Torte

Torte

:"Not to be confused with tort, a civil wrong at law."

A torte is a cake made with many eggs and usually ground nuts or even bread crumbs instead of or in addition to flour. [ [http://www.m-w.com/dictionary/torte] Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary Online accessed June 23, 2007 ] Tortes are Central European in origin. The word torte is derived from the German word "Torte" (pronounced|ˈtoʀtə), which was derived from the Italian word "torta" which was used to describe a round cake or bread. [ "Ibid."]

The most well-known of the typical tortes include the Austrian Sacher torte and Linzertorte and the many-layered Hungarian Dobos torte. But other well-known European confections are also tortes, such as the French Gateau St. Honore.

A element common to most tortes is sweet icing. (Exceptions include several French tortes, such as Gâteau Mercédès and Gâteau Alcazar.) When the cake is layered, a thick covering of icing is placed between the layers, but there is almost always icing on the tops and sides of the torte. A number of European tortes do not have layers.

In America, wedding cakes are sometimes called "tortes," and their creation has developed into quite a complicated technique of its own.Fact|date=June 2008

Well-known European tortes

* Gâteau St. Honoré
* Sacher torte
* Linzertorte
* Dobos torte
* Black Forest cake
* Simnel cake
* Gâteau Pithiviers
* Gâteau Mercédès
* Gâteau Alcazar
* Gâteau Progrès
* Tarta de Santiago
* Reform Torte
* Vasa's Torte

Wedding cakes

Wedding cakes can be quite ornate, some with gravity-defying designs. Some American wedding cake makers have made designs that are so elaborate that they can sometimes topple before they are served. Some torte makers even use power tools to assist them in their torte sculpting.Fact|date=February 2007 Elaborate tortes have dowel rods between each layer for support. Without these supporting dowels, the tortes would topple under their own weight. Other than the dowels, every part of a torte is edible, even the glassy-looking flowers which are made from molten sugar.

Wedding cakes can have multi-colored, or even multi-flavored icing or frosting. Icing is a basic mixture of whipped cream and sugar. Some torte makers add flavoring to their icing like strawberry, banana, cherry, chocolate, or even apple. They also add colors to their icing like yellow, red, blue, green, pink, etc.

The majority of the wedding cake's weight is the cake itself. The two most common cake flavors are chocolate, also known as devil's food cake, and vanilla.

Many tortes have decorations made of molten sugar attached to the torte. A different type of design is the sugar bubble, which usually acts as a centerpiece on the torte. It is made using almost the same process as glass blowing. A hollow rod is dipped into molten sugar and then spun slowly. The spinner then blows air through the hollow tube and into the sugar to create a bubble. When the bubble cools, it is placed on a cloth or pillow and the rod is tapped lightly to release the bubble.

References


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • torte — (n.) sweet cake, tart, 1748, from Ger. Torte; earlier sense of round cake, round bread (1550s) is from M.Fr. torte; both from L.L. torta flat cake, also round loaf of bread (Cf. It. torte, Sp. torta), probably related to TART (Cf. tart) (n.1);… …   Etymology dictionary

  • Torte — Torte, 1) 3–6 Zoll dickes od. hohes, rundes Gebäck, welches in einer irdenen, blechernen od. kupfernen Form (Tortenform Tortenpfanne) gebacken wird. Die gewöhnlichsten Arten sind: Brodtorte, wozu 10–16 Eidotter mit 1/2 Pfund Zucker eingerührt,… …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • Torte — Torte: Der Name des Feingebäcks wurde im 16. Jh. aus gleichbed. it. torta entlehnt, das u. a. mit entsprechend frz. tourte »Fleischtorte; Ölkuchen« und span. torta »Torte« auf spätlat. torta »rundes Brot, Brotgebäck« beruht. Die weitere Herkunft… …   Das Herkunftswörterbuch

  • Torte — (franz. tarte; ital. u. span. torta; v. lat. tortus, »gedreht«), ursprünglich ringförmiges Backwerk, jetzt: seiner platter Kuchen …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Torte — Sf std. (15. Jh.) Entlehnung. Zunächst im niederdeutsch niederländischen Bereich als tarte (im Einklang mit frz. tarte Obstkuchen ). Aus it. torta, ml. torta Gebäck , zu l. torquēre drehen . Vermutlich zunächst eine gedrehte (Ton )Scheibe, dann… …   Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen sprache

  • Torte — [Basiswortschatz (Rating 1 1500)] Auch: • Kuchen Bsp.: • Sie backte einen Kuchen für uns …   Deutsch Wörterbuch

  • torte — ► NOUN (pl. torten or tortes) ▪ a sweet cake or tart. ORIGIN German, from Latin torta round loaf, cake …   English terms dictionary

  • torte — [tôrt; ] Ger [ tō̂r′tə] n. pl. tortes or Ger. torten [tō̂r′tən] [tō̂r′tən] [Ger < It torta < LL(Ec), twisted bread: see TART2] a rich cake, variously made, as of eggs, finely chopped nuts, and crumbs or a little flour …   English World dictionary

  • torte — ⇒TORS, TORSE ou TORTE, adj. et subst. masc. I. Adjectif A. [En parlant d une matière souple] Qui est tordu; qui a été soumis à une torsion. Soie torse. Les fils sont de tors droit ou de tors gauche (...). Dans le fil tors gauche, les spirales… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Torte — Schwarzwälder Kirschtorte Eine Torte (von italienisch torta, aus dem spätlateinischen tōrta, „rundes Brot“, „Brotgebäck“) ist ein feiner, aus mehreren horizontalen Schichten bestehender Kuchen, der nach dem Backen des Teigs mit Creme und/oder… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

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