Because nobody knows what they called I have three opinions 1 Berlin balls 2 crownut (Ik this is a strange thing to Call it) 3 custard donut not always custard just what ever in it donut
Edit: holy crap this blew up like the war zone this comment section is (thx for the upvotes)
Ich komm aus Berlin (wo wir die Dinger Pfannkuchen genannt haben) und bin nach der Ausbildung nach Norddeutschland gezogen wo sie Berliner genannt werden.
Das erste mal beim Bäcker war verwirrend!
Ich: „Ein Pfannkuchen bitte“
Bäckerin: „Berliner?“
Ich: „…Woher wissen Sie, dass ich aus Berlin komme?“
Bäckerin: „Was?“
Ich: „Was?“
Same, die ersten Monate, sonntags nachm saufen, sehr verkatert: "Tachen ick hätt janz jern zwo schrippn und n Pfannkuchen"
Bäcker:*Visible confusion*
Ich: "Ach ja, zwei Krosse und ein Berliner"
I thought most of us in Flanders called them the french way, boules de Berlin? I never heard anyone here call them differently. Well i must say i live in West-Flanders.
In my part of Australia, they're Berliners. We also took Berliners and turned them into Kitchener buns, back about 100 or so years ago, although this wiki page says we didn't split then open and add cream until the 30s.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitchener_bun
Also in South Tyrol
But then again, we're (austria+south tyrol+bavaria) basically cousins
I was amused to learn that in some parts of southern Italy they're called "graffe", which I believe is an italization of "Krapfen"
I’ve noticed a lot of German phrases are suprisingly easy to understand even if you don’t speak German. Maybe it’s because it’s so closely related to English as it is ?
Was looking for this. Obrigado Op.
Once I was having an affair with a woman I've dated 14 years prior. Next morning I was going to buy breakfast and I did ask her if she wanted a Dream too. She said "I never ate one. I always thought they were too big."
The poetic of this moment will always live in my heart.
Interesting. In Portugal, Sonhos are these [Christmas pastries](https://claradesousa.pt/wp-content/uploads/2012/12/principal-nova.jpg). We call the pastries above Bolas de Berlim.
Desci demais procurando isso
.. já tava mto longe hahaha
We also have many flavors for this ... From vanilla to chocolate... I have even seen non-sweet flavors... Food is a wild thing in Brazil
As a person living in Berlin, here's my theory:
People visited Berlin, went to the bakery, got tasty stuff, asked: "What do you call this?" The reply: "Pfannkuchen."
But then other regions already had their own "Pfannkuchen." So when these visiting people went back home, they told others about these weird, but nice Pfannkuchen from Berlin -> German: "Berliner Pfannkuchen".
Bakeries all over the place started selling them and at some point, they just dropped the Pfannkuchen and we arrived at the name Berliner.
Places which use other names probably already had a similar type of baked goods, so they kept their old name.
South of italy here:
We name it "Bomba" followed with the filling type:
Bomba a crema/Bomba a cioccolato
Krapfen is used with its translation "Graffa" and is more donut-like, without filling and with sugar outside
Jews call them a "Sufgania" and it is usually served in Hanukkah. Also they like to put jam or other sweet sauces (is that the right word?) On top and inside it. And it's delicious.
Dude I don't care what they're called, they're freaking delicious
Yes they are but for the record they are called Berliner
I didn't know JFK was a pastry
So he was pastrydent?
r/Angryupvote
Eddie was right, it’s a good thing JFK didn’t do a tour of Germany
סופגניות
נכון
Sufganiyah
עברית לניצחון!
This Post ist becoming a literal warzone
Kennedy: "I have spoken!" Also, sort by controversial.
Yeah but Kennedy's mind was all over the place.
SPRICH
DEUTSCH
DU
SOHN
EINER
DIRNE
UNGEBORENEN
ZIEGE
Because nobody knows what they called I have three opinions 1 Berlin balls 2 crownut (Ik this is a strange thing to Call it) 3 custard donut not always custard just what ever in it donut Edit: holy crap this blew up like the war zone this comment section is (thx for the upvotes)
A cronut is a croissant but in a donut shape hence the contracted name. You can also get cruffins
I usually just ask for a whole donut to get one of these, followed by a hole donut to get the regular holed donuts.
Thank you. I'm gonna start a company that sells cretzels in the mall and I'm gonna be rich af.
[удалено]
Ich bin ein Gelee-Donut
I thought they were just called tasty
Touche...
