Gâteau Breton Recipe (2024)

Recipe from Edd Kimber

Adapted by Melissa Clark

Gâteau Breton Recipe (1)

Total Time
1 hour 45 minutes, plus 2 hours' chilling
Rating
4(424)
Notes
Read community notes

With its soft, buttery crumb, this classic French cake is similar to a giant shortbread, though moister and more tender. Its hidden prune filling is traditional, although you can use other dried fruit, such as apricot, instead. In France you sometimes even see bakers sandwiching melted chocolate or caramel between the layers. This keeps well if you want to bake it 1 or 2 days ahead. Store it well wrapped at room temperature. —Melissa Clark

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Ingredients

Yield:12 servings

  • ¾cup/100 grams pitted prunes or dried apricots (about 16)
  • 2tablespoons/30 milliliters rum
  • cups plus 2½ tablespoons/300 grams all-purpose flour
  • 1cup/200 grams superfine sugar
  • Large pinch flaky sea salt
  • ounces/240 grams unsalted butter (2 sticks plus 1 tablespoon), diced, more for greasing pan
  • 6extra-large egg yolks

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (12 servings)

442 calories; 19 grams fat; 11 grams saturated fat; 1 gram trans fat; 5 grams monounsaturated fat; 1 gram polyunsaturated fat; 59 grams carbohydrates; 2 grams dietary fiber; 20 grams sugars; 7 grams protein; 21 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Gâteau Breton Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. Step

    1

    In a small pot over medium-high heat, combine prunes, rum and 2 tablespoons water. (Use 1 cup/240 milliliters water if using dried apricots.) Cook until most of the liquid has been absorbed (about 5 minutes for prunes, 10 to 15 for apricots). Use a fork to mash into a thick purée. Cover and chill.

  2. In a food processor, pulse to combine flour, sugar and salt. Add butter and pulse until mixture resembles bread crumbs. Add 5 egg yolks and pulse until mixture comes together as a dough. Divide in half, form into disks, and wrap in plastic wrap. Chill at least 2 hours or until firm.

  3. Step

    3

    Heat oven to 350 degrees. Grease and line an 8-inch round cake pan with parchment paper. Between two sheets of parchment paper or plastic wrap, roll one of the dough halves into an 8-inch circle. Transfer dough to prepared cake pan, pressing into edges. Spread prune or apricot purée across dough, leaving ¾ inch border around outside edge. Roll second piece of dough into an 8-inch circle, transfer to cake pan, press around outside edge to stick the pieces together and seal in fruit purée.

  4. Step

    4

    In a small bowl, combine remaining egg yolk with 1 teaspoon water and beat lightly. Brush over top of cake, then use a fork to score a crisscross pattern into the dough. Bake until golden brown, about 50 minutes (cover with foil if cake is browning too quickly). Cool in pan 15 minutes. Flip onto a plate, then invert onto a wire rack and let cool completely.

Ratings

4

out of 5

424

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Private Notes

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Cooking Notes

LEL

Put regular granulated sugar into the food processor and take it for a spin before adding flour and salt. This will make "superfine". No change in measurement.

Chef Willie Cooper

Hi MC! To make it really authentic, add a few drops of essence de Bergamot to the yolks. This is the greatest shortbread/cake to have with afternoon tea! With prunes, it's called a "far breton". So good! My recipe is the same....very old-school. Love the dragging the fork tines overtop to make the signature decorative pattern. Merci!

Susan

The perfect recipe to use the yolks after making macaroons. I added 1/4 tsp. of raw apple cider vinegar to the dough for extra flakiness. My husband wanted frangipane AND prune filling, so I added the frangipane from David Lebovitz to much success. It was helpful to use a parchment lined spring form pan to avoid having to invert the cake. I'm glad I used a cookie sheet underneath due to leaking butter. This is a must repeat recipe - thanks Melissa!

Jill Momper

Is the cake pan a springform pan? Else, how do you get the gateau out of the pan?

Sally in Tampa

I substituted dried cherries for the prunes, using kirsch instead of rum, and used 3/4 cup of water. Also, I used an 8 1/2 inch springform pan, and it worked very well.

Chef Willie Cooper

Use a fluted edge French tart pan, with a removable bottom. Mine are black, from years of making gateau breton.

Wendy

Superfine is also sometimes called Caster Sugar. Most grocery stores have superfine, Domino's makes it, if not in baking aisle, try where the bar supplies are, like bitters and mixers etc. It is often used to make co*cktails.

Jean

Found Gateau Breton with almond filling in a patisserie in Montparnasse this past July and couldn't get enough of it.

Stéphane

Bonjour Melissa,
I love your columns. Being French and 1/4 Breton, I would recommend to try the plain one first. No prunes, no apricots. Quality of butter is essential.
This cake is fun to make. I would recommend a nice glass of hard cider (not too sweet as there is enough sweetness in the cake). That plus a kouing, and invite friends over!

