Solange
'A meal of green tea, scandal, hot Sally-Lunn Cakes,
and a little novel-reading.'
Pendennis; William Thackeray; 1849
Solange Luyon fled France: in 1680, she arrived to the City of Bath, to
Lilliput Alley, where a baker's business bloomed, and she baked the bread of
her Huguenot heritage. Her name was anglicized, and the popular breads known
henceforth as Sally Lunn's Buns. The baker's house still stands and the breads
are still made, though the oven is updated now.
But what became of Sally Lunn, refugee, entrepreneur?
When her recipe was rediscovered in a secret
compartment above the fireplace, was there no clue of the writer?
She disappears, in a puff of blown smoke.
Marie Byng-Johnson is almost as vague. She bought a run down town house, in
Bath, in 1937, and turned it out as a tea room. She found a secret compartment
and there was a secret recipe and she told Sally's story and baked her buns and
business was good. If you google Marie, you will find Sally, and some old water
colours of scenes around Bath. That is as much as I know about Marie.
Solilem, incidentally, is the name of a brioche type treat, an old recipe
arguably from France or Alsace.
Another story appears, unearthed on internet travels,
in which a real woman of name unknown does bake the breads and her cry to buy
is: Solilem! Solilem!
She is known as Sally Lunn: it is what she might be
shouting.
But what became of Marie?
'Victoria Art Gallery objects to be de-accessioned.
Local paintings of no artistic merit
4 works
(oil on board) by Marie Byng Johnson (P1930.32, .33, .34, & .35)'
The secret compartment is revealed/alleged! |
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