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Christmas cake

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Christmas cake
A Christmas cake
TypeFruitcake

Christmas cake is a type of cake, often fruitcake,[1] served at Christmas time in many countries.[2]

British and Commonwealth variations

A neatly decorated Christmas cake
White Christmas cake

Christmas cake is an English tradition that began as plum porridge.[3] A traditional English Christmas Cake is made with rich, moist currants, sultanas (golden raisins) and raisins which have been soaked in rum. If a Christmas cake is covered in icing, it is quite common for it to be decorated – models of houses, of fir trees or of Father Christmas may be in the array of decorations.

A Scottish specialty is the traditional Christmas cake, the "Whisky Dundee". As the name implies, the eponymous cake originated in Dundee, and is made with Scotch whisky. It is a light and crumbly cake, and light on fruit and candied peel—only currants, raisins, sultanas and cherries.[4] There is also the Scottish black bun, of a similar recipe using whisky and often caraway seeds, eaten on Hogmanay[5]

Aside from candied cherries, some Christmas cake recipes call for angelica for green color.[5][6]

Coins were also occasionally added to Christmas cakes as well as Christmas puddings as good luck touch pieces. The usual choices were silver 3d piece, or sixpences, sometimes wrapped in greaseproof paper packages.

In Yorkshire, Christmas cake, as with other types of fruit cake, can be eaten with cheese, such as Wensleydale.

A cake that may also be served at Christmas time in the United Kingdom, in addition to the traditional Christmas cake, is the cake known as a "Yule Log, or chocolate log". This is a Swiss roll that is coated in chocolate, resembling a log.

The Christmas cake largely displaced the previously popular Twelfth-night cake during the Victorian era.

In other countries

Some cakes listed below do not contain fruit. For example, the Bûche de Noël does not contain any fruit; it is not a fruitcake.[7]

In the United States, some people give fruitcakes as gifts at Christmas time, but they are not called Christmas cakes.[8] In Canada, however, the same cake is instead called "Christmas cake," at least among the English-speaking majority[citation needed].

In India, Christmas cakes are traditionally a fruit cake with many variants. Allahabadi cake is famous for its rich taste and texture. Many smaller and more traditional Christian bakeries add alcohol, usually rum, in the cake. [9]

In Sri Lanka, Christmas cakes use treacle instead of cane sugar and include spices like nutmeg, cinnamon and black pepper.[10]

Japanese style Christmas cakes in a display case at Nijiya Market

In Japan, Christmas cake is traditionally eaten on Christmas Eve. The cake is simply a sponge cake, frosted with whipped cream, often decorated with strawberries, and usually topped with Christmas chocolates or other seasonal fruits, and a Santa Claus decoration. Christmas cakes of this style were originally released by Fujiya, and was popularized when they began sales at Ginza, the central commercial district in Tokyo.[11] This was during the time when Japan was going through massive waves of Westernization, particularly by the upper elite class. Members of the upper class, who had a strong penchant for Western cultures in general, enjoyed Western style desserts as a delicacy. Thus, being a Western style dessert, Christmas cakes were associated with the idea of Western modernity and social status.[12] Therefore, it was a major hit when the Christmas cakes were commercialized and became more affordable to the general public. Different shapes and styles of Christmas cakes are released across the countless numbers of confectionery stores in the country; the cakes are no longer tied down to the traditional form of round white cakes with strawberries and Santa Claus on top.[11] The Christmas cakes today are symbolized as a ritual of Christmas celebration; specifically, the act of sharing the cake with family or friends.[12][13]

In the Philippines, Christmas cakes are bright rich yellow pound cakes with macerated nuts or fruitcakes of the British fashion. Both are soaked in copious amounts of brandy or rum mixed with a simple syrup of palm sugar and water. Traditionally, civet musk is added, but rosewater or orange flower water is more common now, as civet musk has become very expensive. These liquor-laden cakes can usually stay fresh for many months provided they are handled properly.

In Germany, Stollen, a traditional German fruitcake, is popular. During the Christmas season, it's also called Weihnachtsstollen or Christstollen.

In Italy, Panettone, a sweet sourdough bread with a distinct cupola shape, is traditionally eaten at Christmas. It contains raisins and candied citrus fruit and is prepared meticulously over several days. Pandoro is a typically a Veronese product. Is traditionally shaped like a frustum with an eight-pointed star section.[14]

In France, in Belgium, in Switzerland, in French Canada, in Luxembourg and in Lebanon, a Bûche de Noël (Yule Log cake) is the traditional Christmas cake. They are light sponge cakes covered with a layer of butter cream flavored with chocolate, coffee, Grand Marnier ... Then rolled, covered with another layer of butter cream which is streaked and sprinkled with powdered sugar to simulate a log of wood covered with snow. The Yule Log cakes are often garnished with Christmas-themed sugar or plastic decorations (Christmas tree, Santa, Reindeer, Holly leaves,...). Its origins comes from the large wooden log called Yule Log that was burned in the hearth for several days at Christmas time since at least the Middle Ages throughout Europe and a French pastry chef to represent in the form of dessert in the nineteenth century.

