22 Delicious Hungarian Pastries and Cakes (2024)

From caramel-topped Dobos torte to vanilla-laced krémes, you'll find these classics in Budapest's pastry shops.

Hungarian pastries reflect many influences: some hark back to the Middle Ages, others have Ottoman Turkish origins, still others show French inspirations that seeped in through neighboring Austria. Starting in the mid-19th century, Hungary's pastry industry came into its own and unleashed a range of tasty creations.

The year 1884 was especially memorable: Two bakers, Emil Gerbeaud and Vilmos Ruszwurm, each took over a pastry shop that went on to transform Budapest's confectionery and still exists today: Café Gerbeaud and Ruszwurm. This was also when József C. Dobos invented the famous Dobos torte.

Similar to Vienna, Budapest enjoys a thriving pastry culture: pastry shops (cukrászda) are peppered across the city, with each neighborhood boasting at least a couple. Some people visit them to socialize – there's also coffee, tea, and savory biscuits – others just pop in to pick up cakes for the Sunday family meal.

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#1 - Pogácsa: Dating back to medieval Hungary, these soft sconelike snacks are among the most traditional and widespread across the country. They come in different sizes and varieties: topped with melted cheese, studded with pork cracklings (töpörtyűs), filled with cottage cheese (túrós), for example. Both bakeries and pastry shops sell pogácsa, but those often can’t hold a candle to a fresh homemade version.

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#2 - Strudel (rétes): Strudels evolved from the baklava to which Hungarians were exposed during the country’s occupation by Ottoman Turkey in the 16-17th centuries. Later, the strudels spread across the Habsburg Empire. What makes them unique in Hungary is the sheer variety of fillings, both sweet and savory. Have you had your fair share of apple strudels in Vienna? No problem, try one with cottage cheese (túró), cabbage, or poppy seeds in Budapest.

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22 Delicious Hungarian Pastries and Cakes (8)

#3 - Bejgli: During Christmas, few dining tables in Hungary are absent these sweet rolls filled with finely ground and sweetened poppy seeds and walnuts. People usually place them on a plate side by side because there's a folk belief that poppy seeds bring prosperity and walnuts keep trouble away. Bejgli is popular across countries in Central Europe.

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22 Delicious Hungarian Pastries and Cakes (10)

#4 - Pozsonyi kifli: A variation of the bejgli, above. During Austria-Hungary, bakers in Bratislava (Pozsony) were so skilled at making of these filled buns that people from as far as Budapest would order deliveries. The ones containing poppy seeds come in a crescent shape, whereas those with a walnut filling resemble a letter C. Unlike the bejgli, the pozsonyi kifli is available throughout the year.

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#5 - Chimney cake (kürtőskalács): A sugar-coated yeast dough wrapped around a baking spit and roasted over fire, the Transylvanian chimney cake flaunts a caramelized crust and a chewy, soft interior. Kürtőskalács was traditionally made by the Transylvanian aristocracy for celebrations such as birthdays, weddings, carnivals, New Year’s Day, and baby showers. Today, still, kürtőskalács is a symbol of Transylvania, but kürtőskalács vendors exist also in Budapest and make all sorts of new-wave varieties.

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#6 - Donut (fánk): You might know it as krapfen, Berliner, bombolone, sufganiyah, or donut – fánk is the Hungarian version of this centuries-old deep-fried pastry traditionally eaten in the days of Carnival. Besides fruit jam, a fánk might also come filled with chocolate or vanilla custard these days. Most bakeries and grocery stores in Hungary serve them year-round.

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22 Delicious Hungarian Pastries and Cakes (18)

#7 - Dobos torte: It was confectioner József C. Dobos who in 1884 created this sponge cake layered with chocolate buttercream. The Dobos torte's signature feature is the shiny, brittle caramel topping. After pathetic attempts by competitors to replicate his concoction, Dobos made the recipe public and the cake has remained a staple of pastry shops in countries of the former Habsburg Monarchy.

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#8 - Esterházy torte: The Esterházy torte consists of vanilla and rum-spiked buttercream layers that are sandwiched between ground walnuts (or almonds) and encased in white fondant inscribed with chocolate. It’s very popular in both Budapest and Vienna and almost all pastry shops serve it. Various origin stories exist but the Esterházy torte likely first appeared in Budapest pastry shops in the late 19th century and was named after one of the wealthiest persons in Hungary, the gourmand-aristocrat Prince Pál Antal Esterházy (1786-1866).

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#9 - Krémes: Similar to a Napoleon pastry, krémes is a cherished custard slice across Central Europe with each country flaunting a slightly different version. In Hungary, apart from regular krémes – vanilla custard enclosed by puff pastry – there's also "francia krémes," which comes with an extra layer of whipped cream and a caramel glaze on top.

