- Bundt cake
A Bundt cake is the name used for a
dessert cake cooked in a Bundt pan, whose identifying attribute is its ringed shape. It is pronounced "bunt", the "d" being silent. The Bundt pan (aregistered trademark ) was created in 1950 byH. David Dalquist , founder ofNordic Ware , at the request of members of theHadassah Society's chapter inMinneapolis, Minnesota . [cite web | url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A51960-2005Jan5.html | title=Obituaries: Bundt Pan Creator H. David Dalquist, 86 | publisher=Washington Post| format=HTML| accessdate=2006-11-12] They were interested in a pan that could be used to make bundkuchen (sometimes calledkugelhopf orGugelhupf ), a popular German and Austriancoffee cake . The old-world pans, with fluted and grooved sides, made of delicateceramic or heavycast iron , were difficult to use. He modified some existingScandinavia n pan designs and fashioned the pan out ofaluminum .The pan sold somewhat slowly until a Pillsbury-sponsored baking contest in 1966 saw a Bundt cake win second place. This prompted a scramble for the pans, causing them to become the most-sold pan in theUnited States soon after. Since introduction, more than 50 million Bundt pans have been sold by the Nordic Ware company.The women of the Hadassah Society called them "bund pans". The German word "bund" in "bundkuchen" originated from bundling or wrapping the cake's dough around the pan's center hole [Hermann O. Pfrengle, " [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A27813-2005Jan21.html Who Brought the Bundt Cake?] ", "The Washington Post", January 22, 2005, p. A15.] (in German the final "d" is pronounced like a "t"). Dalquist simply added the letter "t" to the end and trademarked it. Pillsbury licensed the name in 1970 for a line of cake mixes.
In early 2007 some of the original Bundt pans were taken into the Smithsonian Institute's collection. [cite web | url=http://www.startribune.com/535/story/1022295.html | title=Smithsonian gobbles up Bundt pan| publisher=Star Tribune | format=HTML | accessdate=2007-03-01]
National Bundt Pan day is November 15. [ [http://www.brownielocks.com/november.html November 2008 Monthly,Weekly,Daily,Bizarre,Silly,Crazy,Unknown Holiday Observances ] ]
References
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