In Cyprus, it is served on Christmas Day. It is the first treat the locals serve to their guests. Cypriot Christmas cake is much like the UK equivalent.

Japanese term

Christmas is a very busy secular holiday for patisseries in Japan, and Japanese Christmas cakes are created with a wide variety of flavors, ingredients and colors.[15]

In Japan, women had traditionally been expected to marry at a young age,[16] and those who were unmarried after the age of 25 were metaphorically referred to as Christmas cakes (クリスマスケーキ) in reference to items which are still unsold after the 25th.[17] The term first became popular during the 1980s[18] but has since become less common[19] because Japanese women today can remain unmarried with somewhat less stigmatization.[20]

See also

References

  1. ^ This is a British definition: https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/Christmas%20cake)
  2. ^ "definition of Christmas Cake". The Free Dictionary.
  3. ^ "History of Christmas Cakes", English Tea Store
  4. ^ "Dundee Recipe Is Another Standby for the Holidays". The Evening Independent. St. Petersburg, FL. 13 November 1936. p. 13. Retrieved 19 November 2011.
  5. ^ a b Alcock, Joan P. (1991). Walker, Harlan (ed.). The Festival of Christmas. Prospect Books. p. 39. ISBN 0-907-32546-7. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  6. ^ Craig, Elizabeth (1965). What's cooking in Scotland. Oliver and Boyd. p. 119.
  7. ^ https://www.allrecipes.com/recipe/17345/buche-de-noel/
  8. ^ Robert Sietsema (November 20, 2002). "A Short History of Fruitcake". The Village Voice.
  9. ^ "Cakewalk in Allahabad - The Times of India". The Times of India. December 15, 2013.
  10. ^ "How Sri Lanka Was Influenced By Being a British Colony". Culture Trip. March 10, 2018.
  11. ^ a b Lee, Diana. "Eating Christmas Cake is a Japanese Tradition". Uniorb. Archived from the original on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 13 December 2015.
  12. ^ a b Konagaya, Hideyo (2001). "The Christmas Cake: A Japanese Tradition of American Prosperity". The Journal of Popular Culture. 34 (4): 121–136. doi:10.1111/j.0022-3840.2001.3404_121.x.
  13. ^ Alison Bruzek (16 Dec 2014). "Japan's Beloved Christmas Cake Isn't About Christmas At All". The Salt.
  14. ^ Martin, Rachael. "The most mouthwatering Christmas cakes from around Italy", The Local (Italy), December 6, 2018
  15. ^ Japanese Christmas cake “inspired by a fascinating woman” SoraNews24, 30 October 2020
  16. ^ Orenstein, Peggy (July 1, 2001), "Parasites in Prêt-à-Porter", The New York Times
  17. ^ Wiseman, Paul (June 2, 2004), "No sex please — we're Japanese", USA TODAY, retrieved January 3, 2013, Better educated, more widely traveled and raised in more affluence than their mothers, young women no longer feel bound by the Japanese tradition that says a woman unmarried after age 25 is like a Christmas cake on Dec. 26 — stale.
  18. ^ Naoko Takemaru (2010), Women in the Language and Society of Japan: The Linguistic Roots of Bias (book), McFarland, p. 158, ISBN 9780786456109, retrieved January 3, 2013
  19. ^ Watanabe, Teresa (January 6, 1992), "In Japan, a 'Goat Man' or No Man : Women are gaining more clout in relationships. As they become more independent, they demand a gentle yet strong, supportive and high-achieving spouse.", Los Angeles Times, retrieved January 3, 2013, Women are said to be gaining new clout in the realm of romance. They are marrying later, or not at all. They are making their own persnickety demands on potential mates. The best-known demands on their list are called the "three highs": high salary ($35,000 or more), high education (a four-year university degree) and a height of not less than 5 feet, 7 inches.
  20. ^ Tanaka, Yukiko (1995), Contemporary Portraits of Japanese Women (book), p. 24, ISBN 9780275950675, retrieved January 3, 2013, The social stigma previously attached to the unmarried is slowly on its way out as the number of women who stay single, as well as the number of divorcees, has increased.