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  2. How To Roll and Decorate a Bûche de Noël

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/food-how-roll-and-decorate...

    To view our step-by-step photo instructions for making a Bûche de Noël, check out the slideshow above! A French Christmas Menu The Best Store-Bought Bûches de Noël 25 Traditional Christmas ...

  3. Yule log (cake) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yule_log_(cake)

    The name bûche de Noël originally referred to the Yule log itself, and was transferred to the dessert after that custom had fallen out of popular use. References to it as bûche de Noël or, in English, Yule Log, can be found from at least the Edwardian era (for example, F. Vine, Saleable Shop Goods (1898 and later). [4]

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  5. Yule log - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yule_log

    The Yule log is recorded in the folklore archives of much of England, but particularly in collections covering the West Country and the North Country. [13] For example, in his section regarding "Christmas Observances", J. B. Partridge recorded then-current (1914) Christmas customs in Yorkshire, Britain involving the Yule log as related by "Mrs. Day, Minchinhampton (Gloucestershire), a native ...

  6. Yule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yule

    The modern English noun Yule descends from Old English ġēol, earlier geoh(h)ol, geh(h)ol, and geóla, sometimes plural. [1] The Old English ġēol or ġēohol and ġēola or ġēoli indicate the 12-day festival of "Yule" (later: "Christmastide"), the latter indicating the month of "Yule", whereby ǣrra ġēola referred to the period before the Yule festival (December) and æftera ġēola ...

  7. Simnel cake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simnel_cake

    Simnel cake is a fruitcake associated with Lent and Easter and widely eaten in England, Ireland and countries with patterns of migration from them. It is distinguished by layers of almond paste or marzipan, typically one in the middle and one on top, and a set of eleven balls made of the same paste.

  8. Madeleine (cake) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madeleine_(cake)

    Cakes à la Madeleine On a pound of flour, you need a pound of butter, eight egg whites & yolks, three fourths of a pound of fine sugar, a half glass of water, a little grated lime, or preserved lemon rind minced very finely, orange blossom praliné ; knead the whole together, & make little cakes, that you will serve iced with sugar.

  9. Doberge cake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doberge_cake

    Beulah Levy Ledner, born into a Jewish family in St. Rose, Louisiana, opened a bakery in New Orleans in 1933.She became very successful after creating her "Doberge cake" adapted from the Hungarian/Austrian Dobos Cake, a cake made of nine génoise cake layers filled with buttercream and topped with a hard caramel glaze. [2]