IT'S MY BIRTHDAY TOO WE'RE TWINNING COMRADE. can see from the majority of what's said here that we are mistakenly assuming superiority, when ants cooperate with one another to gather for a thriving colony—still I loved this post :D
i found something (bad)
If I am correct, that is what is called a ‘hearse’. They are not usually hostile to us, and are mostly used in funeral processions." OP: how interesting! a creature use in funerals? very bizarre! i will approach i think. @cathodezip imagine if we could hitch a ride on that beast, we could actually have the summer off to play
RE: RE: Three Kings' Day Cake Festivities P2 | Eater
Around the World, King Cake Inspires Community
From France’s galette des rois to the green, purple, and gold king cakes of New Orleans, there’s something sweet for everyone
by Kayla Stewart Feb 27, 2025, 11:47am EST
Kayla Stewart is a James Beard Award-winning food and travel journalist, cookbook author, and Senior Editor at Eater. Her work has been featured in Food & Wine, The New York Times, Travel + Leisure, Saveur, and others.
During the months of January through March at Lagniappe Bakehouse in New Orleans, pastry chef Kaitlin Guerin is hard at work.
It’s king cake season, a yearly culinary celebration that’s a cornerstone of the city’s colorful culture. Having trained in kitchens in Copenhagen and California, Guerin, a native New Orleanian, is known for her more experimental takes on the green, gold, and purple-sprinkled pastry. She’s offered a:
Rosemary pecan praline king cake,
Chocolate pecan praline with candy orange, and
An interpretation of the French king cake, galette des rois.
And while Guerin has become known for her inventive approach to pastry-making, it’s the king cake tradition, found in New Orleans and in other parts of the world, that’s become a part of some of the world’s most equally religious and revelrous celebrations.
“We all need something to remind us of why it’s important that we come together,” Guerin says. “The history of the cake is centered around community, and people coming together around sweet food is something I find beautiful.”
Community is a common ingredient in king cakes, a traditionally oval-shaped cake crowned with icing, fruits, and other sweet toppings.
In the U.S., king cake is interwoven with Mardi Gras, a celebration marking the start of Lent, and in New Orleans [it is] distinguished by the colors green, gold, and purple. While both have become all but synonymous with the City of New Orleans, the cake takes its origins from both Catholic & pagan traditions, and is associated with Twelfth Night or Three Kings Day, a celebration just after Christmas that marks the Epiphany—and the start of the sweet season.
On January 6, religious and non-religious folks alike begin enjoying the cakes in countries like Portugal, France, the U.S., and Mexico, and will be able to find the cakes in bakeries, homes, schools, and community centers through Mardi Gras (also known as Fat Tuesday), a jubilant celebration preceding the Holy Lenten season.
This is a strange reminder, so soon too, Easter is coming up and all these random End Times & Return 2 music.. sojourner August??? I'm not saying it is going to happen in that month, there are other things going on in my life too. I think I figured out how to carve this design out, except the edges, unless I have to score it horizontally in addition to the vertical cuts? Could do..
In New Orleans, king cake is distinguished by the colors of Mardi Gras — green, gold, and purple. Randy Schmidt
“We call it Día de Los Reyes in Mexico, and it is bigger than Christmas,” says Pati Jinich of Three Kings Day, which globally, is the start of king cake season.
The journalist and television host explained that rosca de reyes, which means king cake, are associated with the holiday throughout Latin America, and rather than the icing and sprinkled-laced cakes of the U.S., cakes in Mexico, where Jinich is from, often come studded with ingredients like raisins, caramelized fruits, and caramel.
“It is a unifying treat, no matter who you are, where you stand politically, where you live — north or south,” she says. “Everybody is eating rosca de reyes.”
Found in homes, bakeries, and even Mexican department stores (Jinich notes that El Palacio de Hierro is one of many that offers its own variety), the sugary accompaniments and fillings are determined by location and region. But throughout, the cakes are best enjoyed with loved ones, where everyone can get a slice with hopes of finding the plastic baby placed within the cake.
The origins of the plastic baby are murky, but the tradition across countries and time stands: Finding a small, typically ceramic or plastic figure inside the cake, indicates good luck. If you find it in your slice, you’re required to bring a cake to the next gathering.
“In the old days, it would have been a fève, which is the fava bean. A dry fava bean would have been put into the cake,” says Kate Hill, a France resident for more than 30 years who runs a writing retreat and culinary school in Agen. Whoever found the fava bean, Hill explains, would be crowned “the king” and would be required to bring the next cake to the next community gathering. The use of a bean transformed into a porcelain doll around the Middle Ages, and Hill says that these days, it’s typically a ceramic character.