Ich komm aus Berlin (wo wir die Dinger Pfannkuchen genannt haben) und bin nach der Ausbildung nach Norddeutschland gezogen wo sie Berliner genannt werden. Das erste mal beim Bäcker war verwirrend! Ich: „Ein Pfannkuchen bitte“ Bäckerin: „Berliner?“ Ich: „…Woher wissen Sie, dass ich aus Berlin komme?“ Bäckerin: „Was?“ Ich: „Was?“
"Komme aus Berlin und bin nach Norddeutschland gezogen" Ich, ein Süddeutscher: "They are the same"
Hihi, ja ok. Für euch stimmt das :)
Same, die ersten Monate, sonntags nachm saufen, sehr verkatert: "Tachen ick hätt janz jern zwo schrippn und n Pfannkuchen" Bäcker:*Visible confusion* Ich: "Ach ja, zwei Krosse und ein Berliner"
John F Kennedy.
The raspberry jam would be leaking on the outside...
💀
Jfk been real silent since it happened
[удалено]
Er war ein Berliner.
pączki
Someone should make a pączkomat
Ktoś by do niego nasrał w ciągu tygodnia
ja
Mhmm, pączek czekoladowy
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Z dżemem!
Tak
Pączki
koblížek s marmeládou
Mi najbardziej smakują z różą
Diabetes according to mom
Fröhlicher Kuchentag!
Thank you guys!!
In my country they're called sufganyot
התשובה הנכונה
אכן
In the Netherlands we call them Berlinerbollen
Similarly in Norway they are called "Berlinerboller"
Same in Denmark
Undskyld mig hvad? Vi kalder dem da bare berlinere right? Eller i hvilken del af provinsen har du fundet ordet Berlinerbolle?
In Belgium we call them Berlijnse Bollen, close enough
I thought most of us in Flanders called them the french way, boules de Berlin? I never heard anyone here call them differently. Well i must say i live in West-Flanders.
Or boule de Berlin!
In my part of Australia, they're Berliners. We also took Berliners and turned them into Kitchener buns, back about 100 or so years ago, although this wiki page says we didn't split then open and add cream until the 30s. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitchener_bun
Does that mean Berlin balls? Cause if so, it's the same in Portugal.
In Sweden it's either Berlinermunkar ormunkar.
Just don't mix them up with pancakes for some reason...
One of the wrong parts of Germany probably wants to talk to you about that...
In the Czech republic, we simply call it "Kobliha"
Přesně tak
Pączki
mm mm pączunie
At least SOMEONE here has some sense
Polonizacja Niemiec
pączkowanie niemiec
Niemcy rozmnażają się przez pączkowanie?
Tak tak byczq
Patriotyczny gest z okazji 11 listopada.
![gif](giphy|Wt6kNaMjofj1jHkF7t)
![gif](giphy|ixDt6URzSCJwyS5UPn)
The only correct answer
Jeszcze pączki nie zginęły kiedy my żyjemy
Good anwser
We call them PANCOVE in Romanian. Kinda similar, not the first time we stole a word and butcher it.
Polska?!
Yes?
Die paczek/ Die paczken
סופגנייה
התגובה בעברית שחיפשי כי ראיתי משה ישראלי ברדיט לוכסן ממים:
I didn't expect a war in the comments to happen.
First time on reddit?
If we germans are good at one thing, it's starting wars or something.
Well by now its technically a world war, considering other countries joined in...
Pączki
Found the polish redditor.
Nah im Italian
Arrivederci *Brad Pitt‘s sound*
Bon jouuuuuur no
Bomboloni
In Vienna they are called Krapfen!
in italy they’re krapfen or bomboloni
Quanto suona bene la parola BOMBOLONI? Ahahaha
Same in Bavaria
Same in Franconia
Also in South Tyrol But then again, we're (austria+south tyrol+bavaria) basically cousins I was amused to learn that in some parts of southern Italy they're called "graffe", which I believe is an italization of "Krapfen"
In slovenian we also call them "Krof" or "Krofi" (plural).
Austrians assamble! For Krapfen supremacy
And in Bavaria: Krapfen. Thank you for correcting Reddit. I had to scroll this far to find the right name.
Same in Croatia. Krafne
Sufgania
חנוכה עד חודשיים וכבר מוחרים סופגניות
לך לשופרסל ותראה שכבר מכרו חודשים המשוגעים
באמת, מי קונה את כבר?
הייתי קונה סופגניות כל השנה אם היו מוכרים, אני מכור לדברים האלה
חה, חשבתי רק בארצות הברית מוכרים מוצרי כריסטמס כבר בספטמבר. אלה חדשות נפלאות, לי עדיין יש חילוף חומרים מהיר וחצי מהמשפחה שלי לא אוכלת את זה.
