What you'll learn
- 🎂 Discover my renowned recipe for the authentic Bolo Rei, the iconic Portuguese Christmas King's Cake.
- 🍰 Learn how to adapt recipes to create the delectable Bolo Rainha, also known as the Queen's Cake.
- 🍒 Master the art of making candied fruits entirely from scratch, adding a personal touch to your pastries.
- 👨🍳 Uncover professional secrets and tips to bake Bolo Rei just like Portugal's finest pastry chefs.
- 🧁 Gain essential baking tips for achieving amazing results with ease in your home kitchen.
- 📜 Explore the rich history and fascinating curiosities behind traditional Portuguese pastries.
Course Content
Welcome!
1 lectureCelebration time in Portugal means eating and drinking well. At Christmas time the Portuguese focus a lot on desserts. Traditionally, families have a full table dedicated just to sweet specialties that are usually only found during this time of the year. We enjoy a variety of sugary goods with lots of cinnamon, and the one cake that cannot be missed: Bolo Rei!
Bolo Rei is also known in English as King Cake or King's Cake.
This fluffy cake with brioche type of dough is enriched with nuts and candied fruits. It is a cousin of Gâteau des Rois from France, Roscón de Reyes from Spain, or Rosca de Reyes from Latin America. Bolo Rei also shares similarities with New Orleans King Cake, associated with celebrations of Mardi Gras/Carnival in Louisiana. It's also somehow similar to Italian Panettone, in the way that it is a cake typically eaten around Christmas time, featuring soft dough with raisins, dried fruits and candied fruits.
For those who don't like candied fruits, there is Bolo Rainha, Queen’s Cake, a version that skips the colorful sugary fruits. In this course we do both recipes from scratch.
I will demystify the process of making Bolo Rei at home. Understanding the best ingredients, kneading the dough, decorating and adapting the recipe to make Bolo Rainha. You don't need to have previous experience in the kitchen.
We will do everything step by step, in a simple and accessible way, so that you can enjoy a sweet Christmas Portuguese style!
Introduction to Portuguese Bolo Rei & Bolo Rainha
1 lectureHow did Bolo Rei come about? What do Bolo Rei and Gâteau des Rois from France have in common?
This is not a long or boring history lesson, but a little context to make your home baking even more fun.
If Bolo Rei is Portugal's most iconic cake during Christmas and Epiphany celebrations, there must be a reason for it... let's look into it!
Making the Dough
2 lecturesOverview of ingredients and steps to make the dough for Bolo Rei and Bolo Rainha.
Both Bolo Rei and Bolo Rainha recipes can be made by hand or using an electric mixer. Please watch the next lecture to see how to make the dough with the aid of an electric mixer - and don't forget to use the dough hook!
Please check full list of ingredients, quantities and recipe steps on the downloadable recipe PDF available on the Resources.
Bolo Rei and Bolo Rainha recipes are VERY similar. The only difference is that Bolo Rainha does not include candied fruits - nor mixed into the dough, nor on top for the decoration.
On the previous lecture we show how to make the dough for Bolo Rei by hand, while on this lecture we do the dough for Bolo Rainha using an electric mixer. But please note that both Bolo Rei and Bolo Rainha's doughs can be made by hand or by electric mixer.
See the details on each lecture and please check the full list of ingredients and cooking steps on the downloadable recipe PDF available on the Resources on the previous lecture.
Shaping the Dough
1 lectureBolo Rei, aka King's Cake, looks like the crown of a royal.
There are 2 ways of shaping the dough to look like a crown. The traditional way, using your elbow. Or simply with your fingers and hands, as if you were shaping one gigantic bagel. We look into both ways of doing it, so that your cakes aren't only delicious, but pretty too!
Fermentation
1 lectureIn a commercial kitchen, like the one at my bakery, it's easy to ferment all sorts of breads and cakes. Why? Because we have a dough proofer, with controlled temperature and humidity.
In this lecture I show you how you can turn your home oven into a dough proofer, making the most of it as a heat resource, with the aid of water to create the right humidity conditions that will ensure your cakes raise beautifully!
Decoration & Finishing Touches
2 lecturesAfter fermentation, your cakes will be big, fluffy and ready for the most fun step of this recipe - decorations!
We decorate Bolo Rei with nuts and candied fruits, showing you the traditional way of displaying the colorful crystallized fruits into a color coordinated cross shape.
On the other hand, we also decorate Bolo Rainha with assorted dried fruits, for a deliciously loaded cake crust.
In Portugal, you can easily find mixed candied fruits for Bolo Rei at the supermarket. The most traditional mixes for the dough may include candied orange peel and fig leaf gourd (a type of squash known here in Portugal as abóbora-chila), dyed with food coloring. It is not compulsory to have these exact same fruits in order to make Bolo Rei at home. Particularly because we know that these aren't always easy to find outside our borders. And, truth be told, after the amount of sugar and coloring applied, you can't really taste the fig leaf gourd in itself.
