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Berry Pavlova
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Wedding cakes
The Custom Cake Creations feature European recipes using the freshest ingredients, such as Butter, Whole Eggs, pure Vanilla, Cocoa and Chocolates. The basic cakes are white cake, yellow cake or chocolate cake. Four layers with fillings such as French Butter cream or enhanced with pure jams and preserves. We also create fabulously light Chocolate Mousse or Lemon Mousse fillings, Mocca, and Key Lime  fillings. We further enhance cakes with the addition of fresh-roasted nuts such as Hazelnut, Walnut, Pecan, Pistachio or Cashew. The final custom cake can be as unusual or simple as you desire, but be assured it will be a taste your guests will remember.
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walnut and apricot pastry   
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Ice Cream history
Precursors of ice cream An ice-cream store inDamascus, Syria The Persians drank syrups cooled with snow called (“fruit ice” in Arabic, thus the derivation of sherbet, sorbet and sorbetto). In 400 BC, Persians invented a special chilled pudding-like dish, made of rose water and vermicelli which was served to royalty during summers. The ice was mixed with saffron, fruits, and various other flavours. The treat, widely made in Iran today, is called "faloodeh", and is made from starch (usually wheat), spun in a sieve-like machine which produces threads or drops of the batter, which are boiled in water. The mix is then frozen, and mixed with rose water and lemons, before serving. Ancient Persians mastered the technique of storing ice inside giant naturally-cooled refrigerators known as yakhchals. These structures kept ice brought in from the winter, or from nearby mountains, well into the summer. They worked by using tall windcatchers that kept the sub-level storage space at frigid temperatures. Ancient civilizations have served ice for cold foods for thousands of years. The BBC reports that a frozen mixture of milk and rice was used in China around 200 BC. TheRoman Emperor Nero (37–68) had ice brought from the mountains and combined with fruit toppings. These were some early chilled delicacies. Ice-cream dessert Ice cream was the favorite dessert for the Caliphs of Baghdad. Arabswere the first to use milk as a major ingredient in its production, sweeten the ice cream with sugar rather than fruit juices, as well as perfect ways for its commercial production. As early as the 10th century, ice cream was widespread amongst many of the Arab world's major cities, such as Baghdad, Damascus and Cairo. Their version of ice cream was produced from milk or cream and often some yoghurt similar to Ancient Greekrecipes, flavoured with rosewater as well as dried fruits and nuts. It is believed that this was based on older Ancient Arab, Mesopotamian, Greek or Roman recipes, which were probably the first and precursors to Persian faloodeh. In 62 AD, the Roman emperor Nero sent slaves to the Apennine mountains to collect snow to be flavoured with honey and nuts. Maguelonne Toussaint-Samat asserts in her History of Food, "the Chinese may be credited with inventing a device to make sorbets and ice cream. They poured a mixture of snow and saltpetre over the exteriors of containers filled with syrup, for, in the same way as salt raises the boiling-point of water, it lowers the freezing-point to below zero. (Toussaint does not provide historical documentation for this.) Some fake stories said that in the age of Emperor Yingzong, Song Dynasty (960-1279) of China, a poem named " (literally Ode to the ice cheese) was written by the poet Yang Wanli. Actually, this poem was named (literally Ode to the pastry, is a kind of food like pastry in the western world) and has nothing to do with ice cream. There also is a saying that, in the Yuan Dynasty,Kublai Khan enjoyed ice cream and kept it a royal secret until Marco Polo visited China and took the technique of making ice cream to Italy. But some people argued that Chinese didn't drink milk at that time and Italians had been making some food like ice cream before Marco Polo returned to Italy. Additionally, no ice cream was recorded in any recipes in China in the past. Japanese green tea ice cream with anko sauce In the sixteenth century, the Mughal emperors used relays of horsemen to bring ice from the Hindu Kush to Delhi, where it was used in fruit sorbets. When Italian duchess Catherine de' Medici married the duc d’Orléans in 1533, she is said to have brought with her Italian chefs who had recipes for flavoured ices or sorbets, and introduced them in France. One hundred years later, Charles I of England was supposedly so impressed by the "frozen snow", he offered his own ice cream maker a lifetimepension in return for keeping the formula secret, so ice cream could be a royal prerogative.  There is, however, no historical evidence to support these legends, which first appeared during the 19th century. The first recipe for flavoured ices in French appears in 1674, in Nicholas Lemery’s Recueil de curiositéz rares et nouvelles de plus admirables effets de la nature. Recipes for sorbettisaw publication in the 1694 edition of Antonio Latini's Lo Scalco alla Moderna (The Modern Steward). Recipes for flavoured ices begin to appear in François Massialot'sNouvelle Instruction pour les Confitures, les Liqueurs, et les Fruits starting with the 1692 edition. Massialot's recipes result in a coarse, pebbly texture. However, Latini claims that the results of his recipes should have the fine consistency of sugar and snow.                                                                                            Source: Wikipedia
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Coffee History
The history of coffee goes at least as far back as the thirteenth century, though coffee's origin remains unclear. It has been believed that Ethiopia anestry of today's Oromo people were the first to have discovered and recognized the energizing effect of the coffee bean plant. However no direct evidence has been found indicating where in Africa coffee grew or who among the natives might have used it as a stimulant or even known about it, earlier than the 17th century. The story of Kaldi, the 9th-century Ethiopian goatherd who discovered coffee, did not appear in writing until 1671 and is probably apocryphal. From Ethiopia, coffee was said to have spread to Egypt and Yemen. The earliest credible evidence of either coffee drinking or knowledge of the coffee tree appears in the middle of the fifteenth century, in the Sufi monasteries of Yemen. It was here in Arabia that coffee beans were first roasted and brewed, in a similar way to how it is now prepared. By the 16th century, it had reached the rest of the Middle East, Persia, Turkey, and northern Africa. Coffee then spread to Italy, and to the rest of Europe, to Indonesia, and to the Americas.                                                                                                               Source: Wikipedia
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raspberry pavlova cake
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ham and vegetable salad
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fruits cake
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cheese and meat roll
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Potato bread
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russian cream cake
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caramel flan cake
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"Goose leg cake" or  Lúdláb torta
A római időkben november 11. a téli évnegyed kezdő napja volt, ekkor az új termésből és az újborból tartottak nagy lakomát. Általában ludat, vagyis a hadisten, Mars szent madarát fogyasztották, ami latinul „avis Martis” (Mars isten madara). Ebből lett népies szófejtéssel „Márton madara”.
https://hu.wikipedia.org/wiki/M%C3%A1rton-napi_n%C3%A9pszok%C3%A1sok
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Lily cake
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Seven layers cake or drummer cake
This rich cake is made by stacking 7 extra-thin layers of generous (or sponge cake) spread with chocolate butter cream. The top is covered with a hard caramel glaze. It was created by Hungarian confectioner József C. Dobos in 1884. Dobos torta was first introduced at the National General Exhibition of Budapest in 1885; Franz Joseph I and his Empress Elisabeth were among the first to taste it. Soon afterwords, it became a sensation around the world.
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Raspberry vanilla crumbs pastry
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chocolate cheese cake
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