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Monday, 9 December 2013

Elisenlebkuchen, my favourite German Christmas Cookies

Elisen Lebkuchen (German Christmas Cookies, Nürnberger Lebkuchen)

This could be translated as "Eliza honey cake, ginger bread cookies" but there is no honey and only moderate ginger in this recipe.
I could probably find some of these in one of the better food stores. They would look more perfect of course. But this way I know exactly what the ingredients are and, it is always something special when home made.
Some I made a little smaller, they taste like macaroons.
Together with Hubby's favourites for coffee we are ready for Christmas!

Ingredients: (ca 20)
5 eggs
400 g (2 cups) sugar
100 g (2/3 cup) Orangeat (minced candied orange) I used candied orange peel
100 g (2/3 cup) Zitronat (minced candied lemon)  I used 1 tsp lemon zest
200 g (1 1/3 cup) Hazelnuts
200 g (1 1/3 cup) Almonds
  50 g (1/3 cup) Walnuts
1 tsp Orange Extract (could not find that)
1 tsp Lemon Extract  (could not find that)
5 tsp Lebkuchen Seasoning ( DIY, see below)
1 tsp Vanilla Extract
1/2 tsp Rum Extract
1/2 tsp Almond Extract
1 tsp salt

How to:
The first day:
Beat the eggs and sugar to a foamy cream.
Grind up nuts into a fine flour. Mince Orangeat and Zitronat in a blender.
Chop walnuts into smaller pieces.

Mix Lebkuchen seasoning with the nut flour and candied fruit bits and blend well with the egg cream. It is a very sticky dough. Cover with plastic and cool in the refrigerator the night over. ( I had it in the fridge for 2 days and still it baked well).



The next day.
Pre-heat the oven to 350 °F (180 °C)
With the help of two tablespoons place an egg-sized amount of the dough on a lightly floured surface. Dust with flour and roll into a small ball by hand. Place the balls onto a cookie sheet, covered with baking paper, and flatten them slightly.
Bake fir about 15 minutes. Don't over-bake, the cookies should still be soft inside and lightly brown on the outside.



They may be covered with lemon icing or melted chocolate. If you buy "Elisenkuchen" in a box you will find half of them are covered with chocolate the other half with lemon icing.

My own experience:
I didn't find all the ingredients, but the cookies tasted very good nonetheless.

I placed the dough with two spoons right onto the cookie sheet and formed them with the spoons, dipped in water, so that the dough didn't stick. That was the easiest and less messiest way to do it.

I also added more than told in the ingredient list.
You can add 100 g (1 1/3 cup) of each:
Minced apricot, raisins, figs, dates, marzipan, brazil nuts.
Add another egg per 200 g added ingredients.

Lebkuchen-Seasoning home made:

2 tsp Cinnamon
1 tsp Ginger, powdered
1/2 tsp Cardamom, powdered
1/4 tsp Clover, powdered
(1/4 tsp Allspice) optional
(1/4 tsp Nutmeg) optional
1/2 tsp Rum Flavour
1/2 tsp Almond Flavour
1/2 tsp Butter Vanilla Flavour

Lemon Icing
150 g Icing sugar ( add 1 tbls cocoa for a fake chocolate cover)
ca 1 tsp lemon juice (use water when using cocoa)
Brush onto the warm cookies. Cool so completely.

Thursday, 5 December 2013

Something out of nothing.

A pot of Impatiens (not impatience), a gift from departing summer-friends. I tried to keep it blooming as long as possible. 
This was what it looked like when I departed the house for two weeks. 
November 8th.  
 It looked like THIS when I came back November 22nd. Barely alive. 
It sat in plain view on the window sill in our living room and needed just a little water every other day. 
Men! UGH!
With just a little TLC and water I coaxed 
it back to life. 
Today, December 5th.
the first bloom appeared!
YEAH!

That's just a little bit of our every day adventures here at home. 
That is making something out of nothing and blog about it. :))


Monday, 2 December 2013

In the Mood at Dusk

We have never been in our house longer than early November. So, this is the first time we decorate it for the Christmas Season.

We went upstairs and found long stored away cases of ornaments and lights. This is the result.
Seasonal inside and outside...
As it was gently raining/snowing I went out to take these shots. Hence the dots in the photos.

Even as I miss being in the desert southwest it does look cosy to me.
With that I can sing: "Let it snow, let it snow, let it snow..."
What do you think?

Sunday, 1 December 2013

Now and then

What a difference mere there weeks can make. The leafs are gone and we made it to December.

The "season" is over us again.
When I was young I was used to go Christmas shopping in December. I went quietly around with my list and got all my errands done by Christmas Eve. The mood was full of expectation, festive.
I borrowed two photos to explain what I remember.
Now I don't go x-mas shopping any more.
Be it Grey Thursday or Black Friday.
I watched some video clips, though, and whatever you think:
people turned into a greedy, screaming crowd, manipulated by advertisements, just grabbing as many items as they could is disgusting.

I have no desire to participate in this kind of crazy frenzy.
I never did and I never will.


That is that.

Now.
Still at home, still not sure whether we will go south or not.
Today it is mild. Just 5°C (41°F) and NO wind for once.

I thought I give you an idea about how it looked like when I glanced out through my windows this morning.
November 4th versus December 1st: 
garden view early November
and this morning...
view out of my kitchen window..
view this morning...
...and out of the bedroom upstairs. 
OOPS, is J.P. going berserk on the car, or???
 I run downstairs and out of the back entrance......no, he was just chopping more firewood. Whew! LOL



Windy and cold at Liberty Point.
Nov.28
That was a cold day, -7°C (19°F) and strong wind so that the wind chill it felt like -11° C (12° F).


After the wood chopping he was ready for his favourite German winter dish:
Kale, caramelized potatoes and smoked pork chops.

That is it for today.
Stay warm were ever you are!