Spelling of Strudel in German: Strudel or Strüdel?
Google translate (and other sources) tell me that the correct spelling of Strudel in German is simply "Strudel".
However, I've often seen it written in English texts as strüdel. So, is this a mistake, or is this an alternate, but correct, spelling in German as well?
spelling
|
show 1 more comment
Google translate (and other sources) tell me that the correct spelling of Strudel in German is simply "Strudel".
However, I've often seen it written in English texts as strüdel. So, is this a mistake, or is this an alternate, but correct, spelling in German as well?
spelling
1
It's either a mistake or sort of a pun, since umlauts are often associated with German language (although other languages have diaereses) as well - such as the strudel is associated with Austrian/German cuisine.
– Marzipanherz
Dec 11 at 16:31
4
This would be a prototypcial question for consulting a dictionary.
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 17:13
1
Heavy Metal Strudel of course.
– Janka
Dec 12 at 2:40
3
This questions shouldn't be deleted because of the great answers (especially Huberts). The question is not "How is strudel spelled correctly?" but rather "Why can I find the wrong form in written English?"
– Ingo Bochmann
Dec 12 at 9:50
2
Reopened because the OP clearly stated they did use a dictionary but were still confused about this frequently used weird spelling.
– Takkat♦
Dec 12 at 11:34
|
show 1 more comment
Google translate (and other sources) tell me that the correct spelling of Strudel in German is simply "Strudel".
However, I've often seen it written in English texts as strüdel. So, is this a mistake, or is this an alternate, but correct, spelling in German as well?
spelling
Google translate (and other sources) tell me that the correct spelling of Strudel in German is simply "Strudel".
However, I've often seen it written in English texts as strüdel. So, is this a mistake, or is this an alternate, but correct, spelling in German as well?
spelling
spelling
edited Dec 12 at 13:00
asked Dec 11 at 15:45
Ben Hocking
1455
1455
1
It's either a mistake or sort of a pun, since umlauts are often associated with German language (although other languages have diaereses) as well - such as the strudel is associated with Austrian/German cuisine.
– Marzipanherz
Dec 11 at 16:31
4
This would be a prototypcial question for consulting a dictionary.
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 17:13
1
Heavy Metal Strudel of course.
– Janka
Dec 12 at 2:40
3
This questions shouldn't be deleted because of the great answers (especially Huberts). The question is not "How is strudel spelled correctly?" but rather "Why can I find the wrong form in written English?"
– Ingo Bochmann
Dec 12 at 9:50
2
Reopened because the OP clearly stated they did use a dictionary but were still confused about this frequently used weird spelling.
– Takkat♦
Dec 12 at 11:34
|
show 1 more comment
1
It's either a mistake or sort of a pun, since umlauts are often associated with German language (although other languages have diaereses) as well - such as the strudel is associated with Austrian/German cuisine.
– Marzipanherz
Dec 11 at 16:31
4
This would be a prototypcial question for consulting a dictionary.
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 17:13
1
Heavy Metal Strudel of course.
– Janka
Dec 12 at 2:40
3
This questions shouldn't be deleted because of the great answers (especially Huberts). The question is not "How is strudel spelled correctly?" but rather "Why can I find the wrong form in written English?"
– Ingo Bochmann
Dec 12 at 9:50
2
Reopened because the OP clearly stated they did use a dictionary but were still confused about this frequently used weird spelling.
– Takkat♦
Dec 12 at 11:34
1
1
It's either a mistake or sort of a pun, since umlauts are often associated with German language (although other languages have diaereses) as well - such as the strudel is associated with Austrian/German cuisine.
– Marzipanherz
Dec 11 at 16:31
It's either a mistake or sort of a pun, since umlauts are often associated with German language (although other languages have diaereses) as well - such as the strudel is associated with Austrian/German cuisine.
– Marzipanherz
Dec 11 at 16:31
4
4
This would be a prototypcial question for consulting a dictionary.
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 17:13
This would be a prototypcial question for consulting a dictionary.
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 17:13
1
1
Heavy Metal Strudel of course.
– Janka
Dec 12 at 2:40
Heavy Metal Strudel of course.
