Mile-Long 'Rosca De Reyes' King Cake Eaten By Thousands During Epiphany Festival In Mexico City

Thousands Eat Mile-Long King Cake
People gather to get a piece of the traditional 'Rosca de Reyes' (Mexican Epiphany Bread) --a large ring-shaped bread roll baked for Epiphany-- in Mexico City, on January 3, 2012. The 1900-metre circumference 'Rosca de Reyes', weighing 10 metric tons --the world biggest-- was distributed among 200,000 people at Zocalo Square in the Mexican capital. AFP PHOTO/Alfredo ESTRELLA (Photo credit should read ALFREDO ESTRELLA/AFP/Getty Images)
People gather to get a piece of the traditional 'Rosca de Reyes' (Mexican Epiphany Bread) --a large ring-shaped bread roll baked for Epiphany-- in Mexico City, on January 3, 2012. The 1900-metre circumference 'Rosca de Reyes', weighing 10 metric tons --the world biggest-- was distributed among 200,000 people at Zocalo Square in the Mexican capital. AFP PHOTO/Alfredo ESTRELLA (Photo credit should read ALFREDO ESTRELLA/AFP/Getty Images)

Tens of thousands of Mexicans wolfed down a 1.9-kilometer (1.2-mile) long king cake on Thursday, polishing it off in less than half-an-hour during the traditional feast in downtown Mexico City.

The Epiphany pastry weighed almost 9.4 tonnes and was made with 4.9 tonnes of flour, 2.8 tonnes of butter, one tonne of sugar and marmalade, hundreds of kilos of candied fruits and more than 43,000 eggs, the city government said.

Mayor Miguel Angel Mancera was among the first people to take a bite from the "Rosca de Reyes," which was placed along tables in the historic Zocalo Plaza. Some 200,000 pieces were distributed.

Mexican families eat the bread in the run-up to the Epiphany on January 6, the day Christians believe the Three Wise Men brought gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh for the baby Jesus.

A baby Jesus figurine is hidden in the cake and the person who finds it must make tamales -- a corn dumpling -- on February 2, the Day of the Candles, for those who shared the bread.

Copyright (2013) AFP. All rights reserved.

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