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Author Topic: A thought on German Chocolate Cake
wieczorek
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Okay...German Chocolate Cake. I was just thinking about it and I wondered if "german chocolate" refers to "cake" or if "german" refers to "chocolate cake". Is the name meant to describe cake consisting of German chocolate or chocolate cake traditionally made by Germans? Do the Germans really call it German chocolate cake or just chocolate cake? Do the Germans call our chocolate cake American chocolate cake? Hmmm...
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Javert Hugo
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I want some chocolate cake.
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wieczorek
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German or American??? Is there really a difference?
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Javert Hugo
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Not German. Coconuts are nasty.
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rivka
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*makes a note: kat does not appreciate the true lusciousness of coconut*
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wieczorek
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I don't mind shredded coconut, but when you have to cut it open yourself, it's a different story.
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Dan_raven
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Since I have seen German Chocolate Ice Cream and German Chocolate Donuts, I am going to say that it means the type of Cake, made with Chocolate, but done with coconut and other mixings as is prevelant either in Germany, or by German immigrants to the US.

Really, I am going to say, "Who Cares".

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The Rabbit
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I've spent extended periods in southern and central German and have toured through most of the country and have never seen anything resembling "German Chocolate Cake". This doesn't mean it doesn't exist in some region of Germany, but it is hardly wide spread.
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wieczorek
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[ROFL]
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wieczorek
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I must've posted just a moment after Rabbit, so I didn't see your post. I was really " [ROFL] "ing at the previous post. I"m going to look up the origin of german chocolate cake now [Big Grin] < hey< my keyboard"s stuck on caps lock< but only for the punctuation>>>
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The Rabbit
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The origin of German's Chocolate Cake.

quote:
German cooks are famed for using extravagant ingredients and combining the whole into a rich dining experience, so it seemed to fit that this recipe must have come from Germany. And yet, it didn't — the cake took its name from an American with the last name of "German."

In 1852, Sam German developed a sweet baking bar for Baker's Chocolate Co. The product was named in honor of him: "Baker's German's Sweet Chocolate." In most recipes and products today, the apostrophe and the "s" have been dropped, fueling the assumption that the chocolate's origins are German.

The first published recipe for German's chocolate cake recipe showed up in a Dallas newspaper in 1957 and came from a Texas homemaker. The resulting spike in German's Sweet Chocolate sales put General Foods (which then owned Baker's Chocolate) on alert; the company quickly sent copies of the recipe and photos of the cake to newspapers across the nation.

Everywhere the recipe was published, food editors were swamped with requests for information on where to buy the chocolate. In a year, sales jumped 73%. Readers who missed the recipe asked that it be reprinted. In no time at all, German Chocolate Cake was on most every table.

It continues to be favorite dessert even forty years later. No wonder. All that rich, gooey sweetness ain't hard to fall in love with.

Which would imply that the "German" refers to the chocolate not to cake.

[ January 02, 2004, 04:41 PM: Message edited by: The Rabbit ]

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