Current:Home > NewsKing Charles III's official "coronation quiche" recipe raises some eyebrows -FinTechWorld
King Charles III's official "coronation quiche" recipe raises some eyebrows
View
Date:2025-04-11 20:34:25
London — Buckingham Palace dropped a juicy bit of coronation news this week, and it has nothing to do with who's attending the ancient ceremony for King Charles III or which of the Crown Jewels may have been looted from the former British colonies. The official dish of the coronation has been announced: It is Coronation Quiche.
Let's dig in.
The dish:
Even the palace's use of the word "quiche" in the official recipe made some culinary commenters balk. Few saw much French influence on the new king's trademark dish of cheddar, eggs, spinach and a few other choice ingredients encased in a buttery pastry crust.
While French chef Manon Lagrève praised the selection as a boost for Franco-British relations, it turns out that quiche, much like Britain's royal family, is originally from Germany.
On a more personal note, Darren McGrady, former chef to the royal family, found the choice entirely in keeping with the king's tastes, tweeting that "The King loves anything with eggs and cheese."
King Charles III's coronation: What to know for the centuries-old ceremony
The monarch and his wife, Queen Consort Camilla, are said to have chosen the dish personally to mark the occasion of their crowning. It was suggested by the royals as a feature dish for the "Coronation Big Lunches" that are being organized at the community level across Britain to mark the occasion.
Quiche controversy:
There's been significant discussion about the optics of holding a taxpayer-funded coronation ceremony, brimming with jewels and inherited wealth, as millions of non-royal Britons struggle through a dire cost of living crisis and join labor picket lines to demand fair pay.
So, the palace may have been wise to offer up a recipe for coronation quiche that calls for relatively cheap and common ingredients. But that ingredient list — and one ingredient in particular — has not gone down particularly well.
My take on the coronation quiche as an ex professional chef and baker is that broad beans are such a weird choice. Are they fresh? Are they double shelled? Have these people peeled broad beans, because it’s a pain in the arse. And tarragon? Why?
— Emily Cooper (@Emily_S_Cooper) April 17, 2023
It's unclear what authority might actually rule on whether beans belong in a quiche, but the coronation quiche recipe calls for broad beans (fava beans, to Americans) or soybeans to be included in the filling. The addition was blasted by some Twitter users as "disgusting," and "nonsense" on the more vitriolic end of the spectrum, and as "a weird choice" by another who chose less harsh words for the lunch fare.
The history:
Coronation quiche isn't the first official royal coronation dish to hit the British isles, and its predecessor remains a common feature in grocery store aisles and café shelves across the U.K. to this day.
In 1953, the famed Le Cordon Bleu cooking school developed a recipe of cold chicken in a mild curry cream sauce to be served to guests attending Queen Elizabeth II's Coronation Luncheon.
Coronation Chicken has retained steadfast popularity in the U.K., even weathering the controversial recent addition of raisins. It can be found in restaurants as a salad served on lettuce or rice, or even stuffed into baguettes and sold as a lunch offering at cheap sandwich shops.
Bean-bashing and raisin debates aside, food journalist Felicity Cloake said the quiche recipe — which she described as "more like spinach pie" — was less original than its predecessor, "but it's also likely to be less divisive, which is exactly what the country needs right now."
Perhaps that will be its legacy — a non-divisive, if mildly controversial, quiche-like pie to united a divided Britain. If you can buy it in a London sandwich shop between two pieces of bread when Prince William is crowned at some indeterminable date in the future, the coronation quiche will be vindicated.
- In:
- King Charles III
- British Royal Family
- Food & Drink
- Queen Elizabeth II
veryGood! (91285)
Related
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- 'I'm going to kick': 87-year-old woman fights off teenage attacker, then feeds him snacks
- Lawyer for Bryan Kohberger says he was driving alone night of murders
- Bark beetles are eating through Germany’s Harz forest. Climate change is making matters worse
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- X Blue subscribers can now hide the blue checkmarks they pay to have
- Major cases await as liberals exert control of Wisconsin Supreme Court
- Céline Dion's Sister Shares Update on Singer's Health Amid Battle With Stiff Person Syndrome
- Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
- Judge in Trump's Jan. 6 case gives attorneys 2 weeks to propose trial date
Ranking
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Family mistakenly held at gunpoint by Texas police say the stop traumatized the kids in the car
- Idaho student murders suspect Bryan Kohberger reveals alibi claim in new court filing
- Tickets for Lionel Messi's first road MLS match reaching $20,000 on resale market
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Want tickets to Taylor Swift's new tour dates? These tips will help you score seats
- The economy added jobs at a solid pace in July, reinforcing hopes about the economy
- Police shoot and kill a man in Boise, Idaho who they say called for help, then charged at officers
Recommendation
'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
Trump's day in court, an unusual proceeding before an unusual audience
Mother of Uvalde victim on running for mayor: Change 'starts on the ground'
'Cash over country': Navy sailors arrested, accused of passing US military info to China
Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
Veteran Massachusetts police sergeant charged with assaulting 72-year-old neighbor
Idaho stabbing suspect says he was out driving alone the night of students' killings
Extreme heat has caused several hiking deaths this summer. Here's how to stay safe.