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Read on for 51 of the best Bundt cake recipes to make for all occasions, like almond, ricotta, olive oil and lemon drizzle Bundt cake, glazed vegan chocolate Bundt cake and cheesecake swirl carrot ...
14. Devil’s Food Bundt Cake with Chocolate Espresso Ganache. ... There’s a surprise inside too: cinnamon swirl filling. Get the recipe. 33. Raspberry Swirl Pound Cake.
The word's origin is disputed. [2]Glazed earthenware gugelhupf pan made in Rače-Fram around 1900. The old, South German name combines the Middle High German words Gugel (see also gugel, a long-pointed hood) derived from Latin cucullus, meaning hood or bonnet, and Hupf, which literally means "to hop" or "to jump".
A category of dessert that involves stacked layers of cake held together by some type of filling. Lekach: Ancient Egypt, Rome and the Middle East, Germany: Honey-sweetened cake made by Jews, especially for the Jewish holiday of Rosh Hashanah. Lemon cake: Unknown, but likely England [22] A cake with a lemon flavor. [23] [24] Linzer Torte: Austria
A chocolate babka made with a dough similar to challah, and topped with streusel. It consists of either an enriched or laminated dough; which are similar to those used for challah, and croissants respectively, that has been rolled out and spread with a variety of sweet fillings such as chocolate, cinnamon sugar, apples, sweet cheese, Nutella, mohn, or raisins, which is then braided either as ...
The earliest known record in a Jewish source of a cake called lekach, from the Middle High German lecke, 'to lick', [5] was in the Medieval ages in Sefer ha-Rokeach by Eleazar ben Judah of Worms, Germany. [1] Many Ashkenazi versions by the 13th century were influenced by or based on Lebkuchen or Honigkuchen (honey cake) recipes found in Germany ...
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. In the bowl of an electric mixer, cream together butter, brown sugar and sugar. Add vanilla and mix until combined.
Šakotis ("tree cake" [1]) (Polish: sękacz [ˈsɛŋkat͡ʂ] ⓘ, [2] Belarusian: банкуха, romanized: bankukha [3] [4] [5]) is a Polish, Lithuanian and Belarusian traditional spit cake. It is a cake made of butter, egg whites and yolks, flour, sugar, and cream, cooked on a rotating spit in an oven or over an open fire.