– Janka
Dec 12 at 2:40
3
3
This questions shouldn't be deleted because of the great answers (especially Huberts). The question is not "How is strudel spelled correctly?" but rather "Why can I find the wrong form in written English?"
– Ingo Bochmann
Dec 12 at 9:50
This questions shouldn't be deleted because of the great answers (especially Huberts). The question is not "How is strudel spelled correctly?" but rather "Why can I find the wrong form in written English?"
– Ingo Bochmann
Dec 12 at 9:50
2
2
Reopened because the OP clearly stated they did use a dictionary but were still confused about this frequently used weird spelling.
– Takkat♦
Dec 12 at 11:34
Reopened because the OP clearly stated they did use a dictionary but were still confused about this frequently used weird spelling.
– Takkat♦
Dec 12 at 11:34
|
show 1 more comment
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
That is simply wrong.
Maybe the author was trying to build the plural (the singular pieces close to the pictures are correct, the wrong spelling is consistently used in the two places on the page - title and "more" link at the page bottom - where Strudel connects with "recipes"), but Strüdel is not the correct plural. It's Strudel like in Singular.
Like “Huhn” - “ Hühner”? Could be...
– Stephie
Dec 11 at 16:36
Good point about plural vs. singular intention, given the point @Stephie made that none of the individual recipes used the umlaut.
– Ben Hocking
Dec 11 at 16:40
@Stephie Rather like "Pudel" - "Püdel".
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 17:14
add a comment |
Some English speaking people who don't speak German don't understand the meaning of the dots on a, o and u, but they can see, that those dots are typical for German language. German language also often is perceived as sounding hard, and therefore in the 1970ies some heavy metal bands began to use umlauts in their names because those umlauts gave their names an even harder image:
- Blue Öyster Cult
- Motörhead
- Mötley Crüe
This kind of usage is called metal umlauts or röck döts, and those metal umlauts made german umlauts popular even to people who was not fans of heavy metal music. So many English native speakers, who have no idea of german language may think:
If it is German, it must have umlauts.
I think Apfelstrudel was known in USA even before Arnold Schwarzenegger, but it was him (also in the 1970ies and 80ies) who made Apfelstrudel really popular in USA (baked by his mom), and he came from a German speaking country (Austria) and has a heavy German accent.
Soon the German word Apfelstrudel turned into the English-German mixture apple Strudel, but instead of keeping the first letter of Strudel in upper case (which in fact really is very typical for German language), they used a lowercase s, but added dots to the u to make it look more German. And so the English röck-döts word
strüdel
was created. When I search for "strüdel -strudel" today, Google reports 22.300 results.
So, this special spelling is neither correct German, nor is it correct English. But you will find it relatively often, but only on English websites.
3
Do you have a reference for the claim that Schwartzenegger made Apfelstrudel famous? History makes me doubt that a bit. (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_language_in_the_United_States))
– Stephie
Dec 11 at 17:22
2
Yes, metäl äpple strüdel. If you can somehow prove your hypothesis that strüdel is an outflow of this, then this is my favourite answer. (Isn't strudel (with schnitzel) in Sound of Music, or even earlier?)
– LangLangC
Dec 11 at 17:31
2
Objection! ö and ü are much more typical for Turkish than for German. Something like müdürmüsünüz (= Are you the boss?) is totally normal in Turkish. The only circumstance that makes Americans believe that these graphs are typical German is that they know even less Turkish.
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 23:06
2
Objection Number 2: Arnold Schwarzenegger does not have at all a German accent. What he has is a very prominent Austrian accent.
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 23:08
2
@ChristianGeiselmann Objection to your objection 1: The train of thought is not umlauts => German but German => umlauts.
– Jan
Dec 12 at 1:51
|
show 6 more comments
It's spelled Strudel
no matter what,
3
Incorrect: Das also war des Strudels Kern! So it can take other forms ;)
– 0xC0000022L
Dec 12 at 14:31
add a comment |
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
That is simply wrong.
