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For Christmas: lebkuchen — 12 Comments

  1. I’ll have to try that. My mother made lebkuchen that was like hardtack in texture, but delicious. Must have had a lot of orange peel in it, as I recall an orangy taste to it.

  2. Gringo: this isn’t hard in texture. Most people really love it and find it quite addictive, but there are a few who think it’s too sweet. I am not one of the latter.

  3. “I have no powers of resistance for this particular treat.”

    Obviously you have to save yourself by shipping all of it to ….. ME!

    Write for shipto address.

    Thanking you in advance, I remain your soon to be more portly reader….

  4. Ahh – I’ll have to try this. Now, I posted one of my Christmas recipes on my book-blog, here: Carribbean Black Fruitcake, or as a friend of mine who adored it, called D-W-I Fruitcake. You start with ground dried fuit macerated in rum, and end with the baked cake soaked in tawny port. My friend kept slices in her freezer, and was so potent that it stated soft.

    http://celiahayes.wordpress.com/2012/12/15/carribbean-black-fruitcake-aka-dwi-fruitcake/

    Bon appetite, y’all!

  5. Neo, thanks for the recipe! Our family has made lebkuchen since way back I don’t know when. After my mother stopped making it, I took over, then my daughter-in-law, and now my granddaughter has done it for the past few years. It’s a two-day affair: the first day is rolling out the dough, cutting the shapes and baking. The next day is the decorating — basically the confectioner’s sugar glaze with a few sprinkles of this and that. Our recipe is different — there seem to be as many varieties as there are Germans — but I’ll have to try this one.

    I tried your fruit cake recommendation — it’s excellent! I had to order it for myself, because no one else in the family wants any!

    Christmas seems to be a time when all our food quirks emerge.

  6. You had me at 1lb dark brown sugar and 4 eggs 😉

    Not really, I’m mostly low carb, but I’d happily eat some at someone else’s home.

  7. I don’t think I’ve evet known anyone here who actually makes lebkuchen. It is so widely available in stores and bakeries that it probably doesn’t seem worth the trouble. Homemade stollen is another matter. I got one as a gift about a week ago, and it was so good.

  8. Forgive me but Hostess may have stopped making twinkies……here is a great receipe….enjoy and Merry Christmas

    Twinkie Cake (Kentucky style)

    1 Duncan Hines yellow cake mix
    1 cup whole milk
    ½ cup Solid Crisco
    1 tsp vanilla
    1 stick ( yes one whole stick) butter
    ½ tsp salt
    1 cup sugar
    5 tbl spn all purpose flour
    Bake cake mix as indicated on box (let cool)
    Cut cake in half (through the middle, top and bottom) by using a piece of thread( did I mention this was Kentucky style). Remove top layer.
    Mix icing ingredients:
    Heat to boiling (the milk and flour)
    Let cool completely
    Then mix butter, Crisco, vanilla, salt, and sugar very well and spread out over the bottom layer of cake, carefully replace top section of cake, dust top with powdered sugar!

  9. Thanks for the recipe. I love the whole “family recipe” thing, and I am not above pillaging somebody else’s family. For instance, I stole my Advent-season favorite goulash from one Betty Crocker, but after 25 years or so it’s unrecognizable and it’s MINE! 🙂

  10. expat: ah, but not this lebkuchen. It’s quite different from the type in stores. My family always called it “lebkuchen,” but that probably goes back several centuries, because it certainly doesn’t resemble the usual kind.

    Oh, and this is pretty easy to make.

    And very easy to eat. Lots of it.

  11. Neo, I made the lebkuchen today. Because it was thicker than my mother’s lebkuchen, it didn’t have the hardtack texture. Her icing was thinner- you drizzled it on the finished product.

    Because I am in TX, I used pecans instead of walnuts.

    It was different from my mother’s lebkuchen, but very tasty.

    Some reactions from neighbors follow. One who tried it before being told it was called “lebkuchen” said the following: “It tastes German.” Which it is- the dark brown sugar and the cinnamon were the apparent giveaways.

    A neighbor from Morocco, a Sephardic Jew, still cooks a lot of Moroccan food, a half century after having left Morocco. Perhaps it goes without saying that what she cooks is very tasty, but I will say it. She liked the lebkuchen so much that she got the recipe from me and will cook it tomorrow.

    Also bear in mind she very seldom cooks dessert food. She bakes her own bread, so her not baking much in the way of cookies and such reflects her inclinations, not her abilities. Her thus deciding to bake lebkuchen is thus an indication how much she liked it, given that she hardly ever bakes sweet stuff.

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