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#10 - Minyon: Local confectioner Henrik Kugler introduced in Hungary the petit fours – those dainty, bite-sized, delicate French cakes – in the 19th century. Here, they grew in size and one of them, what came to be known as the minyon, became especially cherished. The color of the icing indicates the flavor of the buttercream filling: brown for coffee, dark for chocolate. But pink is most popular, sporting a rum-soaked sponge cake inside.

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#11 - Flódni: This eye-catching cake features layers of plum jam, grated apples slickened with honey, sweetened ground walnuts, and ground poppy seeds. The flódni originated among Hungary'sJewish community whose members traditionally made it for the Purim holiday, but today it's widely available across Budapest pastry shops (recipe).

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22 Delicious Hungarian Pastries and Cakes (30)

#12 - Punch torte: A classic of pastry shops across Budapest and Vienna, the punch torte's signature feature is the striking pink icing on top. A layer of apricot preserves and raisins are sandwiched between rows of rum-infused sponge cakes.

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#13 - Linzer & Isler cookies: Both of these fruit jam-filled cookies made their way to Hungary from neighboring Austria with a few twists and turns along the way. Typically, people enjoy them with the afternoon tea. The main difference between the two is the chocolate glaze that blankets the Isler.

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22 Delicious Hungarian Pastries and Cakes (36)

#14 - Rigó Jancsi: This dark-hued sponge cake is named after the Hungarian Gypsy violinist whose story scandalized 19th-century Europe: Rigó seduced Princess Chimay, an American-Belgian socialite, who ran away with him, leaving behind her husband and two children. Their romance didn't last very long, unlike the chocolate cream-filled cake Rigó inspired, which became a classic, though fewer and fewer Budapest pastry shops serve it these days.

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22 Delicious Hungarian Pastries and Cakes (38)

#15 - Indiáner: These puffy black-and-white cakes were all the rage a hundred years ago in pastry shops across Budapest and Vienna. Blanketed in chocolate and split by a layer of whipped cream, Indiáners are delicious but a hassle to make. Auguszt pastry shop is among the few places in Budapest that still serves them.

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#16 - Gesztenyszív: How about a post-meal dessert that won't knock you out for the rest of the day? These chestnut paste treats coated in crackly chocolate are light and winsome. Molded in the shape of a heart, they're sold in almost all Budapest pastry shops.

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#17 - Tepertős-szilvás papucs: Prune jam and pork cracklings? In the same pastry? What may sound like a bizarre combination turns out to produce a delicious sweet-savory snack (these two ingredients are widespread and adored in Hungary). People usually make tepertős-szilvás papucs at home but a few pastry shops will also have it.

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#18 - Somlói galuska: Despite dating back only to the 1950s, the somlói galuska has become a beloved dessert dish across Hungary. It consists of a rum-infused sponge cake soaked in vanilla custard, chocolate cream, and whipped cream, with a sprinkling of walnuts and raisins on top. Apart from pastry shops, restaurants also serve it.

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22 Delicious Hungarian Pastries and Cakes (46)

#19 - Gerbeaud slice: Created at the historicCafé Gerbeaud, this bite-sized cake is a standard of most pastry shops in Hungary: Under a chocolate glaze lie layers of a sweet dough alternating with a filling of ground walnuts and apricot jam.

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22 Delicious Hungarian Pastries and Cakes (48)

#20 - Rákóczi túrós: Even most Hungarians mistakenly believe that this meringue and apricot jam-topped túró cake is named after the country's famous prince and revolutionary leader, Ferenc II Rákóczi, but the truth is more banal: the moniker is a hat-tip to baker János Rákóczi, who invented the cake in the 1930s.

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#21 - Kossuth kifli: Typically made at home, these half-moon shaped treats were supposedly a favorite of Lajos Kossuth, a national hero and leader of the 1848 Hungarian revolution against Habsburg Austria. It's a simple and delicious sponge cake, sprinkled with bits of browned walnuts or almonds. Some people prepare it annually on March 15th, in memory of Kossuth and the launch of the revolution.

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22 Delicious Hungarian Pastries and Cakes (52)

#22 - Marzipan: Similar to Italy, Germany, and Spain, Hungary enjoys a thriving marzipan culture with Budapest pastry shops serving colorful figures of all shapes and sizes (marzipan is made from a mixture of almond paste and sugar). There's even a dedicated Marzipan Museum in Szentendre, a small town outside Budapest.

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22 Delicious Hungarian Pastries and Cakes (2024)
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