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Selasa, 03 Juli 2018

Battenberg Cake | Mother's Day Cakes | Tesco Real Food
src: realfood.tesco.com

Battenberg or Battenburg is a light sponge cake with the pieces covered in jam. The cake is covered in marzipan and, when cut in cross section, displays a distinctive two-by-two check pattern alternately coloured pink and yellow.

The large checkered patterns on emergency vehicles in the UK are officially referred to as Battenburg markings because of their resemblance to the cake.


Video Battenberg cake



Recipe

The cake is made by baking a yellow and a pink sponge cake separately, and then cutting and combining the pieces in a chequered pattern. The cake is held together by apricot jam and covered with marzipan.


Maps Battenberg cake



Origins

While the cake originates in England, its exact origins are unclear, with early recipes also using the alternative names "Domino Cake" (recipe by Agnes Bertha Marshall, 1898), "Neapolitan Roll" (recipe by Robert Wells, 1898), or "Church Window Cake".

The cake was purportedly named in honour of the marriage of Princess Victoria, a granddaughter of Queen Victoria, to Prince Louis of Battenberg in 1884. The name refers to the town of Battenberg, Hesse in central Germany and is the seat of the aristocratic family which had deceased in the early middle ages and whose title had been transferred to Countess Julia Hauke (no "von", as it had been a Russian title) in 1852, on behalf of her marriage to Prince Alexander of Hesse and by Rhine; then first Countess, afterwards Princess of Battenberg, known in Britain since 1917 as Mountbatten.

According to The Oxford Companion to Food, the name "Battenberg cake" first appeared in print in 1903. However, a "Battenburg cake" appeared in: Frederick Vine, Saleable Shop Goods for Counter-Tray and Window ... (London, England: Office of the Baker and Confectioner, 1898).


Battenberg Cake - The Great Canadian Baking Show
src: www.cbc.ca


American variation

In the United States, there is a related confection called a checkerboard cake named because, as with a Battenberg cake, when it is sliced open it resembles the board for the game draughts, known in the U.S. as "checkers", which is played on a "checkerboard". A typical checkerboard cake is one that alternates between vanilla and chocolate flavoured sponge cake and has a very rich chocolate buttercream icing. Unlike the British Battenberg, it does not typically use marzipan and utilizes a special springform pan to get the desired effect.


Playing with Flour: Battenberg cake
src: 3.bp.blogspot.com


See also

  • List of foods named after people

Battenberg cake - YouTube
src: i.ytimg.com


References


Source of article : Wikipedia