Best German Wreaths Recipes

facebook share image   twitter share image   pinterest share image   E-Mail share image

23 GERMAN COOKIES WE CAN'T LIVE WITHOUT



23 German Cookies We Can't Live Without image

These German cookies bring Oktoberfest right into your home! These authentic recipes are simple, delicious, and will give you an authentic taste of Germany.

Provided by insanelygood

Categories     Cookies     Recipe Roundup

Number Of Ingredients 23

Lebkuchen Cookies
Vanillekipferl (German Vanilla Crescent Cookies)
German Hazelnut Cookies
German Cinnamon Star Christmas Cookies
Springerle
German Spice Cookies (Spekulatius)
Heidesand (Traditional German Browned Butter Shortbread Cookies)
German Marzipan Cookies
German Hazelnut Macaroons
Kipplens
Spritz Cookies
Linzer Cookies
German Pepper Nut Cookies
Nut Corners (German Nussecken)
Walnut Shortbread (German Christmas Cookies)
Mandelhu00f6rnchen (Chocolate-Dipped Marzipan Almond Horns)
Cornflakes Cakes or Choco Crossies
German Chocolate Macaroons
Spitzbuben
Thumbprint Cookies/Angel Eyes
Amish Sugar Cookies
Dominosteine (German Layered Christmas Cookie)
German Butter S Cookies

Steps:

  • Select your favorite recipe.
  • Organize all the required ingredients.
  • Prep a German treat in 30 minutes or less!

Nutrition Facts :

STOLLEN WREATH



Stollen wreath image

BBC Good Food's show-stealing December 08 cover recipe - perfect if you fancy a change from the usual Christmas cake

Provided by Angela Nilsen

Categories     Dessert

Time 2h50m

Yield Cuts into 20-22 slices

Number Of Ingredients 16

85g raisin
50g dried cranberry , plus extra to decorate
100g carton mixed peel
4 tbsp dark rum
550g strong white bread flour
2 x 7g sachets easy-bake yeast
50g golden caster sugar
pinch nutmeg
zest 1 lemon
85g butter , cut into pieces
250ml milk
1 egg , beaten, plus extra beaten egg to glaze
50g pistachio , peeled and chopped, plus extra, sliced, to decorate
300g marzipan (bought or homemade)
100g fondant icing sugar
holly sprig, to decorate

Steps:

  • Mix the raisins, cranberries and mixed peel in a bowl, pour over the rum, then leave to soak while you make the dough. Tip the flour into a large bowl and stir in ½ tsp salt, the yeast, sugar, nutmeg and lemon zest. Rub the butter in until the mix is like fine crumbs. Warm the milk to hand-hot, then mix into the egg. Pour the milk into the flour mix, then stir with a round-bladed knife to make a soft dough, adding a drop more milk if needed to mop up any dry crumbs in the bottom of the bowl. Gather the dough into a ball, then knead for 3-4 mins on a lightly floured surface. Put the dough into a lightly oiled bowl, cover with cling film and leave until the dough has risen to double the size (about 45 mins-1 hr).
  • Knead the dough 2 or 3 times, then roll out to a rectangle about 37cm x 17cm. Stir the chopped pistachios into the soaked fruits, then spread one-third of the fruit mix down the centre of the dough, leaving all the edges uncovered. Fold each side into the centre to overlap slightly. Press the edges with the rolling pin to seal, turn the dough, then repeat the rolling out and spreading of the fruit twice more. Roll out to a final rectangle that is 55cm x 16cm. Roll the marzipan into a sausage shape, so it's slightly shorter than the length of the dough. Place it down the centre. Roll the dough over the marzipan, then turn the dough over so the join is underneath. Lift onto a buttered baking sheet, then curl the dough round a buttered 12cm round cake tin (see tip, below), brushing the ends with a little beaten egg and pinching them well together to seal.
  • Cover and leave to rise for 30-45 mins or until puffy and doubled in size. Heat oven to 190C/fan 170C/ gas 5. When the dough has doubled, brush with beaten egg and bake for about 25 mins until golden. Cool on the baking sheet briefly, then transfer to a wire rack.
  • Make up the icing. Stir 2-3 tsp water into the fondant icing sugar and, when the stollen has cooled, drizzle the icing over. Scatter over the extra cranberries and pistachios and decorate with holly.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 292 calories, Fat 9 grams fat, SaturatedFat 3 grams saturated fat, Carbohydrate 49 grams carbohydrates, Sugar 28 grams sugar, Protein 6 grams protein, Sodium 0.28 milligram of sodium

BRAIDED ALMOND-CREAM WREATH (KRANZKUCHEN)



Braided Almond-Cream Wreath (Kranzkuchen) image

Braided Almond-Cream Wreath (Kranzkuchen) is an almond-paste and rum-raisin-stuffed sweet wreath. It is glorious: sticky and rich, winey with rum and almond paste, chewy, and flaky all at once. After baking, when the Kranzkuchen is golden brown and shiny from the apricot glaze and topped with a drizzled glaze, it's as beautiful as it is delicious. I suggest you bake this when you have a lot of people to feed at once-it's best the day it is made.

