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In Mainland China, a similar product also marketed as a Napoleon (拿破侖; Nápòlún, or more commonly, 法式千層酥) varies between regions and individual bakeries, but usually features a top and bottom layer of rough puff pastry, typically made with vegetable shortening rather than butter, and a sponge cake and artificial buttercream ...
Russian-style Napoleon cake A dessert made of puff pastry layered with pastry cream. Paskha: Tvorog (farmer's cheese) plus heavy cream, butter, sugar, vanilla, etc., usually molded in the form of a truncated pyramid. Traditional for Easter. Pryanik: A range of traditional sweet baked goods made from flour and honey. Pastila
Egg tart – Delicate pastry tart with a lightly sweet golden egg custard filling; [2] probably influenced by the Portuguese tart pastels de nata; Napoleon – Layers of puff pastry and creamy filling or jam; Swiss roll – Rolls made just like a Portuguese roll torta; the creamy layer may be sweetened cream, chocolate, pear, or lemon paste
The top is glazed in white (icing) and brown (chocolate) strips, and combed into a distinctive pattern. This cake is also known as a Napoleon. Mimosa cake: Italy: First created in Rieti in the 1950s, [25] the name comes from the small pieces of sponge cake scattered on the surface, which resemble mimosa flowers in shape. Misérable cake: Belgium
A Breton cake containing layers of butter and sugar folded in, similar in fashion to puff pastry albeit with fewer layers. The sugar caramelizes during baking. The name derives from the Breton words for cake (kouign) and butter (amann). Krempita: Balkans: A well-known dessert from the Balkans, specifically the former Yugoslavia. The dish is ...
Tompouce is difficult to eat. The cakes are usually served with tea, beer, or coffee, and in formal settings are eaten with pastry forks.But the hard biscuit-like layers, which squash the pastry cream when trying to cut a piece off, make this difficult and messy, inspiring the humorous article "Hoe eet je een tompoes?"
The recipe is credited to Harry Baker (1883–1974), a Californian insurance salesman turned caterer. Baker kept the recipe secret for 20 years until he sold it to General Mills, which spread the recipe through marketing materials in the 1940s and 1950s under the name "chiffon cake", and a set of 14 recipes and variations was released to the public in a Betty Crocker pamphlet published in 1948.
Kremówka Napoleonka with egg white cream. Napoleonka (Polish: [napɔlɛˈɔnka] ⓘ; colloquially kremówka (Polish: [krɛˈmufka] ⓘ), is a Polish type of cream pie.It is made of two layers of puff pastry, filled with whipped cream [1], crème pâtissière [2] (according to Polish gastronomy textbooks made from whole eggs [1]; some versions consist of melted butter [3] [4]) or just thick ...