Maybe the author was trying to build the plural (the singular pieces close to the pictures are correct, the wrong spelling is consistently used in the two places on the page - title and "more" link at the page bottom - where Strudel connects with "recipes"), but Strüdel is not the correct plural. It's Strudel like in Singular.
Like “Huhn” - “ Hühner”? Could be...
– Stephie
Dec 11 at 16:36
Good point about plural vs. singular intention, given the point @Stephie made that none of the individual recipes used the umlaut.
– Ben Hocking
Dec 11 at 16:40
@Stephie Rather like "Pudel" - "Püdel".
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 17:14
add a comment |
That is simply wrong.
Maybe the author was trying to build the plural (the singular pieces close to the pictures are correct, the wrong spelling is consistently used in the two places on the page - title and "more" link at the page bottom - where Strudel connects with "recipes"), but Strüdel is not the correct plural. It's Strudel like in Singular.
Like “Huhn” - “ Hühner”? Could be...
– Stephie
Dec 11 at 16:36
Good point about plural vs. singular intention, given the point @Stephie made that none of the individual recipes used the umlaut.
– Ben Hocking
Dec 11 at 16:40
@Stephie Rather like "Pudel" - "Püdel".
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 17:14
add a comment |
That is simply wrong.
Maybe the author was trying to build the plural (the singular pieces close to the pictures are correct, the wrong spelling is consistently used in the two places on the page - title and "more" link at the page bottom - where Strudel connects with "recipes"), but Strüdel is not the correct plural. It's Strudel like in Singular.
That is simply wrong.
Maybe the author was trying to build the plural (the singular pieces close to the pictures are correct, the wrong spelling is consistently used in the two places on the page - title and "more" link at the page bottom - where Strudel connects with "recipes"), but Strüdel is not the correct plural. It's Strudel like in Singular.
edited Dec 11 at 17:17
answered Dec 11 at 16:31
tofro
40.8k138120
40.8k138120
Like “Huhn” - “ Hühner”? Could be...
– Stephie
Dec 11 at 16:36
Good point about plural vs. singular intention, given the point @Stephie made that none of the individual recipes used the umlaut.
– Ben Hocking
Dec 11 at 16:40
@Stephie Rather like "Pudel" - "Püdel".
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 17:14
add a comment |
Like “Huhn” - “ Hühner”? Could be...
– Stephie
Dec 11 at 16:36
Good point about plural vs. singular intention, given the point @Stephie made that none of the individual recipes used the umlaut.
– Ben Hocking
Dec 11 at 16:40
@Stephie Rather like "Pudel" - "Püdel".
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 17:14
Like “Huhn” - “ Hühner”? Could be...
– Stephie
Dec 11 at 16:36
Like “Huhn” - “ Hühner”? Could be...
– Stephie
Dec 11 at 16:36
Good point about plural vs. singular intention, given the point @Stephie made that none of the individual recipes used the umlaut.
– Ben Hocking
Dec 11 at 16:40
Good point about plural vs. singular intention, given the point @Stephie made that none of the individual recipes used the umlaut.
– Ben Hocking
Dec 11 at 16:40
@Stephie Rather like "Pudel" - "Püdel".
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 17:14
@Stephie Rather like "Pudel" - "Püdel".
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 17:14
add a comment |
Some English speaking people who don't speak German don't understand the meaning of the dots on a, o and u, but they can see, that those dots are typical for German language. German language also often is perceived as sounding hard, and therefore in the 1970ies some heavy metal bands began to use umlauts in their names because those umlauts gave their names an even harder image:
- Blue Öyster Cult
- Motörhead
- Mötley Crüe
This kind of usage is called metal umlauts or röck döts, and those metal umlauts made german umlauts popular even to people who was not fans of heavy metal music. So many English native speakers, who have no idea of german language may think:
If it is German, it must have umlauts.
I think Apfelstrudel was known in USA even before Arnold Schwarzenegger, but it was him (also in the 1970ies and 80ies) who made Apfelstrudel really popular in USA (baked by his mom), and he came from a German speaking country (Austria) and has a heavy German accent.
