birthday
Italy: Ciambellone

Ciambellone is an Italian version of the many Easter breads that occur across the continent, celebrating the cook's ability to have in the house (and eat!) the eggs, butter, sugar and other rich ingredients that are finally permitted again after the long Lenten fasting period. The bread is a sweet one, and heavy enough to be considered a cake.
The name ciambellone has over recent years come to mean almost any kind of ring cake, and appears in countless other forms containing chocolate and numerous other flavorings. But this is the most basic recipe.
When asked to select two of the most famous cakes in the country to send to the European Union's 50th birthday celebrations as the "national birthday cake", Italy chose the ciambellone as one of them.
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Happy 50th, EU! -- the 27 National "Birthday Cakes"

All through 2007, the member states of the European Union celebrated the 50th anniversary of the Treaty of Rome, the signing of which established the EU in its initial form as the EEC.
While the official EU birthday cake was cut in Malta, it was accompanied by a gathering of cakes representative of every member nation -- two cakes per country -- which were served to the heads of state when they met for the official birthday celebrations in Berlin. The official list of the cakes is here.
We're still working on featuring all the cakes here. Here are the ones that have been posted so far (underneath a link to the master list):
More to follow...
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Ireland: Auntie Florence's Orange Cake

This beautiful, simple and surprisingly elegant cake was contributed by Irish TV chef Darina Allen as one of Ireland's two "birthday cakes" for the festivities celebrating the 1957 signing of the Treaty of Rome, which established the European Union.
Oranges have been popular in Ireland for hundreds of years, initially (in the 1600's) as a faddish snack food, then as a favorite staple in desserts. For example, Dean (Jonathan) Swift's favorite dessert was "burnt oranges" -- oranges and white wine, caramelized under the grill with brown sugar and whiskey. Oranges appear in many Irish desserts, in both fresh and dried / candied forms -- but rarely as intensively as they do here.
It would probably be understandable if residents of the Republic of Ireland pause briefly to wonder whether the "orangeness" of the cake is a sly nod to our cousins up in the "Wee North".
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