Here it is Monday morning again although it's not quite a regular Monday morning. It's a day off for the employed and it is called Family Day. It doesn't make a lot of difference to those of us who are retired.
It was a lovely weekend filled with family and a lot of cake! One of the cakes was a traditional German cake called Bienenstich. It consists of layers with a wonderful cream filling. A picture from the 'net.
Bienenstich
Kuchen, a German delight, also known as Bee Sting Cake. Carmelized honey
almonds on top, cream filling with a yeast rise dough cake that is firm and not sweet, kind of like cream puff dough is a pastry but not sweet. ( I find the filling very sweet!) ( This cake was bought at a German cafe).
Some of the chocolate hearts that I made.
Recipe for Easy Fudge
2 1/2 to 3 cups of chocolate chips ( depending on how firm you want the fudge. I used 3 cups)
1 can of condensed milk
1 tsp vanilla ( I forgot to add it)
The directions are simple. Using parchment paper in your pan makes it easy to lift out once it has hardened.Add the chocolate chips, condensed milk, and vanilla extract to a microwave-safe bowl.
One change that I've made to the recipe is to sautee sliced apples in the pan before adding the egg/milk mixture. As it bakes it puffs up but like a souffle it will fall once out of the oven. We find it very tasty!!



Lots of lovely sweets.
ReplyDeleteWe have presidents day and like you being retired it's another day
Cathy
Thank you so much for sharing. I ❤️ chocolate.
ReplyDeleteWhen we visited Oregon, when my mother was still living, a favorite stop was the restaurant where i ordered a German Pancake, another name for Dutch baby. I ate a whole one by myself! Loved it. Served with a Marion berry compote.
ReplyDeleteLong ago in a small local newspaper I think it was, our family came across a recipe called Hootenanny. It was eggs, milk and a little flour mixed in a blender and baked in the oven with butter. It was so easy for the older children to mix up on their own when they needed a hearty snack.
ReplyDeleteAfter 10 or 15 years I discovered that this was a very simplified Dutch Baby. One daughter perfected her own version that was much larger and you wouldn't be able to mix it in a blender. A true Dutch Baby is very nice. I might make one this week ;-)
The German cake sounds divine! Cute hearts and thanks for sharing your fudge recipe.
ReplyDeleteBienenstich cake looks good.
ReplyDeleteEnjoy the week ahead.
All the best Jan
The fudge hearts look yummy. I just might have to make some. :)
ReplyDeleteI need to make a Dutch Baby. My husband would love it.
ReplyDeleteI have quite the sweet tooth lately -I could go for some of that cake or fudge. (:
ReplyDeleteA lovely post with some yummy Monday sweets, thanks for sharing. xxoo, Virginia
ReplyDeleteThe German cake looks delicious. So do the hearts and the popover. Anything sweet or remotely dessert like has my vote.
ReplyDeleteI would love to live near you and be able to drop in for a cup of tea and a sweet treat.
We drove out to a state park today and renewed our annual permit there. We had Zoey with us and took her for a walk by the lake there and thoroughly enjoyed our morning. It was 68F today. Tomorrow is supposed to be 76F. I don't know what is happening with winter this year. March will probably be awful but I sure hope not. We're thinking of going camping.
Blessings and hugs,
Betsy
I'd never come across Dutch babies, in spite of my mother being Dutch. Now for a recipe hunt!
ReplyDeleteI've been on the Nigella Lawson website; a Dutch baby is a Pennsylvania Dutch recipe, which also explains why one comment say she knows it as a German pancake. It does look good!
ReplyDeleteI LOVE Bee Sting Cake = Bienenstich ๐
ReplyDeleteOn Monday we had Rose-Monday = Rosenmontag ๐น
Family-day sounds very good, too ๐
Oh yum... now I need Chocolate! lol
ReplyDeletehugs
Donna
Ahhh, Bienenstich (Bee Sting Cake).
ReplyDeleteYesterday I had a slice from my favorite pastry shop... absolutely delicious with that wonderful filling and that crunchy almond-honey topping. And yes, it's the sweetest cake the pastry shop has, which is why I eat it so rarely.
And today we had Pfannkuchen (pancakes) – maybe you know them as Berliners (doughnuts) – here we call them Pfannkuchen, the round balls filled with jam and rolled in sugar... a must here for today's Carnival.
Hugs. Greetings from Germany/Saxony.
12" cast iron for crepes. I have a small crepe pan and I pour and twist the batter to cover the pan. How do you crepes GM? The pan would be heavy. Bee Sting cake is in the Mennonite Girls can cook cookbook, all of your deserts look so good.
ReplyDeleteI've had Beesting Cake before but didn't realize that it had a German name. Your heart shaped chocolate fudge turned out really nice. That's the same recipe that I use. We really enjoy Dutch Babies here at our house.
ReplyDeleteAll kinds of yummy at your house! That makes sounds really good. I have made Durch baby before and we really liked it.
ReplyDeleteGlad your idea of the chocolate hearts worked so well!
I do love Bienenstich Cake. The best I ever had was in Austria and the filling was mostly whipped cream and not too sweet. Lovely chocolates.
ReplyDeleteYum this post makes me want to get in the kitchen and rattle those pots and pans ❤️
ReplyDeleteI make an apple pancake that is put in the oven we really like it!
ReplyDelete