Here's how you can make your own Black Forest cake and eat it too
If there are two things German that Pakistanis are most familiar with, one has to be the character of Janoo German from a well-loved Urdu comedy drama Chhoti Si Dunya; and the other, the ubiquitous yet delicious Black Forest cake.
As a youngster, living in Karachi, I remember the opening day of Sasha’s bakery. My parents’ flat was opposite the bakery, and five-year-old me walked out of the bakery with marzipan and a black forest pastry, loving the cherries, whipped cream and chocolate cake combo.
Soon, the trendier desserts and evolving taste buds took over, and the Black Forest cake migrated to the back burner of my cake desires.
But recent travels managed to transport the sublime German import, now adopted and owned as Pakistani, to the forefront of my dessert dreams. And here I am, finding myself falling in love with the old faithful, yet again.
My curiosity to find out why and how it came to Pakistan has stayed, and has remained somewhat unanswered!
What is Black Forest Cake?
History tells us that the cake took birth in the 16th century in the Black Forest Region located in the state of Baden-Wurttemberg. The name Schwarzwald (German for Black Forest) refers to darkened mystique inferred from the romantic German concept of Waldeinsamkeit, or forest-loneliness.
It was during this time that chocolate was introduced in cakes (chocolate had just been welcomed in Spanish royal courts, and was slowly spreading to the rest of Europe).
This region was, and is, famous for its sour cherries and Kirsch or Kirschwasser (a double distilled, clear cherry brandy made from the sour Morello cherry), and a combination of these cherries, crème, brandy and chocolate gave us this wonderful chocolate confection named after this brandy.