German Mom's Springerle
Submitted by wwilliams
German springerle, the classic embossed anise cookie made with eggs, sugar, flour, and crushed anise seed. Patterned with a springerle roller and dried overnight to lock in the design before baking.
YIELD
48 servingsPREP
45 minCOOK
15 minREADY
9 hrsSpringerle cookies are the heirloom German Christmas treat that bridges art and baking. Every cookie comes out with a pale, raised picture pressed into the top from a hand-carved roller or wooden mold, and the cookie itself is hard, slightly chewy, perfumed with anise.
The magic ingredient is the long air-dry. After cutting, the cookies sit at room temperature for 6 to 8 hours before baking. That waiting time lets the surface form a dry skin, which is what locks in the pattern when the cookie hits the oven. Skip the dry, and the design puffs and blurs in the heat.
The anise treatment matters too. Pouring boiling water over the anise seed wakes up its essential oils and lets them perfume the dough deeply, instead of leaving the seeds inert and weak.
These are dunking cookies. They’re hard out of the oven and meant to be dipped into hot coffee or sweet German wine to soften.
Pro Tips
- Don’t skimp on the air-drying. Without that 6-8 hour rest, the patterns blur during baking and you’ve wasted the effort of using the roller.
- Beat the eggs and sugar until the mixture is pale, thick, and forms ribbons. This air structure is what gives springerle their signature lift.
- Bake just until the bottoms are golden but the tops stay pale white. Browned springerle are over-baked and lose the pattern visibility.
- Store in an airtight tin with a slice of apple or piece of bread for 1 week before serving. The cookies absorb the moisture and soften into perfect chewy texture.
Variations
- Swap anise seed for 1 teaspoon of lemon zest for a citrus version popular in Bavaria.
- Use ½ teaspoon of cardamom and 1 teaspoon vanilla for a warmer, less licorice-leaning flavor.
- Add a pinch of hartshorn salt (baker’s ammonia) instead of baking powder for the most authentic crackly traditional texture.
Ingredients
Directions
Sift flour; measure; add baking powder and sift again.
To well-beaten eggs gradually add the sugar, beating until very thick.
Pour boiling water over anise seed and add to egg mixture.
Stir in the flour.
Chill.
Roll on a lighly floured board to ¼ inch thickness; then roll again with a springerle roller to make designs.
Cut the cookies at the marked outlines and place on an ungreased cooky sheet.
Let dry 6 to 8 hours at room temperature.
Bake in a moderate oven (375 F) 12 to 15 minutes or until brown.
Makes 4 dozen cookies.
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