Christmas stollen rich in history: Make room for the dense, sweet holiday bread from Germany (2024)

Jewelled breads, studded with candied fruits and nuts, are hallmarks of the Christmas holiday

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The Associated Press

Published Dec 13, 20165 minute read

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Christmas stollen rich in history: Make room for the dense, sweet holiday bread from Germany (1)

Jewelled breads, studded with candied fruits and nuts, are hallmarks of the Christmas holiday. Fruitcake, panettone, and julekake are favourites, but for many, the Christmas stollen is king.

Christmas stollen, known in Germany as Christollen, is a rich, dense, sweet bread filled with dried fruit, candied citrus peel, marzipan or almond paste, and nuts. It hails from the city of Dresden, Germany, where it was first produced in the late 1500s.

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Christmas stollen rich in history: Make room for the dense, sweet holiday bread from Germany (2)

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Stollen is enjoyed throughout the year, but at the holidays, it is loaded with more fruits and nuts, items that were historically only available through importation from Italy, and therefore very expensive. Christmas stollen is rich in history, and in Germany, the recipe and ratio of ingredients is considered an important matter of tradition.

Though stollen tradition runs deep, there are many variations, and ingredients can be substituted to suit your tastes. Our recipe offers a simplified version that will mimic the shape of a classic Christmas stollen, without the anxiety of a 600-year tradition.

Stollen is not difficult to make, but it is also not a quick holiday recipe; much of the experience is in the time it takes to create it. Like any bread, there is a good deal of waiting time, but none more challenging than the aging process. Once your stollen is baked (and after it has filled your home with the smell of Christmas), it should be left to cool, then wrapped tightly and rested for three weeks.

Before mixing the dough, we soak our dried fruits in rum or other spirits. Later, while the bread ages, that flavourful liquid soaks into the bread, providing its characteristic richness and depth of flavour. If you don’t have the time to age the bread, don’t despair — it will still be delicious. Next year, you can add it to your after-Thanksgiving tradition, and your stollen will be ready just in time to unwrap with your other Christmas gifts.

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CHRISTMAS STOLLEN

Start to finish: 11 hours (Active time: 30 minutes)

1 cup (250 mL) golden raisins
1 tbsp (15 mL) candied lemon peel
1 tbsp (15 mL) candied orange peel (see note)
2 tbsp (30 mL) dark rum
1 1/2 cups (375 mL) bread flour (divided use)
1/4 cup plus 2 tbsp (80 mL) milk, warmed (about 80°F)
2 1/2 tsp (12 mL/1 packet) instant dry yeast
10 tbsp (150 mL) unsalted butter, room temperature
1 tbsp (15 mL) almond paste
1 tbsp (15 mL) sugar
1 tsp (5 mL) kosher salt
1 tsp (5 mL) citrus zest (lemon, orange, or a combination of both)
1/4 tsp (1 mL) ground ginger
1/4 tsp (1 mL) ground cinnamon
1/4 tsp (1 mL) allspice
1/4 tsp (1 mL) ground clove
1/2 cup(125 mL) whole blanched almonds
3 tbsp (45 mL) unsalted butter, melted
2 cups (500 mL) sugar (or vanilla sugar), for rolling

1. The day before preparing the bread, combine the raisins, lemon peel, orange peel, and rum in a small bowl. Cover and rest at room temperature overnight.
2. In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the dough hook, combine 3/4 cup bread flour, milk and yeast. Mix on medium speed until a dough forms, about 4 minutes. Depending on the size of your mixer, you may need to hand-knead the dough for a moment, just to incorporate all of the dry ingredients. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and set aside to rest in a warm place (ideally around 75 degrees F) until doubled in size, about 30 minutes.
3. Uncover the bowl and add the remaining flour. Add the butter, almond paste, sugar, salt, zest, ginger, cinnamon, allspice, and clove. Mix on medium-high speed, scraping the bowl as needed, until the mixture is smooth, but still slightly sticky, about 6 minutes. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and rest in a warm environment until nearly doubled in size, about 35 minutes.
4. Remove the dough from the bowl and gently pat into a flat circle. Add the almonds to the soaked raisin mixture and spread on top of the dough. Gently fold the sides of the dough over the raisins, to enclose them in the mixture. Continue to fold the dough over itself until the raisins and almonds are evenly distributed throughout the dough. Return the dough to the bowl, cover, and rest for an additional 10 minutes.
5. Transfer the dough to a clean work surface. Divide into two equal pieces, and use the side of your hand to lightly round the dough into balls against your counter. Cover the dough with plastic wrap or a clean towel and let it rest for about 15 minutes.
6. Preheat the oven to 350°F.
7. Working with one piece of dough at a time, use your hands to gently flatten the dough into a rough square. Fold the first top third of the dough toward the centre of the square, and then again toward the bottom, forming a loose cylinder. Using the palms of your hands, roll the dough into a log that is about 7 inches long.
8. With the dough parallel to the edge of counter, place a rolling pin in the centre of the dough and gently roll upwards, to flatten the top half of the dough (until it is about 3/4-inch thick). Fold the top of the dough toward the centre, to meet the thicker, bottom portion of dough. Press it down lightly with the side of your hand to seal the seam, and transfer to a parchment-paper-lined baking sheet. Repeat with the second piece of dough.
9. Rest the dough, uncovered, until it has puffed up slightly, about 30 minutes.
10. Transfer to the oven and bake until the bread is golden brown and sounds hollow when tapped, about 35 minutes. Remove from the oven and transfer to a rack to cool slightly.
11. When the bread is still hot, but cool enough to handle, brush each loaf with melted butter. Roll in sugar and return to a cooling rack until fully cooled. You can serve the bread now, or, for a fuller flavour, wrap the cooled bread in plastic wrap and refrigerate for 3 weeks.
Makes: 2 loaves, each 8-10 servings

