The made-in-Minnesota Bundt pan and the Taste section have enjoyed a long, fruitful relationship.
The earliest Bundt recipe to appear in Taste was published on Nov. 24, 1969, nine weeks after the section's debut. It was part of an interview with Elsa Rosborough, a representative from Butter-Nut Coffee (fun fact: "Midwesterners who brag about their strong, black coffee might be surprised to learn that coffee companies ship their weakest blends to this part of the country," reads the story). The article included recipes for upside-down coffee cakes; one of them, "Sour Cream Somersault," called for chopped pecans, a box of yellow cake mix, cinnamon, sour cream and a Bundt pan.
In the intervening years, dozens and dozens — and dozens — of Bundt cake recipes followed: "Mrs. Lyndon Johnson's Famous Lemon Pound Cake." "Date Beer Cake." "Painted Peach Cake."
Very few of them embraced chocolate. At least until Valentine's Day in 1988, when Taste published a revised version of the Tunnel of Fudge cake.
At the time, this baking juggernaut was probably the country's most famous cake. It also boasted deep local roots. The recipe came out of the 1966 Pillsbury Bake-Off, back when American culinary trends were shaped by the Minneapolis-based company's closely scrutinized cooking contests.
Contestant Ella Helfrich of Houston found baking inspiration from three sources: the pecan tree in her backyard, a box of Pillsbury's Two Layer Double-Dutch Fudge Buttercream Frosting mix and what was then a kitchenware novelty, a fluted and scalloped aluminum tube pan produced by Nordic Ware in St. Louis Park.
Curiously, Helfrich's cake took second place that year; the winner was Golden Gate Snack Bread, which requires processed cheese spread and dry onion soup mix and hasn't exactly endured as the decades have passed. Meanwhile, Helfrich pocketed $5,000 (that's roughly $39,000 in 2019 dollars) and lasting fame because her recipe went viral, a pre-internet sensation that also kicked off a blazing demand for what was then the relatively obscure Bundt pan.
(Nordic Ware founder H. David Dalquist started manufacturing the pans in 1950, based on a request from a member of the Minneapolis chapter of Hadassah, who wanted to replicate the deep, heavy cakes pans of her native Germany. By the way, bund is German for association, and Dalquist added the "t").