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But what's almost as fun as having a slice of cake baked in the famous pan is learning the fascinating history behind it from Jenny Dalquist, the executive vice president of sales and marketing and third generation member of the family that created the brand Nordic Ware, the makers of the Bundt pan. With Nordic Ware celebrating 75 years of ...
Bundt pans were invented by H. David Dalquist in 1950, and today we use them to make those classic cakes and also to roast up extra-crispy-skinned chicken.
In 1950, the brothers bought Northland Aluminum Products, a small firm with a line of “Nordic Ware” products including griddles and steak platters. The same year, Dave Dalquist created a cast aluminum, fluted cake pan and trademarked it as the “Bundt” pan.
H. David Dalquist, who died last Sunday at age 86, will be remembered as the inventor of the Bundt pan. But the rounded, circular baking pan was actually the brainchild of several women from...
In 1950, the brothers bought Northland Aluminum Products, a small firm with a line of “Nordic Ware” products including griddles and steak platters. The same year, Dave Dalquist created a cast aluminum, fluted cake pan and trademarked it as the “Bundt” pan.
Many Americans can recognize a Bundt pan or have one at home. But few know that this iconic cake pan, created by H. David Dalquist, founder of the Nordic Ware Company, is rooted in Minnesota’s Jewish immigrant history.
The famous pan was invented by H. David Dalquist in 1950. As the owner of Minnesota's Nordic Ware company, Dalquist cast the pan for the Minneapolis-based Hadassah Society. (The Jewish women in the Society wanted to recreate traditional kugelhopf, a dense, ring-shaped cake).
Invented by alumnus H. David Dalquist, the Bundt pan revolutionized midcentury baking. By Elizabeth Foy Larsen. H. David Dalquist III with his daughter, Jennifer Dalquist/Photograph by Sara Rubinstein. Skulls are spinning. Haunted Skull cakelet pans, that is.
Bundt pans were created in 1950 by H. David Dalquist, the owner of the Minnesota-based company, Nordic Ware. He cast the distinctive aluminum pan at the request of the Minneapolis-based Hadassah Society, a Jewish women’s group.
Coined by one H. David Dalquist of Minneapolis in the 1950's, the word Bundt is actually a riff on the German word bund, which translates to "association." Dave hoped Bundts would always evoke the idea of a gathering together of people, which they indisputably do. Photo by James Ransom.