Patience solidified: Baumkuchen, the German layered 'tree cake'
The traditional German-layered winter cake "Baumkuchen" is usually served glazed with chocolate. (Shutterstock Photo)

The traditional German cake Baumkuchen stands out with its resemblance to a tree's growth rings, making it perfect for the holidays. Here's a bit on its origins and how you can make your own at home



While this cake may be internationally known as a German "tree cake," its roots reach far back in history. This German dessert pantheon is usually seen around Christmas and winter holiday season, but it is also popular for weddings due to its ring shape. The simplistic taste of its ingredients also makes it great for office parties, as it was last year for us. Even though COVID-19 prohibits such gatherings this year, you can always bake your own at home.

History

Baumkuchen can be seen in many countries throughout Europe. But it's also a hugely popular dessert in Japan, which makes for a rather interesting story.

We can trace one of the very first written recipes for this amazing layered cake back to 1581, the roots for this cake are said to go back to Ancient Greece.

There are some myths that this cake came about by people poking sticks into the dough and rotating them over an open fire as you would do with your "wurst." As the dough would dry quickly and be pretty thin, they’d do that over and over again to make a much thicker cake. In Ancient Greece, this type of cake was said to be a symbol of fertility because it looked like a phallus.

The Japanese make many variations of Baumkuchen, including green matcha-infused ones (pictured). (Shutterstock Photo)

Baumkuchen around the world

Just as language is a living, growing and changing entity, so are recipes. While some German cities claim the cake as their own, there are quite a few variations out there, including in other countries.

In Poland, this cake is known as "senkacz" and is sometimes called "beggar’s cake" because thieves stealing eggs would make this cake to solidify the eggs and make them easier to transport.

The Hungarian version of the cake is known as "kurtoskalacs" and is made from a different kind of (yeast) dough which is wrapped around the spit rather than brushed on. Before it's baked, the cake is covered in sugar, and layers of butter are brushed on during baking. The Czech version is similar to the Hungarian but adds walnuts into the mix.

Weirdly enough, the cake is popular in Japan thanks to German confectioner Karl Joseph Wilhelm Juchheim who was in China during World War I and went to Japan with his wife when the war ended. They presented and sold the cake at a German exhibition in Hiroshima in 1919 and eventually, it became popular enough for them to open a shop in Yokohama. But due to an earthquake in 1923, the shop was destroyed, forcing them to move to Kobe. The couple stayed there until the end of World War II. Mrs. Juchheim returned a few years later to help a Japanese firm open a chain of bakeries under the juccheim name and spread it all over the country. That very chain is still active in Japan to this day.

"Kurtoskalacs," the Hungarian take on Baumkuchen, at a street food stall at a Christmas market in Budapest. (Shutterstock Photo)

What is exactly Baumkuchen?

It's rich history aside, Baumkuchen is delightfully rich and contrary to stereotypical German pragmatism, is an impractical cake. It is made by brushing on the dough onto a spit, quite like kokoreç or a horizontal döner, which is constantly rotated. Each layer added turns a slightly brown color before the next layer is applied. Once the desired amount of layers is achieved, which is usually 15 to 20 layers, they are cut into smaller sizes, making for a log-like piece. The cake is covered in a thin layer of chocolate and then is ready for consumption.

But as it so happens, during the making pieces can fall off. There is no solution, except for being extremely skilled. When accidents do happen, these pieces are not thrown away but covered in chocolate as well and sold as "Baumkuchenspitzen" (tree cake points or pointed tree cakes).

Miniature versions of Baumkuchen when it is cut into pieces are referred to as "spitzen." (Shutterstock Photo)

The recipe

While the majority of people do not have a spit to make this cake at home, many do have an oven with the option to heat it from above. If you have the patience and quite a few eggs lying around, you can try making this cake yourself at home. I like to multitask while doing this one, an eye on my crochet needles and the other on the cake. Or you could even have a movie on while making it; just make sure it is not too captivating as you might be too late by the time the smells of burnt cake reach you.

Ingredients