Business & Tech

Fastnacht Day Meets Fat Tuesday

Fastnacht Day or Fat Tuesday is the last chance for sweet pastry before Lent begins.

Emmaus Bakery owner Rob Erdossy is tired. He started making fastnachts last night at 8 p.m. and was selling them by 7 a.m. this morning.

Erdossy will get some sleep this afternoon and then return to the bakery tonight to start all over again. In the process, he’ll make about 2,000 dozen, that’s 24,000, fastnachts for Fat Tuesday, better known as Fastnacht Day to the Pennsylvania Dutch.

A fastnacht is a doughnut made from potatoes. Traditionally, fastnachts were made as a way to empty the cupboard of lard, sugar and butter before Lent, when Christian families give up sweets and fats.

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For some, Fastnacht Day, or Fat Tuesday, is the last day to indulge in tasty pastry.

Tomorrow, of course, is officially Fastnacht Day, and starting at 5 a.m., every bit of shelf space will be stacked with freshly made fastnacts in the bakery at 415 Chestnut St. The shop is open until 6 p.m.

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Erdossy with his wife make five types of fastnachts: traditional or plain, powdered, sugared, cinnamon-sugared and glazed.

A dozen costs $12, $6.50 for a ½ dozen or, if you are thinking of swimsuit weather,  $1.25 for just one.

 Of course, even after Fat Tuesday, the Emmaus Bakery will still continue to produce its pastries. For St. Patrick’s Day, Erdossy said, he plans to make Irish soda bread, and when Easter rolls around, hot cross buns.


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