Great Dessert Debate Whipped Up Again
Posted on: Tuesday, 19 July 2005, 12:00 CDT
SYDNEY, Australia - Australia and New Zealand's neighborly rivalry often erupts on the sports field, but it's being played out in an unusual location this week - the dinner table.
Just who did invent the pavlova, a baked calorie bomb made of egg whites and sugar topped with whipped cream and fresh fruit and named after a Russian-born ballerina? Was it an Australian or a New Zealander?
The great dessert debate is so vexed that a New Zealand university professor is studying the dish's origins.
Australians widely credit chef Bert Sachse with inventing the dish at the Esplanade Hotel in the Western Australian city of Perth in 1935 - although the exact date remains in doubt.
But Prof. Helen Leach, of the University of Otago, says she has uncovered New Zealand recipes for the meringue dish - bearing the name "Pavlova" dated 1929 and 1933.
Leach is mystified about the fuss that has erupted this week with media reports in Australia and New Zealand - saying she reported on the earlier finds last year.
"We've had a 1933 one in New Zealand for a long time, and we've found a 1929 one as well and that's where it stands," she said in a telephone interview Tuesday.
Media reports on the subject printed this week erupted after a member of her research team gave a talk in New Zealand on the cook who contributed the 1933 recipe, she added.
Leach was reluctant to be drawn on why the dispute has lasted so long.
"I would say it has something to do with a small country and a large country, but I'm not going to speculate any further," she said.
The top results delivered by a Google search of the word pavlova Tuesday were inconclusive, underscoring the uncertainty. Top of the Google list was a recipe for pavlova which called the dish "a traditional Australian dessert." In second place came "New Zealand Recipes - Pavlova."
Matthew Evans, restaurant critic for The Sydney Morning Herald, says it's unlikely a definitive answer about the pavlova's origins will ever be found.
"People have been doing meringue with cream for a long time, I don't think Australia or New Zealand were the first to think of doing that," he said in a telephone interview.
Evans says ultimately it's irrelevant.
"I think it's a great dish and we should be happy somebody invented it," he said.
Source: Associated Press/AP Online
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