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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Colston_bun
rdf:type
dbo:Food yago:WikicatBuns yago:Foodstuff107566340 yago:Matter100020827 yago:Bread107679356 owl:Thing yago:WikicatSweetBreads yago:WikicatYeastBreads yago:Food107555863 yago:WikicatBritishBreads yago:PhysicalEntity100001930 yago:BakedGoods107622061 yago:Bun107680932 yago:Food100021265 yago:Starches107566863 wikidata:Q2095 yago:Solid115046900 yago:Substance100020090
rdfs:label
Colston bun
rdfs:comment
A Colston bun is a sweet bun made of a yeast dough flavoured with dried fruit such as currants, candied peel, and sweet spices. It is made in the city of Bristol, England, and named after Edward Colston, a local merchant and MP, who created the original recipe. There are two size categories: "dinner plate", with eight wedge marks on the surface, and "ha'penny staver", an individual-sized bun.
foaf:name
Colston bun
dbp:name
Colston bun
dcterms:subject
dbc:Yeast_breads dbc:British_breads dbc:Sweet_breads dbc:Culture_in_Bristol dbc:Buns
dbo:wikiPageID
4372829
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
1083757477
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
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n7:4hkDH yago-res:Colston_bun wikidata:Q5149379 freebase:m.0bzt94
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dbp:country
England
dbp:mainIngredient
Yeast dough, dried fruit, candied peel, sweet spices
dbp:region
dbr:Bristol
dbp:type
Sweet bread
dbo:abstract
A Colston bun is a sweet bun made of a yeast dough flavoured with dried fruit such as currants, candied peel, and sweet spices. It is made in the city of Bristol, England, and named after Edward Colston, a local merchant and MP, who created the original recipe. There are two size categories: "dinner plate", with eight wedge marks on the surface, and "ha'penny staver", an individual-sized bun. The Colston bun is traditionally distributed to children on Colston Day (13 November), which celebrates the granting of a royal charter to the Society of Merchant Venturers by King Charles I in 1639. The custom originated from the Colston's School, which was established for poor children in Bristol during the early 18th century. Originally, the child would receive a large "dinner plate" bun with eight wedge marks so that individual portions could be broken off and shared with their family, plus a "staver" which could be eaten immediately to "stave off" hunger, and a gift of 2 shillings (now 10p) from the wives of the Merchant Venturers. The gifts of buns and money were distributed to some school children in Bristol on Colston Day by the Colston Society. Colston buns are not widely known outside Bristol, and are generally only available for sale on occasion in independent bakers around the city. In the 21st century, the name has become controversial because of Edward Colston's connections to the slave trade. The Colston Society, which had operated for 275 years commemorating Colston and supporting the Colston Day distribution of the bun, decided to disband in 2020 after the George Floyd protests and associated toppling of Colston's statue in Bristol; the society deemed it inappropriate to continue to memorialise him.
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4530
dbo:ingredientName
Yeastdough,dried fruit,candied peel, sweetspices
dbo:ingredient
dbr:Dried_fruit dbr:Spice dbr:Candied_peel dbr:Baker's_yeast
dbo:region
dbr:Bristol
dbo:type
dbr:Bread
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
wikipedia-en:Colston_bun