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Sachertorte sold at a café Sachertorte from Budapest Sachertorte as a present. Sachertorte (UK: / ˈ z æ x ər t ɔːr t ə / ZAKH-ər-tor-tə, US: / ˈ s ɑː k ər t ɔːr t / SAH-kər-tort; German: [ˈzaxɐˌtɔʁtə] ⓘ) is a chocolate cake, or torte, of Austrian origin, [1] [2] invented by Franz Sacher, [3] supposedly in 1832 for Prince Metternich in Vienna.
TORTE: 10 ounces bittersweet chocolate, finely chopped 1 cup sugar 2/3 cup unsalted butter, softened 8 eggs separated 2 teaspoons vanilla extract 1 1/3 cups all-purpose flour.
Franz Sacher (16 December 1816 – 11 March 1907) was an Austrian [1] confectioner, best known as the inventor of the Sachertorte. Biography.
The original Sachertorte, as served at Vienna's Hotel Sacher. Austrian cakes and pastries are a well-known feature of its cuisine. Perhaps the most famous is the Sachertorte, a chocolate cake with apricot jam filling, traditionally eaten with whipped cream. Among the cakes with the longest tradition is the Linzer Torte.
Hotel Sacher is a five-star luxury hotel in Vienna, Austria, facing the Vienna State Opera in the city's central Innere Stadt district. It is famous for the specialty of the house, the Sachertorte , a chocolate cake with apricot filling.
In the early decades of the twentieth century, a legal battle over the use of the label "The Original Sacher Torte" developed between the Hotel Sacher and the Demel bakery. Eduard Sacher, son of Franz Sacher , the inventor of Sachertorte, had completed his own recipe of his father's cake during his time at Demel, which was the first ...
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Sachertorte – Austrian chocolate cake invented by Franz Sacher with dense cake and a layer of apricot jam; Chocolate Swiss roll – A sponge cake roll filled with jam, cream or icing, and its Christmas variant the Yule log; Tunnel of Fudge cake – A chocolate bundt cake that won 2nd place in the 1966 Pillsbury Bake-Off. [12] [13] [14]