Provided by Luisa Weiss

Categories     Christmas     Christmas Eve     Bread     Breakfast     Brunch     Dried Fruit     Rum     Almond     Raisin     Dessert

Yield Makes 1 (13-inch/33cm) wreath

Number Of Ingredients 22

Dough:
3 1/4 cups, scooped and leveled, minus 1 tablespoon/ 400g all-purpose flour, plus more for kneading
1 1/2 teaspoons instant yeast
1/3 cup/70g granulated sugar
1/4 teaspoon salt
3/4 cup plus 1 tablespoon/190ml whole milk
1 egg
8 tablespoons/115g unsalted high-fat, European-style butter, at room temperature
Filling:
2/3 cup/100g raisins
3 tablespoons dark rum
Juice of 1/2 lemon
1 pound/455g almond paste
1/4 cup/50g granulated sugar
1 egg white
1 to 2 tablespoons whole milk
3 1/2 tablespoons/50g unsalted butter, at room temperature
1/4 teaspoon salt
Glaze:
1/2 cup/150g smooth apricot jam
13 tablespoons/100g confectioners' sugar
2 tablespoons water

Steps:

  • To make the dough:
  • In a large bowl, stir together the flour, yeast, sugar, and salt. Then add the milk and egg and stir briefly. Add the butter and knead the dough briefly by hand in the bowl. Scrape it out onto a lightly floured work surface and continue to knead it for several minutes. You may need to add 1 to 2 additional tablespoons of flour, but resist the urge to add more; the dough should be quite soft and rich. You won't be able to knead it as long as other yeast doughs, but try to get it to a point where it's no longer too sticky and can be formed into a ball.
  • Place the ball back in the bowl. Cover the bowl with a clean dishcloth and place in a warm, draft-free place for 1 hour to rise.
  • To make the filling:
  • Place the raisins in a small bowl and add the rum and lemon juice. Set aside to macerate for 30 minutes.
  • To assemble and bake:
  • Heat the oven to 350°F/180°C. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. In a medium bowl, combine the almond paste, sugar, egg white, 1 tablespoon of milk, butter, and salt; knead together by hand until well combined. Knead in the raisins and their macerating liquid. The mixture should be creamy but will still hold its shape when spread. If necessary, mix in the remaining 1 tablespoon of milk. Set aside.
  • When the proofing hour is up, gently tug the dough onto a work surface. Roll out the dough to a 13 by 16-inch/33 by 40cm rectangle. You can pull the edges out to form neat corners.
  • Scrape the filling onto the dough and, using a bench scraper, spread the mixture out evenly over the dough, leaving a 1-inch/2.5cm border on one of the long sides. Starting from the other long side, roll up the dough. Using a sharp bench scraper, cut the roll of dough in half lengthwise, leaving about 1 inch/2.5cm at one end still attached. Working quickly, twist the 2 strands around each other all the way down the length of the roll. Then form the wrapped dough strands into a circle. Next, slice through the end that you left attached and tuck the end pieces at both ends underneath each other to make a neat closure.
  • Transfer the wreath to the prepared pan (you may need someone to help you do this) and bake for 45 minutes at the second-lowest rack position, rotating halfway through. When finished, the loaf will be golden brown all over and should sound slightly hollow when tapped. It will still be quite soft.
  • To make the glaze:
  • Just before the end of the baking time, heat the apricot jam over medium-high heat until loose and bubbling. When the wreath emerges from the oven, immediately brush it all over with the hot jam. Place the pan on a rack to cool.
  • When the wreath has almost fully cooled, sift the confectioners' sugar into a small bowl and whisk in the water. Whisk until smooth and lump-free. You want a thick but pourable glaze. Add more sugar or a drop more water as needed. Drizzle the glaze back and forth over the entire wreath. Wait 1 hour for the glaze to set and the cake to cool completely and then slice and serve. The cake is best eaten the day it is made, but it can be kept at room temperature, loosely wrapped in plastic wrap, for 2 additional days.

HEFEKRANZ (YEAST WREATH)



Hefekranz (Yeast Wreath) image

This recipe is from the King Arthur Flour website, one of my all time favorites. I've changed it a bit to make it more authentically German. It is a traditional Christmas bread.

Provided by pammyowl

Categories     Grains

Time 4h15m

Yield 1 loaf

Number Of Ingredients 11

2 eggs
2 cups milk, scalded, then cooled (should amount to a total of two cups when cooled)
1/4 cup sugar
1 tablespoon active dry yeast
5 -6 cups unbleached all-purpose flour
1/2 cup butter, at room temperature
1 teaspoon salt
1 lemon, zest of
1/2-1 cup golden raisin
1 egg, beaten with 1 tablespoon water
sliced almonds

Steps:

  • Break the eggs into a 2 cup measuring cup. Add cooled milk to equal 2 cups liquid. Beat in the sugar, yeast and 3 cups of the flour. Let rest for 20 minutes.
  • Stir in the salt, butter, lemon zest, raisins and 2 cups flour. Stir until the dough begins to pull away from the sides of the bowl. Turn out of the bowl and knead,using the last cup of flour if needed, to make a smooth , elastic dough. (You can do the whole process in a stand mixer, too!) . Halfway through, let the dough rest while you lightly oil a bowl. Bread dough loves a short rest! Return, knead again until you have a smooth elastic dough. Place in the bowl let rise until doubled, punch down, let rise again. Dough is ready when you poke your finger in and indent remains.
  • Turn it out onto a table divide into 3 equal pieces (I use a scale). Roll into ropes an inch in diameter, letting the dough relax if you need to, to relax the gluten. Braid and form a wreath, tucking the ends into each other as best you can. Place on a greased baking sheet cover with a damp cloth or lightly greased cling film let rise for 45 minutes. Glaze with the egg wash and sprinkle the almonds over top a generous amount. Put in a cold oven turn oven to 400 degrees for 15 minutes, turn oven down to 350 and bake for an additional 25-30 minutes. Remove, cool and serve or store until you are ready for this wonderful bread.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 4083.9, Fat 131.7, SaturatedFat 75.3, Cholesterol 870.4, Sodium 3617, Carbohydrate 618.8, Fiber 24.6, Sugar 96.6, Protein 108.3

Related Topics