A fact from Clementine cake appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the Did you know column on 26 December 2015 (check views). The text of the entry was as follows:
Did you know... that the origin of clementine cake may be roughly based upon an orange cake developed by the Sephardi Jews?
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Could we link orange muscat, white dessert wine, Riesling wine and tangerine oil? I do not think we come across these terms as commonly as milk or butter.
Can we have more information on the origin, chemical composition or nutrition and the history of the cake? It is not necessary, but would do this article tremendous good. The Baker's Four Seasons: Baking by the Season, Harvest, and Occasion source claims that it is a rich source of Vitamin D, which would be a great addition.
I have added "It may provide significant amounts of Vitamin D" (and a source) to the lead. Nutritional information varies greatly among various cake varieties (e.g. see [1]), and many of the available sources are not reliable. As such, it seems best to include the minor addition to the lead, rather than have a nutritional information section that only contains this brief information.
Regarding the origins, composition, etc., not much more information is available. During the process of creating and expanding the article, I pretty much used up all of the reliable sources that are available online (e.g. from Google Books, Google News, Highbeam, etc.) North America100018:14, 2 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I like the graphical presentation at Crab dip. The images in our article are a bit stacked above one another, so the gallery arrangement would certainly be better.