German
Meringue, Chocolate, and Kirsch Cream Layer Cake
Schwarzwälder Torte
Active time: 30 min Start to finish: 4 hr (includes cooling meringues)
Ashkenazic Layered Pastry (Fluden)
This is the pastry version of the popular Franco-German dessert.
By Gil Marks
Spiced Rum and Tea Punch
This German drink, called Grossmutters Punsch (Grandmother's Punch), is usually enjoyed warm at midnight on Christmas Eve.
It can also be served as a refreshing chilled drink. For a festive touch, add a cinnamon stick to each glass.
German Cinnamon Stars (Zimtsterne)
These nut meringues are also called erstesternen ("first stars"), a reference to the heavenly signs indicating the end of a fast day. They are traditionally served by German Jews at the meal following Yom Kippur.
By Gil Marks
Zwetschgenkuchen
(Southern German and Alsatian Italian Plum Torte)
This torte is served traditionally at the high holidays in early fall, when small blue Italian plums are in season. In southern Germany and Alsace the pie was made from zwetsche, a local variety of these plums. My aunt Lisl always used to make a murbeteig crust (a short-crust butter cookie dought) for this tart, and sliced each Italian plum into four crescent shapes. She lined the tart with breadcrumbs and then apricot preserves, which protected the dough during baking, leading to a crispy crust. She went light on the cinnamon, a spice she felt was overused in this country. (I agree with her.) My aunt's results, simple to prepare, were simply delicious.
By Joan Nathan
German Lebkuchen Cake with White Chocolate Frosting
This moist Christmas cake takes its cues from the flavors and spices found in the classic Lebkuchen cookie. It's brushed with an orange-scented honey syrup, frosted with a creamy white chocolate icing and then surrounded by sliced almonds.
Moravian Sugar Cake
Many Moravians--a Germanic people from a region in what for most of the twentieth century has been known as Czechoslovakia-- settled in Ohio, southern Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Illinois in the last century. The mashed potatoes give this coffee cake, which is good for breakfast or an afternoon break, a distinctive, moist texture.
Orange, Chocolate and Hazelnut Mandelbrot
These crunchy cookies are a new version of classic Mandelbrot, which means almond bread in German. Here, recipe tester Selma Brown Morrow uses hazelnuts instead of the usual almonds. To add an elegant look, she dips the cookies into melted chocolate and seals them in holiday bags.
Choucroute Alsatian
By James Beard
Lebkuchen
Spice Cookies
Rice paper is traditionally used in this recipe, but is not essential. You can bake these cookies on buttered baking sheets instead.
Mixed Berry Spoon Pudding
Rote Grütze
"My husband and I always have the Rote Grütze at the Kempinski Hotel Atlantic when in Hamburg, Germany," says Mary Futchik of Naples, Florida. "Could you could help us get the recipe?"
Consider this a cross between a spoonable pudding and a fruit soup.
Onion, Bacon and Cream Pizza
This is a wonderful way to experience onions and it is reminiscent of the Alsatian specialty, flammekeuche. Combined with the cream, the onions (Rose de Roscoff, if you can find them) create a sweet, succulent foil for the bacon and the pizza dough. I like to serve this as a first course, with a lovely Gewurtztraminer.
By Susan Herrmann Loomis
Mushroom and Goat Cheese Strudel with Balsamic Syrup
An appealing dish from Matt's in the Market in Seattle, Washington.
German Chocolate Pie
My grandmother Marie "Nanney" Spivey (I am her namesake) always doubles this family favorite and uses two pie shells. She says, "Everybody loves it. You can stir it up in five minutes."
By Nanney Spivey and Donna Marie Spivey
Buttermilk-Spinach Spaetzle
Little dumplings that are served in Germany, Austria, Switzerland and Alsace, spaetzle are usually made by pushing the batter through a strainer into boiling water. The batter in this recipe is thicker and can be shaped with a small spoon.