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Schimeck
10 months ago

Who invented it is not known.

For the first time, Gottlieb Siegmund Corvinus’s “Women’s Room-Lexicon” from 1715 was apparently named as pancakes and pancakes.

https://diglib.hab.de/drucke/ae-12/start.htm

PascalBrown
10 months ago

At ubs is the bear tea.

PascalBrown
10 months ago
Reply to  LTBJann

But these are clearly bear tits

spanferkel14
4 months ago
Reply to  PascalBrown

Yeah, these are bear teas. Bear teats are not Berliner/Krapfen/Pfannkuchen.

PascalBrown
10 months ago

You call her right. And I answered your question.

iF3lix
10 months ago

The oldest sources of writing testify “pancake”

Honeysuckle18
10 months ago

In the Franconian they are called “Faschingskrapfen” – in the original only the Hiffenmark belongs pure…;)

Whatelse23
10 months ago

In Austria Krapfen and in Germany Berlin

Kugelflitz
10 months ago
Reply to  Whatelse23

No, they’ve always been Berlin pancakes.

The abbreviation Berliner is rather modern, compared with the origins. Someone posted a link here.

nobodyathome
10 months ago

They were invented by Count Krapfen and bear his name

krispinchen
10 months ago

Berliner.

Kugelflitz
10 months ago
Reply to  krispinchen

Nope. Someone posted a link here that explains it wonderfully.