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Title: Gingerbread Men (Thorner Kathrinchen)
Categories: Holiday Cookie German
Yield: 1 Servings
The most popular kind of | ||
Christmas gingerbread in | ||
Eastern | ||
Germany was associated with | ||
The city of Thorn | ||
(present-day | ||
Torun), which was founded by | ||
The Teutonic Knights, was a | ||
Member | ||
The Hanseatic League, and | ||
Was the seat of a famous | ||
Medical | ||
University | ||
And Russia for several | ||
Centuries apiece; it | ||
Reverted to Poland | ||
After the First World War, | ||
Though the famous 'Thorner | ||
Kathrinchen' (Little Kates) | ||
Are still very much part of | ||
The | ||
Popular culture of the city | ||
In later years, Thorn/Torun | ||
Belonged both to Poland | ||
.. | and of Germany. |
2 Tbsp butter 1/2 cup (scant) sugar 1 cup plus 1 Tbsp honey 1 Tbsp gingerbread spices (ground cardamon, anise, cloves, cinnamon, ginger - mixed together according to taste) small pinch of salt grated peel of 1 fresh lemon 2 Tbsp sugar 1 egg yolk 2 1/2 tsp baking soda 2 Tbsp rosewater 2 1/4 cups flour vanilla or chocolate icing (optional)
Melt together the butter, sugar, and honey over low heat, then allow to cool. Add the gingerbread spices, salt, grated lemon peel, sugar, and the egg yolk; stir until lightened. Stir the baking soda into the rosewater and add to the egg yolk mixture. Combine this mixture with the flour and knead into a dough. Let stand overnight.
Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F. Generously butter a baking sheet. Roll out the dough on the sheet about 1/4 inch thick, and cut the dough into long reactangles or stamp out little gingerbread men with a cookie cutter (the original 'Kathrinchen' are shaped like the pastries called 'langues du chat', or "cat's tongues" - or ladyfingers with broadened ends). Whatever design you decide on, bake for 15 to 20 minutes. And, if you choose, frost with chocolate or vanilla icing when cookies are lukewarm.
Makes 10 servings.
From: THE CUISINES OF GERMANY by Horst Scharfenberg, Simon & Schuster/Poseidon Press, New York. 1989 Shared by: Karin Brewer, Cooking Echo, 12/93
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