History of Petits Fours: The Origin of These Luscious Little Layer Cakes

Matt Stelter
The Swiss Colony
Published in
5 min readAug 13, 2019

The history of petits fours goes back hundreds of years. Learn the origin of petits fours and why they make so much sense at today’s parties.

Incredible petits fours in chocolate fudge, red velvet, strawberry, vanilla, carrot spice, and lemon

Whenever there’s a special event — a birthday, a wedding, or any other reason to celebrate-a layer cake is usually not far away. Unfortunately, layered cakes can be somewhat labor-intensive…not to mention messy. Someone needs to cut the cake, at which point it ceases to be pretty. Some people want big pieces; others want small. Some don’t want frosting; others want only frosting. The rest gets thrown. Plates and forks are needed: either nice ones, which need to be washed, or disposable ones, which wind up in the trash. Then, of course, it’s not easy to walk around and mingle while eating cake.

Luckily, there is a better way-one that’s been around for 130 years or so-and it’s absolutely perfect for the retro revival of the Cocktail Age. Presenting the .

Assortment of petits fours mini cakes

What Is a Petit Four, Anyway?

The definition of petit four (plural: petits fours) is “a small teacake, variously frosted and decorated”. In case you were wondering, “petit four” is pronounced “puh-TEE FOOR” but is usually Americanized to sound like “pettifore.” In fact, many people searching for this delight on the Internet type in “pettifor cake” or “pettifor dessert”. As you can imagine, the petit four originated in France…but it has nothing to do with the number four. In French, means “oven.”

In the 19th century, there were no gas ovens. French bakers had huge brick or stone ovens that were usually coal fired. They took a long while to heat up, got really hot, and then took their time cooling off. There were no temperature controls, only two imaginary “settings.” When the fire was at its most intense it was called (“big oven”), used for roasting meats, crusty loaves of bread, cakes, and other main events. When the fire was dying out and there was still plenty of heat retained in the oven walls, this was called (“small oven”). This lower temperature was perfect for baking individual pastries and bite-sized cookies and appetizers, all of which came to be called petits fours.

There are several types of petits fours: petits fours salé (“salted,” or savory appetizers), petits fours sec (“dry” as in cookies and macarons), petits fours frais (“fresh,” referring to highly perishable items like éclairs and madeleines which must be eaten that day when kept at room temperature), and petits fours glacé (“glazed,” which are decorated miniature cakes covered in fondant, chocolate or white chocolate and decorated with royal icing). In America, these little cake bites, consisting of multiple layers of cake and buttercream, are what most people know as petits fours…and many people got to know them because of an Austrian immigrant named Horst Hart.

A cake stand displaying royal chocolate petits fours with curls of chocolate, some cut to show the layers

The Origin of Swiss Colony Petits Fours

In 1958, The Swiss Colony endeavored to expand its operations from the cheese-selling business it had established in Monroe, Wisconsin, more than 30 years earlier. The Swiss Colony Bakery was established with the recruitment of a team of meister konditors (master pastry chefs) from Austria. The first product they produced was a layered cake called a Dobosh Torte, adapted from the classic Austrian recipe to be more shippable (and, as it turns out, even richer in flavor).

One day in 1961, The Swiss Colony’s founder, Ray Kubly, was throwing a party. His wife, Marguerite (“Peg”), wanted a special bite-sized dessert (preferably a layered dessert) that would be easy for guests to pick up and eat as they mingled, and asked Horst Hart, one of the Austrian chefs, to come up with something.

Hart replied, “You want petits fours!” And he made hundreds of them for the party-all by hand. The guests loved them…and because they looked almost too good to eat, many people smuggled these little cakes home in napkins.

Hart’s petits fours were such a hit that Mr. Kubly wanted to offer them in The Swiss Colony catalog. Knowing how labor-intensive the little cake bites were, Hart’s initial response was, “You can’t afford them.” But Mr. Kubly persevered, and Hart devised a way to make them a little less intricate and more affordable while still retaining the handcrafted charm that won so many hearts at that gathering. Hart more than earned his salary that year, dipping over 60,000 small square cakes by hand.

See the Horst Hart Story [VIDEO].

Petits Fours for the People

As petits fours caught on with customers, technology has enabled The Swiss Colony to keep up with the demand. Today, the Monroe bakery can make more petits fours in one day than Hart made in all of 1961. By the late 1970s, huge band ovens moved the little layered desserts through strictly controlled time and temperature zones to produce the best results, and new enrobing machines allowed 70,000 mini cakes per day to be coated in luxurious chocolate from the holding tanks. Today, robotic water cutters and handlers add more precision and efficiency to the process. And while these innovations and efficiencies have helped keep labor costs down, they will never replace The Swiss Colony’s dedication to the personal touch.

After enrobing, each little cake is hand-decorated by skilled associates, many of whom have worked in the bakery for decades. A drizzle of icing here, a hand-piped Christmas tree there…it all contributes to a special result. Swiss Colony Petits Fours aren’t just pretty; each dessert is a layered piece of art made with ingredients such as one would use at home. Depending on the flavor, the white or chocolate cake layer is made with real eggs; the buttercream layer may have cream cheese or almond extract with confectioner’s sugar; the coating is rich chocolate or the white chocolate-like Swiss creme confection…just like Hart’s originals.

It’s a process that is not duplicated anywhere else…and when a gift recipient opens the festive gift box arriving from The Swiss Colony, it is a truly special experience-to be surpassed only by biting into one of these exquisite layered desserts.

See photos, video, reviews and more about Petits Fours.

Originally published at https://www.swisscolony.com on August 13, 2019.

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Matt Stelter
The Swiss Colony

A 20-year Internet Marketing expert with a passion for building brands through content marketing, video, search marketing, SEO, CRO & UX optimization.