I'm warning you, this is a very fussy recipe, but definitely worth the time and effort.
So, repeated from last year:
'Doesn't this look delicious? It is. Way too delicious. And now I also know why it's called 'Stollen.' Because by the time you take the first bite of this delicious pastry, it has actually stolen a good five hours of your life! No kidding. It is the fussiest thing!
So why did I bother? Well, this is all the fault of Lorraine, Scott, and Matthew, who sent us a box of stollen.
It was amazing! We savored every single melt-in-your-mouth morsel and I knew right then that I had to learn how to make this stuff.
Dried fruit, soaking in brandy
The 'sponge' just before fermenting
The dough ball
Patted out and ready to apply the almond paste
Shaped into a crescent, or in this case, a boomerang
The final product, sprinkled with powdered sugar and sliced
I must say that the kitchen smelled fantastic when the stollen was baking. And it does taste wonderful, although mine is no competition for the stollen that we received as a gift. I think they must sprinkle magic on it. Or maybe it just seemed better because it was a gift and I hadn't spent five hours monkeying around with a fussy recipe.
For those of you who would like to try your hand at this delightful treat, I'm sharing the recipe I found online:
Christmas Stollen: Okay, let's make that JANUARY STOLLEN.
The almond paste, which can be made ahead of time (otherwise this would be a six hour project!) and stored in the refrigerator to use within a week. (Actually, I had some I'd made and stored in the freezer):
Ingredients:
10 oz dried blanched almonds (I actually used ground almonds that I found at Farm & Fleet for $1.99 a bag, contrasted with the much greater price of regular almonds.)
10 oz powdered sugar
5 oz granulated sugar
1/4 cup corn syrup
1 cup water
Instructions:
Make a sugar syrup by placing the water, granulated sugar, and corn syrup in a saucepan. Stir it to combine. Bring it to a boil and let it boil for a few minutes. Let it cool.
Place the almonds in a food processor and process them to a fine powder. Add the powdered sugar. With the food processor running, slowly add the sugar syrup until the mixture forms a paste.
Store the almond paste tightly covered. If you will be storing it for more than a week, store in the refrigerator. It also freezes well.
Now on to the Stollen itself:
STOLLEN:
Makes 1 large or 2 small loaves. I doubled the following recipe to get two large loaves.
Sponge
1/2 cup milk
1/2 cup all-purpose flour
4-5 teaspoons (or 2 packets) instant or active dry yeast
Fruit
2 cups dried fruit. I used a combination of dried blueberries, golden raisins, dried cherries, and dried apricots.
1/2 cup Grand Marnier, brandy, rum, or schnapps
1 tablespoon orange or lemon extract and/or grated lemon or orange rind
Dough
2 1/4 cups unbleached all-purpose flour
1 tablespoon sugar
3/4 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 egg
4 tablespoons butter, softened
1/4 to 1/2 cups water
1/2 cup almond slivers or marzipan (I used almond paste.)
Topping
Butter or oil
powdered sugar
Two hours before making the stollen, combine the dried fruit, brandy, and orange peel. Set aside.
Warm the milk to approximately 100 degrees. Mix the yeast into the milk and stir into the flour. Cover with plastic wrap and ferment for 1 hour until the sponge is very foamy.
When the sponge is ready, combine the remaining flour, salt, sugar, and cinnamon in a large bowl. Stir in the sponge, egg, softened butter, and enough water to form a soft but not sticky dough. Stir in the dried fruit mixture and knead in a mixer or by hand for 5 to 10 minutes. I needed to use additional flour so that it wouldn't be a sticky dough.
Place the dough in an oiled bowl, cover with plastic or a damp towel, and set aside to rise for 45 minutes to an hour.
On a floured surface, shape the dough into something like a rectangle, either by rolling it out or pressing it with your hands.
Place the marzipan or slivered almonds (or almond paste) in the center of the loaf. Fold the dough closed and shape the loaf into something resembling a crescent.
Cover the loaf loosely with plastic and set it aside to rise for approximately an hour to an hour and a half. While it is rising, preheat the oven to 350 degrees.
When fully risen (raised?), bake the stollen for approximately 20 minutes. Rotate it (I have no idea why this is necessary) and bake it until the internal temperature is approximately 190 degrees. That would be about 15 or 20 minutes. (Check after 15. I wish I had.)
Remove the stollen from the oven. While still hot, brush the top of the loaf with butter or vegetable oil and sprinkle with powdered sugar.
Wrap and store out of sight, or I can almost promise that it will be gone before you've had a chance to share it with anyone!
And finally, this recipe was 'stolen' from the world wide web.
This post is linked to: Amaze Me Monday and Skip to My Lou and What's in the Gunny Sack and Making the World Cuter Mondays and Make the Scene Monday and Made By You Monday and Something I Whipped Up Monday and Motivate Me Monday and Making Monday Marvelous and Made from Scratch Tuesday and Take a Look Tuesday and Tasty Tuesday and Tasty Tuesday and Tempt My Tummy Tuesdays and Two Maids a Baking and Overflowing With Creativity and What's Cookin' Wednesday and We Did it Wednesday and It's a Party at Creative Princess and Lisa's Gluten-Free Blog and Favorite Things Friday and I'm Lovin' it Friday and It's a Hodgepodge Friday and Home and Family Friday
20 comments:
Wow, looks great.
Lots of work but great results for you. I am sure it disappears fast.
Oh my gosh, I had forgotten about that little slice of Heaven! My mom would make it every year at Christmas and was so delicious! Thank you for the reminder, I just might have to take a day and make it.
Okay, who cares about showing up at work??? I'm going to get in the car and head on over to your house for stollen, one of my favorite treats. And my love for stollen goes up exponentially when you add marzipan to it! I'm happy to work for my share - knead dough, wash dishes. But I'm going to be fixated on that gorgeous picture now, and driven to distraction!
I very much remember this post from last year! I think I'll see about meeting up with Yenta Mary and heading to your house with her!!!
My grandma always used to make stollen. No wonder she was cranky by the end of the day. It sure was delish! I will enjoy looking at yours.
Hubs grandma (Oma) used to make this. He would love it but I'm not sure I can squeeze one more thing in!
You know I don't think I have ever tasted Stollen. When I saw the picture I was thinking biscotti and I am not a fan of that.
This would be so much better if you lived closer to me. LOL
I've never had Stollen but would like to try it.
I love stollen,yours looks delicious!
I'm going to pin this recipe on my Pinterest page once I go out in the sun room and get on my computer. Right now it's too chilly out there! Dang sun isn't up and running at 3:00 a.m. like I am right now. Looks good!
This looks positively fantastic!
I'm pretty good at making things like this! lots of hard work but so delicious and special in the end!
Beautiful! I certainly looks worth the work!
It looks so good! I will have to find some to try (then consider devoting 5 hours to it).
That looks so good!! Now I'm hungry!!
:)
That looks fantastic, Judy! A slice of that with a cup of coffee would be perfect!
Oh my goodness this looks so good Judy!!! Thanks for sharing at Overflowing with Creativity!
one of my favorite holiday treats in the whole world, my mother made these every year for gifts, those of you who think its like biscotti your wrong, it is moist (with fruit and marzipan -almond paste) and so yummy, I found it at Cost plus world market but i really need to try this recipe one day!!
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