Have your Black Forest cake and eat it

Published Oct 21, 2015

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Todtnauberg, Germany - Nothing says Black Forest like cuckoo clocks, hats with red woollen pompoms, ham – and gateau. The dark sponge cake, cream, cherry and schnapps combo celebrates its 100th birthday this year. Yet, it was not even created in the region.

“Making Black Forest gateau is my daily business,” says Freddy Boch, who owns the Hotel Engel in Todtnauberg, near Freiburg, in the southern Black Forest region of Germany. He does not need a recipe. He makes several of the cakes each day. It’s all in his head. A shot of kirsch schnapps creates the dessert’s special flavour.

“Black Forest gateau is our region’s most famous export,” says Christopher Krull, chief executive of the Black Forest Tourism Association in Freiburg. “And it is the most famous and most popular gateau in Germany,” he adds.

The high-calorie dessert is among the most ordered sweets in cafes, restaurants and mountain huts. Its name is inseparable from the Black Forest region. It’s known in South Africa, Australia and Asia. Only Vienna’s Sacher cake enjoys similar stardom.

The gateau was invented 100 years ago. According to the official story, it was created by baker Josef Keller (1887-1981), who first decided to combine cream, cherries and schnapps in a cake.

Keller, who had been born in the Swabian Riedlingen on the River Danube, was working at the Cafe Ahrend in Bad Godesberg, near Bonn, where he first served the dessert in 1915.

Hence, the cafe is considered the birthplace of the Black Forest gateau. It still exists, although it’s now called Cafe Agner.

Then Keller moved to Radolfzell on Lake Constance and opened his own cafe, where the gateau once again became a popular favourite.

From there, it travelled around the world.

One of Keller’s trainees took the original recipe, which is now kept at a pastry shop in Triberg in the Black Forest region.

However, the locals are not too bothered by the Swabian pastry chef who reportedly created the Black Forest speciality in the Rhineland. Things are not that clear, they say.

Thus, the Swabian town of Tuebingen equally claims to have invented the classic gateau – however, only in 1930 and, therefore, 15 years after its “birthday” in Bad Godesberg.

The idea of serving preserved cherries with cream and sometimes with a shot of schnapps has been around in the Black Forest for a while. In dispute is who brought in the confection.

While the cake itself is old, it’s unlikely to go out of fashion any time soon. On the contrary, more people are eating it now than ever before.

“We benefit from a trend towards regional and unique foodstuffs,” says the 46-year-old restaurateur and hotel owner Boch who has made the gateau his signature dessert, among others, through to the largest cherry cake in the world.

“It is important that it is technically well executed,” he says.

The cake’s recipe has not changed in 100 years.

Nutrition experts might worry about its high calorie count. However, the gateau also contains regional and natural ingredients, says pastry chef Franz-Josef Koszinowsky.

The cherries are local and the schnapps is distilled locally from Black Forest fruit.

“For a long time we have taken the cherry gateau for granted; today it takes centre stage,” says Boch.

Every two years there is a cherry gateau festival in Todtnauberg. The next one will take place in April 2016 and will be organised by Boch.

Boch and other local pastry chefs also teach tourists and locals in courses and seminars how to turn cherries, cream and cherry schnapps into the delicious dessert.

As the gateau is not trademark protected, anyone anywhere in the world can make one and change things around too.

Five years ago, a baker from the Black Forest region developed a new version from the original recipe – this time in a can.

dpa

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