Forklore: Waffling wafers
A waffle is a wafer--historically speaking, that is. So is an ice cream cone.
The original wafer was the oblatum, the unleavened Communion wafer (unleavened because the bread at the Last Supper was a matzo). The idea of cooking oblata between sheets of metal to make them as thin as possible goes back at least 1,300 years; a wafer iron has been found at a 7th-century site in Carthage, Tunisia.
In the 13th century, bakers in France and the Netherlands started producing secular versions of oblata with a honeycomb pattern, probably so that there would be no confusion with consecrated wafers. The ice cream cone was originally this kind of wafer rolled into a cornet shape.
The honeycomb pattern proved so popular that the name oblata was largely replaced by wafel or wafer (in French, gaufre), a word meaning “honeycomb.” By the 16th century, the Belgians had developed the deep-dish version of the pattern, used with a leavened batter that we know as the waffle.
The tastiest development of the flat wafer is the Dutch stroopwafel, a large split wafer with a filling of butter and molasses. Unfortunately, true stroopwafels are all but impossible to taste in this country. They don’t have “shelf life” -- the wafers get soggy in a matter of days, and much of the fun is lost.
More to Read
Eat your way across L.A.
Get our weekly Tasting Notes newsletter for reviews, news and more.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.