Sacher is the most well-known dessert of the Viennesse cuisine since the 19th century and also a cake with mythical stories surrounding it's original recipe. Chefs at Budapest bake it in many ways.
We Love Budapest: Years of tradition, professionality and home-grown peach guarentees the memorable dessert - not to mention the homemade whipped cream. Their version is the "classical" Sacher, which everybody tried .
Eastern European Restaurant · Budapest XVIII. kerülete · 49 tips and reviews
We Love Budapest: Sacher cake here comes with a homemade peach jam-fueled version, and you can also taste fifty-five percent Belgian chocolate and the cinnamon with hints of cacao.
We Love Budapest: Művész's Sachertorte is served with vanilla sauce instead of whipped cream and balances between French and Viennese traditions: seventy percent chocolate mousse, marzipan and only hints of pearl jam.
Paulay Ede u. 17. (Káldy Gyula u.), Budapest, Budapest
Dessert Shop · Budapest VI. kerülete · 43 tips and reviews
We Love Budapest: Here Sacher is baked with fifty-three percent chocolate mousse, Normandian butter, crowned with crispy candy (fermentated cacao beans, a little bit of dried appricot and twenty-four carat gold fume).
We Love Budapest: They used to experiment with the well-known dessert, but the regulars kept asking for the "original" version - which means sponge cake with walnut and cacao powder and the famous pearl jam of Gönc.
We Love Budapest: Sacher here means: not too sweet, not to bitter, a perfect choice if you are taking the first steps on the chocolate-brown brick road.
We Love Budapest: Sacher: chocolate sponge with marzipan, filled with homemade apricot jam, encased in Valrhona chocolate frosting. After you've tried it, it can easily happen that every other Sacher will taste worse.
We Love Budapest: Their Sachertorte comes with two layers of peach jam, fifty-eight percent plain chocolate and a cinnamon-y flavor. The current owner, Szamos Miklós told us, they prefer the original, drier version.