GoogObits: Glory to Bundt in the Highest (H. David Dalquist, 86, Bundt Pan’s Inventor, Dies)

Here’s a classic GoogObits fave. Today we learn that last week we lived in a world that included the inventor of the Bundt pan, and now we don’t.

H. David Dalquist, 86, Bundt Pan’s Inventor, Dies
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

EDINA, Minn., Jan. 5 (AP) – H. David Dalquist, creator of the aluminum Bundt pan, died on Sunday at his home here. He was 86.

Bundt_1The cause was heart failure, his family said.

Mr. Dalquist founded Nordic Ware, which has sold more than 50 million Bundt pans.

He designed the pan in 1950 at the request of members of the Minneapolis chapter of Hadassah, who sought to recreate cakes baked in Europe but wanted a pan made of modern materials. Mr. Dalquist created a new shape based on a German original, adding regular folds to make it easier to cut the cake.

The women from the society called the pans “bund pans” because “bund” is German for an organization or group of people. Mr. Dalquist added a “t” and trademarked the name.

For years, the company sold few such pans. Then in 1966, a Texas woman won second place in the Pillsbury Bake-Off for her Tunnel of Fudge Cake, made in a Bundt pan. Suddenly, bakers across the country wanted their own Tunnel of Fudge cakes.

Mr. Dalquist founded Nordic Ware after returning from duty in the Navy in World War II. He graduated from the University of Minnesota with a degree in chemical engineering.

He is survived by his wife, Dorothy Margerite Staugaard Dalquist; a son, David, of Minnetonka, Minn.; three daughters, Corrine Lynch of Eden Prairie, Minn., Linda Jeffrey of Medina, Minn., and Susan Brust of Dellwood, Minn; and 12 grandchildren.

Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company


Posted

in

by