Hyperleggera

Bernd Rosemeyer (October 14, 1909–∞)

Alles Gute zum Geburtstag, Herr Rosemeyer!

Our patron saint the fear­less Bernd Rose­meyer has turned one hun­dred last night, sac­ri­fic­ing 71 and count­ing years to the fastest high­way acci­dent in human his­tory. We baked him a cake.


Bernd Rosemeyer’s birthday cake

A silver-​blueberry cheese­cake, in fact—or should I say, in bad German, Alu-Silber-Käsekuchen?

Rose­meyer was younger than I am when he was flung at 270 miles per hour from his Auto Union Reko­rd­wa­gen on the Auto­bahn on that cold Jan­u­ary morn­ing. Pre­co­cious would be an understatement.

He was right up there in natural—strike that: com­pletely, abnor­mally supernatural—talent with the very fastest who pre­ceded and fol­lowed: Nuvolari, Fangio, Clark, Prost, Senna and Schu­macher. Quite a club, this, where mem­ber­ship means a 43% chance of a fatal crash at hyperspeed.

Bernd Rosemeyer with jacket and tie at a test drive on the Berlin Avus in April 1937. Photo: Audi AG

In death, Rose­meyer was said to be serene, having come to rest against a tree with no exter­nal signs of injury, quite a feat when you con­sider that he hit that tree at Mach 0.35.

Bernd Rosemeyer and Elly Beinhorn at their wedding on July 13, 1936. Photo: Herbert Hoffmann/Das Bundesarchiv

But let us not talk about death, talk instead about the life he lived, coast­ing through the evil years of an evil empire which idol­ized him for all the wrong rea­sons, coast­ing along fore­bod­ing race­tracks at sur­real speed yet find­ing time to marry his Elly who would go on to live to be a hun­dred years old.

Bernd Rose­meyer lived and died an explorer, a pusher of envelopes. In frag­ile cars employ­ing prin­ci­ples of physics barely under­stood or not at all, he raced, raced at speeds we no longer dare approach with­out coc­coons of safety.

Per­haps his Bernd Jr., who only had ten weeks to share with his father, might not agree with that approach. But then again, he might. There are people who race, on the Nürburgring, in the Drake Pas­sage, in outer space, they race.

The Bernd Rosemeyer Silver-Blueberry Cheesecake

Mix one pound of Philadel­phia cream cheese with 3.5 ounces of butter, six ounces of confectioner’s sugar and the zest of one lemon. Set aside.

Pre­heat oven to 300 °F. Mix ½ pound of blue­ber­ries, ½ pound of flour, two ounces of out­meal, six ounces of brown sugar, one pack of baking powder and half a tea­spoon each of salt and ground cin­na­mon. In a sep­a­rate bowl, beat two eggs and mix with one cup of plain yogurt, three table­spoons of apple juice and one table­spoon of lemon juice. Add egg mix­ture to flour mix­ture. Pour into but­tered spring­form cake pan. Bake for 35 min­utes. Remove from oven. Let cool.

When cake is cool, cut hor­i­zon­tally in two. Spread one half of cream cheese mix­ture on bottom half. Replace top half. Coat entire cake with other half of cream cheese mix­ture. Sprin­kle with metal­lic silver dec­o­ra­tive candy. Gar­nish with assorted pieces of alu­minum. Serve chilled.

Enjoy.

Bernd Rose­meyer lived a beau­ti­ful life. Wish him a happy birth­day, wher­ever he is.

Bernd Rosemeyer’s birthday cake served on a Krtek plate


Addi­tional pho­tog­ra­phy: Her­bert Hoffmann/Das Bun­de­sarchiv, Audi AG. Cheese­cake recipe: Lila Füge


Published on Thursday, October 15th, 2009

3 comments

By eFi:

KisVakond rules!

Posted on Friday, October 16th, 2009

Nagyon szép tortát sütöttetek!:)
You baked a beau­ti­ful cake! Thnx for the credit

Posted on Friday, October 16th, 2009

By baowah:

The dish is hyper­bad :)

have you seen my plate?
http://​gale​ria.​total​bike.​hu/​a​r​c​h​i​v​u​m​/​2​0​0​8​/​0​9​/​2​3​/​k​i​t​_​e​r​d​e​k​e​l​_​s​e​n​n​a​_​h​a​_​g​o​m​b​o​k​e​r​t​_​v​a​n​_​m​v​_​a​g​u​s​t​a​/​9​7​7​6​7​5​_​2​5​f​8​a​f​7​e​0​f​b​e​5​5​c​e​9​7​1​e​9​4​6​3​4​8​c​f​3​1​2​3​_​m​l.jpg
with trac­tor, lorry, engine, etc…

I find it in Imola Mostra Scam­bio.

Posted on Thursday, November 5th, 2009