If you thought that German chocolate cake originated in Bavaria or Brandenburg, you're not alone. Many people are under the mistaken assumption that German chocolate cake is named after the country -- ...
It may surprise you to learn that German Chocolate Cake is not actually German. (But don’t worry, it’s still very much chocolate and still very much cake.) And it’s also very Texan. Pecans aren’t ...
While researching on the Internet, I found this interesting tidbit about German chocolate cake. According to a piece in Saveur magazine, "This decadent triple-layer dessert takes its name from ...
German chocolate cake looks pretty good for 50 -- the combination of tangy-sweet layers and nutty custard is as irresistible as it was when the recipe was first published in a Texas newspaper back in ...
German chocolate cake looks pretty good for 50 -- the combination of tangy-sweet layers and nutty custard is as irresistible as it was when the recipe was first published in a Texas newspaper back in ...
DID YOU KNOW German chocolate cake isn’t German? Mrs. George Clay’s original recipe, published by The Dallas Morning News in 1957, called for Baker’s German’s sweet chocolate, a baking chocolate ...
If you eat German chocolate cake, you might be under the impression that you’re eating a regional delicacy. What you’re actually eating is the remnants of a famously popular chocolate recipe, a brand ...
Chocolate cake comes in all shapes and sizes, and with all manner of frostings, fillings, and flourishes. Plain and simple, with swooped and swirled frosting, marbled or molten, any chocolate cake ...
It may surprise you to learn that German Chocolate Cake is not actually German. (But don’t worry, it’s still very much chocolate and still very much cake.) And it’s also very Texan. Pecans aren’t ...