixing with flour the dough will be called pâte sucrée. If it is cold the mixing process will require more work and the dough is called pâte sablée. The resulting textures are a little different but mostly for the initiated taster. The flour used is a soft wheat flour with little mineral content The proportion of sugar used also varies. But the principle of this cake is having a soft shortbread-type dough 3 to 6 mm thick filled with an almond pastry cream, also called frangipane, and with a shiny egg-coating.
It is traditional to mark a Basque cross on the top if the cake is filled with black cherry jam, or to use a crosshatch pattern on top if filled with pastry cream.

History

The origins of Gâteau Basque are tied strongly with the town of Cambo-les-Bains, Labourd. It may have originally been made with bread and called bistochak in the 18th century. The fishermen took it out to sea. The first known commercialisation of the cake was by Marianne Hirigoyen in Cambo in the first half of the 19th century. Later editions were flavoured with rum, brought back to France by Basques from the West Indies.
The Gâteau Basque Festival is organized each year in Cambo-les-Bains. Eguzkia, an association to promote quality Basque cake, was founded in France in 1994. There is a museum dedicated to the cake, Le musée du Gâteau Basque, in Sare, Labourd.