Soon the German word Apfelstrudel turned into the English-German mixture apple Strudel, but instead of keeping the first letter of Strudel in upper case (which in fact really is very typical for German language), they used a lowercase s, but added dots to the u to make it look more German. And so the English röck-döts word
strüdel
was created. When I search for "strüdel -strudel" today, Google reports 22.300 results.
So, this special spelling is neither correct German, nor is it correct English. But you will find it relatively often, but only on English websites.
3
Do you have a reference for the claim that Schwartzenegger made Apfelstrudel famous? History makes me doubt that a bit. (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_language_in_the_United_States))
– Stephie
Dec 11 at 17:22
2
Yes, metäl äpple strüdel. If you can somehow prove your hypothesis that strüdel is an outflow of this, then this is my favourite answer. (Isn't strudel (with schnitzel) in Sound of Music, or even earlier?)
– LangLangC
Dec 11 at 17:31
2
Objection! ö and ü are much more typical for Turkish than for German. Something like müdürmüsünüz (= Are you the boss?) is totally normal in Turkish. The only circumstance that makes Americans believe that these graphs are typical German is that they know even less Turkish.
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 23:06
2
Objection Number 2: Arnold Schwarzenegger does not have at all a German accent. What he has is a very prominent Austrian accent.
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 23:08
2
@ChristianGeiselmann Objection to your objection 1: The train of thought is not umlauts => German but German => umlauts.
– Jan
Dec 12 at 1:51
|
show 6 more comments
Some English speaking people who don't speak German don't understand the meaning of the dots on a, o and u, but they can see, that those dots are typical for German language. German language also often is perceived as sounding hard, and therefore in the 1970ies some heavy metal bands began to use umlauts in their names because those umlauts gave their names an even harder image:
- Blue Öyster Cult
- Motörhead
- Mötley Crüe
This kind of usage is called metal umlauts or röck döts, and those metal umlauts made german umlauts popular even to people who was not fans of heavy metal music. So many English native speakers, who have no idea of german language may think:
If it is German, it must have umlauts.
I think Apfelstrudel was known in USA even before Arnold Schwarzenegger, but it was him (also in the 1970ies and 80ies) who made Apfelstrudel really popular in USA (baked by his mom), and he came from a German speaking country (Austria) and has a heavy German accent.
Soon the German word Apfelstrudel turned into the English-German mixture apple Strudel, but instead of keeping the first letter of Strudel in upper case (which in fact really is very typical for German language), they used a lowercase s, but added dots to the u to make it look more German. And so the English röck-döts word
strüdel
was created. When I search for "strüdel -strudel" today, Google reports 22.300 results.
So, this special spelling is neither correct German, nor is it correct English. But you will find it relatively often, but only on English websites.
3
Do you have a reference for the claim that Schwartzenegger made Apfelstrudel famous? History makes me doubt that a bit. (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_language_in_the_United_States))
– Stephie
Dec 11 at 17:22
2
Yes, metäl äpple strüdel. If you can somehow prove your hypothesis that strüdel is an outflow of this, then this is my favourite answer. (Isn't strudel (with schnitzel) in Sound of Music, or even earlier?)
– LangLangC
Dec 11 at 17:31
2
Objection! ö and ü are much more typical for Turkish than for German. Something like müdürmüsünüz (= Are you the boss?) is totally normal in Turkish. The only circumstance that makes Americans believe that these graphs are typical German is that they know even less Turkish.
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 23:06
2
Objection Number 2: Arnold Schwarzenegger does not have at all a German accent. What he has is a very prominent Austrian accent.
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 23:08
2
@ChristianGeiselmann Objection to your objection 1: The train of thought is not umlauts => German but German => umlauts.
– Jan
Dec 12 at 1:51
|
show 6 more comments
Some English speaking people who don't speak German don't understand the meaning of the dots on a, o and u, but they can see, that those dots are typical for German language. German language also often is perceived as sounding hard, and therefore in the 1970ies some heavy metal bands began to use umlauts in their names because those umlauts gave their names an even harder image:
- Blue Öyster Cult
- Motörhead
- Mötley Crüe
This kind of usage is called metal umlauts or röck döts, and those metal umlauts made german umlauts popular even to people who was not fans of heavy metal music. So many English native speakers, who have no idea of german language may think:
If it is German, it must have umlauts.
