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Kaiserschmarrn (German pronunciation: [ˈkaɪzɐˌʃmaʁn] ⓘ) or Kaiserschmarren (German: [ˈkaɪzɐˌʃmaʁən] ⓘ; [1] ' Emperor's Mess ') [2] is a lightly sweetened pancake that takes its name from the Austrian emperor Franz Joseph I, who was fond of this fluffy shredded pancake. It is served as a dessert or as a light lunch alongside ...
Åland pancake (Swedish: Ålandspannkaka; Finnish: Ahvenanmaan pannukakku) is a type of oven-baked pancake made with semolina and flavoured with cardamom. It can be served either warm or cold, and traditionally with whipped cream and prunes. [1]
Kaiserschmarrn is an Austrian pancake ... and is baked in an oven instead of using a ... Yorkshire pudding is made from a similar recipe, but baked instead of fried ...
An oven baked or pan fried thick omelette (egg cake) topped with crispy bacon, tomatoes and chives. Floating island: Sweet France: A dessert consisting of meringue floating on crème anglaise (a vanilla custard). The meringue is prepared from whipped egg whites, sugar, and vanilla extract and baked in a bain-marie.
Kaiserschmarrn (caramelized and shredded pancake) Buchteln (from Czech buchty): sweet rolls made of yeast dough, filled, traditionally, with Powidl, (or, in some modern variants, with apricot jam) and butter-baked. Germknödel; Marillenknödel; Powidl (from Czech povidla) Sachertorte (a chocolate cake) Wiener schnitzel; Backhendl
Unlike most pancakes, Dutch babies are baked in the oven, rather than being fried. They are generally thicker than most pancakes and contain no chemical leavening ingredients such as baking powder. They can be sweet or savory [5] and can be served at any meal. [6] [7]
[8]: 78 Austrian historian Roman Sandgruber, in his biography of Hitler's father Alois, notes that the traditional foods of Braunau am Inn were mostly meatless, with Kaiserschmarrn, Eiernockerl, and Rohrnudeln all being popular, giving young Adolf a taste for cabbage, dumplings, and pastries.
The meat recipes were mostly based on beef and veal, where cooked beef was used for everyday meals. In the case of pork, suckling pig played a great role. "The use of offal and the entire slaughtered animal - especially the calf - from head to toe was a special characteristic of the recipes collected in the Bavarian cookbooks.