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| Bakeries and cafés display their colorful cakes in glass cases. (© picture-alliance / dpa ) |
These days, it is still quite common to get together with friends and family on Sunday afternoon between 3:00 and 5:00 p.m. to share some cake and good conversation.
Whether the gathering takes place at someone’s home or in a café or a confectionary shop, this tradition is a long-standing one in Germany. Records show that cakes have been baked in Germany for some 400 years.
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| The Schwarzwälder Kirschtorte is made with Kirschwasser, or cherry brandy, which is produced in the Black Forest. (© picture-alliance / dpa) |
A good number of German cakes have achieved international popularity. Some of the most popular tortes are also among the most elaborate. The Schwarzwälder Kirschtorte (Black Forest cake) is a chocolate layer cake filled with whipped cream and Kirschwasser-soaked cherries and decorated with whipped cream, chocolate shavings, and cherries.
The Frankfurter Kranz is a white bundt cake layered with buttercream and sometimes also a red jam. The exterior is covered in buttercream and candied nuts before being adorned with cherries. Other people favor cheese cakes and cream cakes for special occasions. The most delightfully named cake would have to be the Bienenstich (bee sting cake), which refers to its honey and nut topping.
Despite its popularity in the US, the so-called German Chocolate Cake with its nutty coconut topping is, however, not a German cake. Invented by a woman in Texas in 1957, the cake takes its name from German’s Sweet Chocolate, a chocolate created by an American baker named Samuel German in 1852.
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| Erdbeertorte (strawberry cake) is usually served with lightly sweetened whipped cream. (© picture-alliance / dpa / Stockfood ) |
German-American immigrants most certainly brought their traditional cake recipes with them. That words such as kaffeeklatsch or coffee klatsch, streusel, and strudel exist in the American-English dictionaries attributes to the importance of their cake-baking tradition in the US.
While cake is sometimes served as an after-dinner dessert in the US, this is rarely considered in Germany. Dessert in Germany is more often served in a bowl and would include dishes like pudding, sweetened Quark with fruit, stewed fruit, or ice cream.
Saxony’s Coffee House Culture
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| With an annual per capita
consumption of 148 liters per year, Germans drink more coffee than any other beverage, according to the German Coffee Association. (© Colourbox.com) |
Even composer Johann Sebastian Bach, who served as cantor of the St. Thomas Church in Leipzig in the mid-18th century, made coffee the main topic of the cantata Be quiet, stop chattering, which became popularly known as the Coffee Cantata (BWV 211). The text, from the poet Christian Friedrich Henrici (aka Picander), tells the story of a father who is trying to break his daughter’s habit of drinking coffee. Finally, she agrees to give up coffee in return for being allowed to marry but secretly intends to land a husband who will support her coffee habit.
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| In his 1889 drawing "Haushaltspolitik" (Household Politics), C.W. Allers depicted a "Kaffeekränzchen." (© picture-alliance / akg-images) |
The Saxons left behind a few more coffee-related legacies. Blümchenkaffee, a German word to describe the much loathed weak coffee served to save money or when the supply ran low, is one. The literal translation is “flower coffee” which refers to the fact that while drinking a cup of weak coffee, one can even see the flowers painted at the bottom of the cup. The other, is the coffee filter. This was invented by Melitta Bentz of Dresden in 1908, when she poked holes in a bottom of a pot, covered it with blotting paper, and added coffee grinds and boiling water. This method became extremely popular at the next trade fair in Leipzig.
Tea Culture of Northern Germany
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| This modern-day tea service includes a timer to achieve the perfect steeping of the tea. (© picture-alliance/ dpa/dpaweb ) |
Today, a quarter of the tea imported in Germany is consumed in the sparsely populated East Friesland region in the state of Niedersachsen, where the per capita rate of consumption is on par with that of England. The tea time traditions – including the delectable cakes and cookies – which became en vogue in the 19th century still have many followers in this part of the country, where it is known as the East Friesland tea culture.
According to tradition, a piece of rock sugar is place at the bottom of the tea cup, which will crack when hot tea is added. Then a spoonful of rich, sweet cream is added to the side of the cup, which creates a little “cloud” in the tea. Stirring is strictly forbidden, as it is said that the unstirred cup allows one to taste all three elements of the tea.
© Germany.info