I think Apfelstrudel was known in USA even before Arnold Schwarzenegger, but it was him (also in the 1970ies and 80ies) who made Apfelstrudel really popular in USA (baked by his mom), and he came from a German speaking country (Austria) and has a heavy German accent.
Soon the German word Apfelstrudel turned into the English-German mixture apple Strudel, but instead of keeping the first letter of Strudel in upper case (which in fact really is very typical for German language), they used a lowercase s, but added dots to the u to make it look more German. And so the English röck-döts word
strüdel
was created. When I search for "strüdel -strudel" today, Google reports 22.300 results.
So, this special spelling is neither correct German, nor is it correct English. But you will find it relatively often, but only on English websites.
Some English speaking people who don't speak German don't understand the meaning of the dots on a, o and u, but they can see, that those dots are typical for German language. German language also often is perceived as sounding hard, and therefore in the 1970ies some heavy metal bands began to use umlauts in their names because those umlauts gave their names an even harder image:
- Blue Öyster Cult
- Motörhead
- Mötley Crüe
This kind of usage is called metal umlauts or röck döts, and those metal umlauts made german umlauts popular even to people who was not fans of heavy metal music. So many English native speakers, who have no idea of german language may think:
If it is German, it must have umlauts.
I think Apfelstrudel was known in USA even before Arnold Schwarzenegger, but it was him (also in the 1970ies and 80ies) who made Apfelstrudel really popular in USA (baked by his mom), and he came from a German speaking country (Austria) and has a heavy German accent.
Soon the German word Apfelstrudel turned into the English-German mixture apple Strudel, but instead of keeping the first letter of Strudel in upper case (which in fact really is very typical for German language), they used a lowercase s, but added dots to the u to make it look more German. And so the English röck-döts word
strüdel
was created. When I search for "strüdel -strudel" today, Google reports 22.300 results.
So, this special spelling is neither correct German, nor is it correct English. But you will find it relatively often, but only on English websites.
answered Dec 11 at 17:18
Hubert Schölnast
70.6k5104233
70.6k5104233
3
Do you have a reference for the claim that Schwartzenegger made Apfelstrudel famous? History makes me doubt that a bit. (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_language_in_the_United_States))
– Stephie
Dec 11 at 17:22
2
Yes, metäl äpple strüdel. If you can somehow prove your hypothesis that strüdel is an outflow of this, then this is my favourite answer. (Isn't strudel (with schnitzel) in Sound of Music, or even earlier?)
– LangLangC
Dec 11 at 17:31
2
Objection! ö and ü are much more typical for Turkish than for German. Something like müdürmüsünüz (= Are you the boss?) is totally normal in Turkish. The only circumstance that makes Americans believe that these graphs are typical German is that they know even less Turkish.
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 23:06
2
Objection Number 2: Arnold Schwarzenegger does not have at all a German accent. What he has is a very prominent Austrian accent.
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 23:08
2
@ChristianGeiselmann Objection to your objection 1: The train of thought is not umlauts => German but German => umlauts.
– Jan
Dec 12 at 1:51
|
show 6 more comments
3
Do you have a reference for the claim that Schwartzenegger made Apfelstrudel famous? History makes me doubt that a bit. (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_language_in_the_United_States))
– Stephie
Dec 11 at 17:22
2
Yes, metäl äpple strüdel. If you can somehow prove your hypothesis that strüdel is an outflow of this, then this is my favourite answer. (Isn't strudel (with schnitzel) in Sound of Music, or even earlier?)
– LangLangC
Dec 11 at 17:31
2
Objection! ö and ü are much more typical for Turkish than for German. Something like müdürmüsünüz (= Are you the boss?) is totally normal in Turkish. The only circumstance that makes Americans believe that these graphs are typical German is that they know even less Turkish.
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 23:06
2
Objection Number 2: Arnold Schwarzenegger does not have at all a German accent. What he has is a very prominent Austrian accent.
