Kornigou
Appearance
Type | Cake |
---|---|
Main ingredients | Fruit, spices |
Kornigou, also known as kornik, are unsweetened pastries made of wheat flour formed in a triangular shape reminiscent of a mitre or square cap, possibly in the style of the first bishop of Cornouaille, a historic province of Brittany.[1] It was not a popular dessert; by 1880, it was only sold by two bakers in Guilers on the feast day of St Corentin.[1] The kornigou were possibly shaped in the style of St Corentin's hair.[2]
References
[edit]- ^ a b "SAF - Bulletin 1880 - Société archéologique du Finistère". societe-archeologique.du-finistere.org. Retrieved 2024-10-01.
- ^ Guennec, Louis Le (1984). Histoire de Quimper Corentin et son canton (in French). Les Amis de Louis Le Guennec. p. 266.
Further reading
[edit]- Michel Duval (1982). Foires et marchés en Bretagne à travers les siècles. Editions Breizh hor bro.
- Bro Nevez: Newsletter of the U.S. Branch. The Branch. 1988.
- Jean François Marie Maurice Agathe Le Gonidec (1847). Dictionnaire français-breton de Le Gonidec: enrichi d'additions et d'un Essai sur l'histoire de la langue bretonne. L. Prud'homme.