A
Berliner Pfannkuchen (known as a
Berliner Ballen or simply
Berliner outside of
Berlin) is a predominantly
German and Central European
doughnut made from sweet
yeast dough fried in fat or oil, with a
marmalade or
jam filling and usually
icing,
powdered sugar or conventional
sugar on top. They are also sometimes available with a
chocolate,
champagne,
custard,
mocha, or
advocaat filling, or with no filling at all. The filling is injected using a large syringe after cooking.
The terminology used to refer to this delicacy differs in various areas of Germany. While most areas call it
Berliner (Ballen), residents of
Berlin,
Brandenburg and
Saxony know them as
Pfannkuchen, which in the rest of Germany generally means
pancakes. In parts of southern and central Germany as well as in much of
Austria, they're called
Krapfen; in
Hesse they're referred to as
Kreppel, or, in
Palatinate,
Fastnachtsküchelchen (literally: "carnival cakes"). The name
Bismarck, after the German Chancellor of the second half of the nineteenth century,
Otto von Bismarck, has been used alternately for it. In other areas of Austria, they're known as
crullers; in Italy, the name is
Krafen. In
Slovenia, it's
krof, in
Croatia,
Bosnia, and
Serbia Krafne. In
Poland they're known as
pączki. All of these are essentially identical.
In English-speaking countries Berliner are usually known as
doughnuts and are usually filled with
jam. However, in
South Australia Berliner is the more usual term and often have cut in half sideways to apply the filling, rather than injecting it. In the
United States, whether filled with jam or custard, they're more commonly known as Bismarcks than Berliners; when made in a rectangular shape, they're sometimes known as Long Johns. In the U.S., the jam-filled ones are often called jelly doughnuts, while the custard-filled variety usually also feature
chocolate icing and are sometimes called
Bavarian cream or Boston cream doughnuts (the latter name from its resemblance to
Boston cream pie). The Boston cream doughnut has been designated the official state doughnut of
Massachusetts.
(External Link
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Berliners are traditionally eaten to celebrate on
New Year's Eve (
Silvester) as well as the
carnival holidays (
Shrove Tuesday). A common
practical joke is to secretly fill some Berliners with
mustard instead of jam and serve them together with regular Berliners without telling anyone.
In
Portugal, berliners are slightly bigger than their german counterparts. They are known as
"bolas de Berlim" and the filling is always a yellow cream called
"creme pasteleiro". The filling is inserted after a half length cut and is always visible. Regular sugar is used to sprinkle it. They can be found in almost every pastry shop in the country.
In popular culture
The term Berliner referring to a jelly doughnut entered the consciousness of many non-Germans after an urban legend spread about then-
President of the United States John F. Kennedy's famous
1963 "
Ich bin ein Berliner" speech in
West Berlin.
External results
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