From Hungary's chimney cakes to Poland's oplatek (bread), there's much to see and eat
Agencies
Published25 Dec 2023, 02:34 PM IST
Bakers cut up a stollen after a parade of stollen bakers celebrating the Christstollen, a Christmas cake, in Dresden, Germany. (Photo by Matthias Rietschel, Reuters)
Kürtőskalács or chimney cakes are traditional Hungarian Christmas fare. They have a crisp sugar-coated exterior, soft interior and are shaped like cylindrical pipes. In this photo, chefs bake chimney cakes at one of Europe's most famous outdoor Christmas markets, the Advent Bazilika market in downtown Budapest, Hungary. In this photo, Laurent Andre, executive chef at the InterContinental hotel in Paris, prepares a cake named opera garni. It is a Christmas Yule log, inspired by the city's historic opera house the Palais Garnier. Bakers and audience celebrate a 1.9-ton Stollen cake during a parade to Germany's oldest Christmas market Striezelmarkt in Dresden, Germany.A worker prepares cakes inside a century-old traditional bakery ahead of Christmas celebrations in Kolkata. Piles of Christmas' baked unleavened bread sheets (oplatek) in a storage are ready for packing after production in a small parish farm's kitchen in Blonie, suburb of Tarnow, southern Poland. The sharing of oplatek is the most important part of the Polish Christmas Eve, which begins with the first twinkling of the stars in the dark winter sky.