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Note: If you cannot find candied citrus peel in your grocery store, you can substitute an equal amount of another dried fruit, like dark raisins, dried cranberries, or dried currants.

Nutrition information per serving: 252 calories; 108 calories from fat; 12 g fat (6 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 24 mg cholesterol; 130 mg sodium; 35 g carbohydrate; 2 g fibre; 24 g sugar; 3 g protein.

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Christmas stollen rich in history: Make room for the dense, sweet holiday bread from Germany (2024)

FAQs

What is the history of Christmas Stollen bread? ›

The tradition of baking Christmas Stollen in Dresden is very old. Historians fond out that Christmas Stollen was already baked in 1400. As a Christmas pasty it was created at the Saxon Royal Court in 1427. That time it was made of flour, yeast, some oil and water.

Why do Germans eat stollen on Christmas? ›

Stollen also has religious symbolism, with the loaf of bread symbolising Christ's body. It represents the baby Jesus wrapped in swaddling garments by being coated with powdered sugar. As a result, it is also known as Christ Stollen or Christstollen.

Which German city is the rich sweet Christmas bread stolen particularly associated with? ›

The tradition of baking Christmas stollen in Dresden is very old. Christmas stollen in Dresden was already baked in the 15th century. In 1560, the bakers of Dresden offered the rulers of Saxony Christmas Stollen weighing 36 pounds (16 kg) each as gifts, and the custom continued.

What does stollen bread mean in German? ›

Stollen is a traditional German Christmas loaf densely packed with raisins and rich with real butter. It has a special place amongst traditional German Christmas pastries. Stollen is sometimes referred to as ChristStollen, Weihnachtsstollen or Winterbrot.

Why is stollen bread so expensive? ›

Expensive ingredients like almonds, nuts, raisins, orange peel, essence of rose and rum were imported. Because the coronation occurred during the Christmas season, the bakers shaped the loaves to resemble a baby in swaddling clothes in respect for the Christ Child. Ask any baker: Stollen is a labor of love.

Is stollen like fruitcake? ›

In Germany, fruitcakes (known as Stollen) don't quite resemble their American counterparts. Fruitcake vs. Stollen: Flattened with a chewy crust, Stollen is often baked more like a traditional loaf of sourdough bread.

How do you eat a stollen bread? ›

Think of a Stollen as the love child of a fruit cake and a loaf of bread: it's typically baked from a yeasty dough (replete with dried fruit soaked in rum), then covered in icing sugar. Like you'd expect, you eat a Stollen in slices, often with your coffee or Christmas punch. Some people put butter and jam on it.

How long will a stollen last? ›

If stored in a cool and dry place such as a bread box or drawer, your stollen will last for months.

What does stollen taste like? ›

Chief among these recent additions, as far as I'm concerned, is stollen, a richly fruited bread from Dresden, often spiked with the familiar flavour of marzipan, making it like the decadent love child of a hot cross bun and a festive fruit cake.

Is stollen just for Christmas? ›

Stollen is really an all-purpose holiday treat. You could pull it out after a meal for a festive punctuation to supper when you don't want something too sweet.

What is the Christmas stollen supposed to symbolize? ›

Christmas classic: the stollen

Oblong in shape and sprinkled with icing sugar, the shape of the traditional German Christmas stollen symbolizes the Child Jesus wrapped in swaddling clothes. In Germany, the stollen is as much a part of Christmastide as Christmas markets and Christmas trees.

What do Germans drink with stollen? ›

8 great wine and other matches for Stollen
  • Coffee. ...
  • Schnapps. ...
  • Spätlese, auslese or beerenauslese riesling. ...
  • Dark rum. ...
  • Pineau de Charentes* ...
  • Cognac and other oak-aged brandies such as armagnac or Spanish brandy. ...
  • Marsala dolce. ...
  • Amaretto.
Dec 10, 2023

What country eats stollen for Christmas? ›

Stollen is a traditional German Christmas bread which dates as far back as the 1400s. It is defined as a folded sweet loaf filled with candied fruit.

What is the most famous stollen? ›

Saxony's World Famous Delicacy. The Dresdner Christstollen is a piece of cultural history, a centuries-old baking tradition, a prevailing passion and, above all, a delicious treat. For centuries, Dresden's bakers and pastry makers have kept up this tradition, passing it on from generation to generation.

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