In the galette des rois, France’s version of the king cake, a puff pastry shell is traditionally filled with a type of almond cream; spices and flavors vary by region.
“There’s a rotational conviviality,” says Hill of the local tradition. “Your neighbors or your friends might say, ‘Oh, come over for cake.’ Not ‘come over for dinner,’ but ‘come over for cake.’
There’d maybe be a glass of champagne or sparkling wine. And that was very much your local gathering of your community: Not very many people, and just an extra [bit of] time past the holidays, a wrapping up of all those festivities before people are ready to get back to work.”
Back in New Orleans, Guerin is surrounded by traditional king cakes during the early months of each year and still finds ways to innovate.
“We added West African, specifically Cameroonian, grains of paradise spice to the king cake,” she says of a recent reinterpretation. “The reason for adding it comes from the questions I find I ask myself: As I’m connecting the bridge between the natural ingredients here in Louisiana to the continent,
how would my ancestors have approached this bread? What ingredients would they want to add and highlight?”
For Guerin, the king cake allows her to preserve tradition & answer new questions, and there’s perhaps no better place for these dualities to exist than New Orleans.
“The sense of coming together and having community in a place is so important,” she says. “I don’t think that I’ve found another city in the U.S. that has community like New Orleans does. King cake is just the quintessential example of that.”
Steve Aoki | Tomorrowland Brazil 2024
watch for the sign: #CakeME - that's where I got the idea from, but I do prefer cake too, all thanks to lattes reminding me of a liquid cake.
I remember watching Tokyo Drift & not realizing the significance of the girl who stood between the two cars in the highly illegal drag race; I just kept thinking holy dangerous, I would never stand there.. so here is another one of Karl Lagerfeld's muses, I wonder how many he had? The most amusing stunt he pulled was getting a bunch of young male models to dress up as his doppelganger, that was fun. I also liked his scent: sun moon stars, he was a genius in many ways.
[4:58] Now I am starting to think I will not ever hear the end of how amazing this man was, listen to this clip about how considerate he was to this footware problem..! #2023
Apple & Blackberry Custard Croissant Cake | Recipe
Many years ago I somehow managed to win two mystery weekend flights for two in one week. Young and struggling at the time, my husband and I were so excited, and shared one of the double tickets with my sister and brother-in-law.
Thirty years later I still remember coming in from the blustery cold, to a little cafe in the city and eating the most delicious apple croissant cake. This probably tastes nothing like the cake of my memory, but the combination of croissants, apples and blackberries cooked in a mellow custard is absolutely beautiful. This cake can be eaten warm with vanilla bean icecream or at room temperature with some whipped cream. Yum.
Ingredients
3 apples, peeled, cored and each cut into 12 wedges
1/3 cup [43g] water
1 tsp [5g] caster sugar, optional
5 good quality croissants, halved
2 cups [256g] fresh blackberries or boysenberries
4 eggs plus 2 egg yolks
3/4 cup [75g] whole milk
1 cup [128g] cream
5/8 cups [80g] caster sugar
3/4 cup [75g] ground almonds
1 tsp [5g] cinnamon or 1/2 tsp almond essence
1/3 cup [43g] flaked almonds
1 tbsp [15g] caster sugar
Directions
Preheat oven to 160˚C (325˚F) & line the base &
sides of a 23cm spring form cake tin.
Heat water & sugar & cook apple wedges until
water absorbed & apples are tender.
Take off heat & leave to cool.
In a big jug, beat eggs, yolks, sugar, milk &
cream until pale.
In a separate bowl mix ground almonds with
cinnamon (or add almond essence to cream).
Layer a couple of croissants into the prepared tin,
covering the base fully. Sprinkle over half the
blackberries, apples & almond mix.
Layer up with remaining croissants, apples,
blackberries & almonds.
Now you can tear the croissants as you wish.
Press down gently.
Pour cream, sugar & egg mixture over croissants,
coating everything fully. Leave to stand for an hour.
Sprinkle with flaked almonds & sugar &
bake for 45 minutes.
The custard might puff up a little in the oven, then
sink when you remove it – this is fine, it will set into
a delicious creamy mix with croissants.
Leave to cool for at least half an hour before serving
with whipped cream & /or vanilla bean ice cream.
Serves 8 – 10.