In this lecture I teach you how to make candied fruits at home - both for the Bolo Rei dough and the decorations. You can apply this method for crystallizing to other fruits you may have available - except fruits that are too soft and pulpy, as those will tend to disintegrate during the boiling and caramelization process.
I really wanted to make sure you had no excuse not to make Bolo Rei at home. So we're using easy to find ingredients (orange and watermelon - which you can find in most parts of the world!) and a simple process to have colorful home-made candied fruits!
Baking
1 lectureHow to set your home oven for best baking results - both for Bolo Rei and Bolo Rainha.
What are we trying to achieve? A perfectly golden crust and soft spongey dough!
Includes tips for even baking results.
Sugar Syrup
1 lectureWe have come to the last step for Bolo Rei and Bolo Rainha making!
While your cakes finish baking, you can make a super simple sugar syrup. Brushing your cakes with this syrup will add sweetness, moisture and an eye-catching shiny glaze!
Please see downloadable recipe PDF available on Section 3 for syrup recipe variations, including other ingredients that will infuse even more flavor into your cake!
Enjoy your Bolo Rei and Bolo Rainha
2 lecturesWe finally enjoy the (candied) fruits of our work! ;)
Bolo Rei and Bolo Rainha tasting and tips on how to best enjoy and store these cakes for days to come... if they last that long at your home, that is!
Thank you very much for joining this Bolo Rei & Bolo Rainha Baking Course!
I sincerely hope you have learnt the necessary steps to make these cakes at home and that you have lots of fun while baking them and sharing them with your family and friends. Here in Portugal, most people simply buy Bolo Rei and Bolo Rainha at bakeries. So serving home-made Bolo Rei and Bolo Rainha is considered a real treat!
I hope you have managed to accomplish incredible results and feel proud of yourself. If you have any doubts or comments, please remember that I am here to help and will be happy to answer all your messages (privately or on the Q&A board of this course).
I hope you get to travel to Portugal one day, and you come visit me at my bakery, Pastelaria Batalha. Keep baking and having fun in the kitchen. Obrigado!
If you enjoyed this course, I'd love to invite you to check out my other course dedicated to Portuguese Christmas Dessert Recipes, focusing on:
- Sonhos de Natal, Portuguese Christmas Doughnuts
- Rabanadas, Portugal's version of French toast
- Coscorões, Portuguese Angel Wings
- Azevias, fried pockets with sweet Chickpea filling
- Filhós, delicate fried dough coated with sugary goodness
These are all quite simple recipes of sugary Christmas fritters, which we will prepare in a practical and accessible way, but that taste like the real deal!
Description
🎄 Master the Art of Baking Bolo Rei: Portugal's Most Famous Christmas Pastry! 🍰
Bolo Rei (Portuguese King's Cake) is more than just a cake; it's an experience. 🇵🇹 This iconic Christmas pastry features a fluffy, brioche-like dough enriched with raisins, nuts, and a colorful array of candied fruits. 🎂✨
Journey through traditions as you discover Bolo Rei, Portugal's sweet counterpart to the French Gâteau des Rois and Spain's Roscón de Reyes. Whether you adore the New Orleans King Cake or cherish the holiday vibes of Italian Panettone, Bolo Rei will capture your heart and taste buds with its soft dough and rich fruits. 🌟💖
What You'll Learn:
- Genuine Bolo Rei Recipe: Craft Bolo Rei and its fruit-free sibling, Bolo Rainha, using our award-winning family recipe that claimed the title of BEST BOLO REI IN LISBON. 🏆
- Professional Techniques Made Simple: Achieve artisan-quality results effortlessly, making you feel as if you’ve stepped into a Portuguese bakery. 👩🍳🍞
- Simplifying Ingredients: Learn how to create homemade candied fruits, ensuring all home-cooks can find success without the stress. 🥳🍊
Embrace the Portuguese Christmas spirit and bring joy to your table. Whether you're proudly Portuguese, of Portuguese descent living abroad, or a foodie seeking new culinary adventures, our authentic recipes are your gateway to flavorful traditions. 🇵🇹🎉
Obrigado! 🙏
Who Should Join This Course: 🤔
- Home Bakers & Baking Enthusiasts – Get hands-on with expert tips and tricks.
- Professional Bakers – Enrich your baking repertoire with traditional Portuguese delights.
- Lovers of Portuguese Culinary Art – Dive deep into flavors that excite the soul.
- Individuals Reconnecting with Portuguese Roots – Revive and honor your culinary heritage. 🌍❤️
Course Reviews
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😀 Olga Augusto
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😀 Kim Arblaster-Loko
Visual learning is excellent!
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😀 Ngoc Nguyen
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😀 Patricia Sia
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😀 Matilde Duarte
Very well explained and easy step by step to follow the recipe Tried it’s very good
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😀 Migdalia Demil
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😀 Ana Cunha
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😀 Cláudio Custódio
Love the course
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😀 Ng Beng Choo
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😀 Penny Neidig