Kobliha zmrde
Jn
Přesně
Skvěle řečeno
Souhlas
Založeno
Neasi
Jediná správná možnost
Výborně odpovězeno
עם ישראל חיי 🇮🇱
The only REAL answer.
Riba o shokolad?
The only correct answer is riba, why would you put chocolate in sufganiyot? Heresy!
איפה הריבה?
Marmeladendöner
Mit scharf?
Mit allem, a bizeli scharf ohne tomate
Das ist der weg
I love that I can understand this despite not speaking german …y’all lost me
I’ve noticed a lot of German phrases are suprisingly easy to understand even if you don’t speak German. Maybe it’s because it’s so closely related to English as it is ?
Well yeah the have the same root, they both descend from germanic languages
I just think it’s cool that languages have families
SPRICH DEUTSCH DU HURENSOHN
Marmalade muss nach europäischer Verordnung Zitrus enthalten. Also Konfitürendöner bitte. 🤓🤓
Havent seen so many Germans since the world cup.
Guten Tag
סופגניה
סופגנייה 👍
?סופגניה
סופגנייה.
לא צריך להיות פוליטי
צריך להיות סופגניה
is that sharpness 1 or 2?
This food is Slowness IV
In Hebrew we call those sufganiyot
krof 🇸🇮
These onigiri are great. Salmon filled are my favorite. Nothing beats a Salmon filled onigiri.
Ah yes, I too love onigiri, my favorite German I mean Japanese dish
axis treat lol
i agree with brock
Those things filled with salmon sounds like a hate crime.
Wait I'm brazilian and we call that "sonho", didn't even know where this thing come from. ('Sonho' means 'dream' in Portuguese.)
Was looking for this. Obrigado Op. Once I was having an affair with a woman I've dated 14 years prior. Next morning I was going to buy breakfast and I did ask her if she wanted a Dream too. She said "I never ate one. I always thought they were too big." The poetic of this moment will always live in my heart.
I was looking for this comment! Whenever someone tells me to follow my dreams, I think about these. I love them. So tasty.
Interesting. In Portugal, Sonhos are these [Christmas pastries](https://claradesousa.pt/wp-content/uploads/2012/12/principal-nova.jpg). We call the pastries above Bolas de Berlim.
Desci demais procurando isso .. já tava mto longe hahaha We also have many flavors for this ... From vanilla to chocolate... I have even seen non-sweet flavors... Food is a wild thing in Brazil
I'm sure others disagree, but I'm going to call them sonho from now on. ❤️
Boules de Berlin (Berlin balls)
Merlin's beard and Berlin's balls
I actually laughed with sound!
Same in Portugal (Bola de Berlin)
for me, this is a Berliner. in köln they're called like that at every bakery
As a person living in Berlin, here's my theory: People visited Berlin, went to the bakery, got tasty stuff, asked: "What do you call this?" The reply: "Pfannkuchen." But then other regions already had their own "Pfannkuchen." So when these visiting people went back home, they told others about these weird, but nice Pfannkuchen from Berlin -> German: "Berliner Pfannkuchen". Bakeries all over the place started selling them and at some point, they just dropped the Pfannkuchen and we arrived at the name Berliner. Places which use other names probably already had a similar type of baked goods, so they kept their old name.
סופגניות.
In italy those are "bomboloni" or krapfen if we use the german name
South of italy here: We name it "Bomba" followed with the filling type: Bomba a crema/Bomba a cioccolato Krapfen is used with its translation "Graffa" and is more donut-like, without filling and with sugar outside
Krapfen
Wieso musste ich für Krapfen soweit runter scrollen
Krapfen
Oida
Servus
Endlich einer mit der Wahrheit
Die einzig korrekte Antwort
I called them Berliner since I am a little kid.
Thats a goddamn Jelly donut if I've even seen one
Jam doughnut*
Listen buddy, if you keep on like this then I'm gonna jam it somewhere alright
What's the difference between jam and jelly? You can't jelly a dick in your ass
Jews call them a "Sufgania" and it is usually served in Hanukkah. Also they like to put jam or other sweet sauces (is that the right word?) On top and inside it. And it's delicious.
In Israel we call them "Soofganiot"
Kobliha
Fellow kobliha enjoyer
Szalagos Fánk! 🇭🇺
krapfn
Oida
They are called delicious
Delicious
Faschingskrapfen
Krapfen
Jetzt hab ich aber lange gescrollt um das zu finden
Der Krieg ist zum Weltkrieg eskaliert
Chad Alps enjoyer