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 23:08
2
@ChristianGeiselmann Objection to your objection 1: The train of thought is not umlauts => German but German => umlauts.
– Jan
Dec 12 at 1:51
3
3
Do you have a reference for the claim that Schwartzenegger made Apfelstrudel famous? History makes me doubt that a bit. (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_language_in_the_United_States))
– Stephie
Dec 11 at 17:22
Do you have a reference for the claim that Schwartzenegger made Apfelstrudel famous? History makes me doubt that a bit. (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_language_in_the_United_States))
– Stephie
Dec 11 at 17:22
2
2
Yes, metäl äpple strüdel. If you can somehow prove your hypothesis that strüdel is an outflow of this, then this is my favourite answer. (Isn't strudel (with schnitzel) in Sound of Music, or even earlier?)
– LangLangC
Dec 11 at 17:31
Yes, metäl äpple strüdel. If you can somehow prove your hypothesis that strüdel is an outflow of this, then this is my favourite answer. (Isn't strudel (with schnitzel) in Sound of Music, or even earlier?)
– LangLangC
Dec 11 at 17:31
2
2
Objection! ö and ü are much more typical for Turkish than for German. Something like müdürmüsünüz (= Are you the boss?) is totally normal in Turkish. The only circumstance that makes Americans believe that these graphs are typical German is that they know even less Turkish.
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 23:06
Objection! ö and ü are much more typical for Turkish than for German. Something like müdürmüsünüz (= Are you the boss?) is totally normal in Turkish. The only circumstance that makes Americans believe that these graphs are typical German is that they know even less Turkish.
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 23:06
2
2
Objection Number 2: Arnold Schwarzenegger does not have at all a German accent. What he has is a very prominent Austrian accent.
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 23:08
Objection Number 2: Arnold Schwarzenegger does not have at all a German accent. What he has is a very prominent Austrian accent.
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 23:08
2
2
@ChristianGeiselmann Objection to your objection 1: The train of thought is not umlauts => German but German => umlauts.
– Jan
Dec 12 at 1:51
@ChristianGeiselmann Objection to your objection 1: The train of thought is not umlauts => German but German => umlauts.
– Jan
Dec 12 at 1:51
|
show 6 more comments
It's spelled Strudel
no matter what,
3
Incorrect: Das also war des Strudels Kern! So it can take other forms ;)
– 0xC0000022L
Dec 12 at 14:31
add a comment |
It's spelled Strudel
no matter what,
3
Incorrect: Das also war des Strudels Kern! So it can take other forms ;)
– 0xC0000022L
Dec 12 at 14:31
add a comment |
It's spelled Strudel
no matter what,
It's spelled Strudel
no matter what,
answered Dec 11 at 16:05
πάντα ῥεῖ
3,86321221
3,86321221
3
Incorrect: Das also war des Strudels Kern! So it can take other forms ;)
– 0xC0000022L
Dec 12 at 14:31
add a comment |
3
Incorrect: Das also war des Strudels Kern! So it can take other forms ;)
– 0xC0000022L
Dec 12 at 14:31
3
3
Incorrect: Das also war des Strudels Kern! So it can take other forms ;)
– 0xC0000022L
Dec 12 at 14:31
Incorrect: Das also war des Strudels Kern! So it can take other forms ;)
– 0xC0000022L
Dec 12 at 14:31
add a comment |
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1
It's either a mistake or sort of a pun, since umlauts are often associated with German language (although other languages have diaereses) as well - such as the strudel is associated with Austrian/German cuisine.
– Marzipanherz
Dec 11 at 16:31
4
This would be a prototypcial question for consulting a dictionary.
– Christian Geiselmann
Dec 11 at 17:13
1
Heavy Metal Strudel of course.
– Janka
Dec 12 at 2:40
3
This questions shouldn't be deleted because of the great answers (especially Huberts). The question is not "How is strudel spelled correctly?" but rather "Why can I find the wrong form in written English?"
– Ingo Bochmann
Dec 12 at 9:50
2
Reopened because the OP clearly stated they did use a dictionary but were still confused about this frequently used weird spelling.
– Takkat♦
Dec 12 at 11:34