Nancy

I thought this recipe would be perfect as the finish to an intense prime rib dinner & overall blow out foodie evening--it was! I asked my daughter-in-law to make it--Superlative! She chose to use both dried apricots as well as prunes. She also used a spring form pan. Also--no food processer--just a plug-in hand mixer--no problem. A total success-- the finished result looked EXACTLY like the photo in this recipe. I think we've discovered a new holiday favorite.

Chef Willie Cooper

Armagnac! (prune cognac, basically)

Francesca

It seems to be hard to find superfine sugar nowadays, but I understand you can pulse regular granulated sugar a few times in your food processor for a similar result.

ellen

omg. Almond filling would be heaven. Thank you for thinking of that! oh. oooooh.

"I'll have what she's having."

Denny

C&H calls their superfine sugar "Bakers Sugar", most supermarket around here (west coast, USA) carry it.

Jane

The parchment paper should come up the sides of the pan so that the pastry releases when inverted. Trim as needed.

Jeff

Could a preparation with apricot, PLUS some chocolate scattered with the fruit in the middle layer, work?

ezachos

Flavor was delicious, and despite my fears, it was the perfect amount of filling (feared it wasn’t enough). But I found the pastry impossible to work with as a disk—either too brittle to fit easily into the pan, or too soft to handle as an intact disk. Tried twice. I’m not quite ready to give up, but will try a different recipe that uses a thick batter that can be spread in the pan, rather than a pastry disk.

Diana

I used a tart pan with a push bottom lined with parchment paper as another commenter noted, and put a very old half sheet underneath to catch drips. Used cherries instead of prunes, but kept the rum. Managed to find superfine sugar of all places at a large Asian market. Had friends over, and between 3 of us, we ate the whole thing! OMG it was great! This is going into my "special cakes" rotation.

kz

This turned out so well! The apricot filling was nice. Next time I want to try Nutella in the center.

Inez

I have a beloved cake recipe that takes 5 egg whites. From now on I'll be making two cakes. This is easy and delicious and i won't be wasting all those eggs yolks!

Loved it! And so did our guests!

This was fabulous. My husband raved about it. Who knew prunes and rum would go so well together. I made the dough and the prune mixture the day before I baked it. I did have to let the dough sit for about 15 minutes before I could roll it out. I’ll be making this again.

Audrey

Sorry, as a breton and the daughter of a pastry chef I am scandalized that you would make a gateau breton with unsalted butter to start. Secondly, whoever said the version with prunes is called a far is deeply mistaken. A far breton is an entirely different dessert resembling a custard.

R Beatty

Agree with Kadia, 3 years, you need a professional size food processor -LARGE. Sadly, I should have read the notes further than I did. Could you be a bit more specific or give hints about how to handle 'other dried fruits'.Gonna use the processor? Throw regular sugar in it for a few spins before the flour and salt.My gateau Breton is a tad ugly, but tasty!

Sally in Tampa

I searched in vain for another recipe that would explain how to make the caramel filling. Finding none, I improvised by using a caramel candy recipe but cooking only until soft ball stage. I scraped the hot caramel into a glass pie plate to let it cool, then used it in lieu of the fruit filling. Very pleased with the results. Note that you need to let the cake cool completely before serving so that the warm caramel does not run out.

Joan

This is spectacular, and spectacularly easy too. You can make the prune filling and the pastry the day before, then all you need to do the "day of" is assemble it and pop it in the oven, so it's great for dinner parties. I use armagnac instead of rum with the prunes.

cramberry

Hi I like Hut, do want to try this with Nutella. I saw in a search chocolate filling can be used. Has anyone tried it with Nutella or a chocolate filling. This will be my Christmas family dinner dessert!

Ray Moderski

I studied at La Varenne in Paris, in 1980. We were taught to plump the prunes with Armagnac liquor. This is a great addition too. If you do not want to use the liquor you can also put the prunes in a strong tea. This is another great flavor choice with prunes.

Sierra

I had four large egg yolks leftover from a different recipe so cut the recipe in half and used a 5” cake pan. Bake time was about the same. Turned out great!

artlife

is there any reason why i shouldn't roll the dough into the circles before it's chilled instead of letting the dough get cold and then struggle with rolling it out?anyway, it's 2 years since the last post, but i thought i'd check in, having recently discovered this fabulous recipe ~ now i'm making my 2nd one, changing up the flour to whole wheat pastry, using fra'angelico instead of rum for the apricot filling and adding vanilla

Lisa

I suggest doing step 1 while the dough is chilling.

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Gâteau Breton Recipe (2024)

FAQs

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There's a big chance your butter and sugar will over-cream, meaning the butter will trap more air than it should. As the batter bakes, that extra air will deflate and leave you with an overly dense cake. It's all science! For best results, cream butter and sugar together for about 1-2 minutes.

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