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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.
There is usually raspberry jam in a sugar ring on the torte. The torte got its name from the Finnish poet Johan Ludvig Runeberg (1804–1877) who, according to legend, enjoyed the torte with punsch for every breakfast. Rustico: Salento, Italy: Made with puff pastry and a stuffing that varies style by style Sacher Torte: Austria
Franz Sacher (16 December 1816 – 11 March 1907) was an Austrian [1] confectioner, best known as the inventor of the Sachertorte. Biography.
Chocolate torte with decorated top. A torte (/ ˈ t ɔːr t /; [1] from German: Torte (German pronunciation:), in turn from Latin via Italian: torta) is a rich, usually multilayered, cake that is filled with whipped cream, buttercreams, mousses, jams, or fruit. [2] Ordinarily, the cooled torte is glazed and garnished.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Redirect page
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 ...
One background story suggests that torta caprese was created when the King of Naples' Austrian wife requested a Sacher cake (an Austrian chocolate cake), Neapolitan chefs improvised by using a typical Neopolitan ingredient, almonds. [4]