Kougelhopf - Fruit and Almond Ring, is the symbol of Alsace baking.
Gugelhupf, Kougloff, kougelhopf, or guglhopf are the various versions of the name of the famous yeast ring cake. The Alsatians have used this name from time immemorial, but they still do not know how to spell it, although they all agree that the cake is part of a good breakfast or something to eat with afternoon coffee. When a glass of Tokay Pinot Gris or Gewurztraminer is offered, a piece of cake should be offered too. Savory versions with diced bacon instead of currants accompany the aperitive.
Its appearance is due to the high-walled wavy mold in which it was baked. Traditional ringcake molds are fired in terracotta and are tile red. The name is derived from German, although it comes from Austria, from where Marie Antoinette brought the recipe to Versailles. An exception is the kougloff of Ribeauville, where the inhabitants claim that the originator of their ringcake was a former village baker.
- 2 tbsp/ 30 ml kirsch
- 1 cup/ 150 g raisins or (sultanas or Malaga currants)
- 5 cups/700 g flour
- 1 oz/ 30 g compressed yeast
- 2 cups/ 500 ml lukewarm milk
- 5 eggs
- 1 tbsp/ 10 g salt
- 2/3 cup/150 g sugar
- ¾ cup/180 g soft butter
- 2 tbsp almond flakes
Directions:
Pour the kirsch over the raisins, stir, leave covered for a few hours to soak. To prepare the starter dough sieve 2 cups/300g flour into a bowl, make a hollow in the center, crumble in the yeast, pour on half the lukewarm milk and stir. Lightly knead and leave to prove for 2 hours.
Then add the remaining milk, the remaining flour, salt, sugar, and eggs to the starter dough, mix all the ingredients well and beat vigorously for at least 10 minutes, which is very important for the texture of the cake. The loose, semi-solid dough should come away from the bowl easily. Mix in the butter and knead the mixture, until it becomes a smooth, supple dough. Now add the raisins or currants and work them in until they are evenly distributed in the dough.
Carefully grease two ringcake molds with butter and sprinkle the almond flakes evenly in them. Fill the mold up to halfway with the dough and leave to prove in a draught-free place.
Preheat the oven to 390F/200C. Bake the kougelhopf for 20-30 minutes, depending on the size of the mold. When the surface is golden brown, remove the cake from the oven and leave it to cool on a cake stand.
Tip: I don’t have two ring molds, so I used one ring mold and one pan for 6 small bandt cakes. Worked perfectly for me. I baked small cakes for only 15 minutes.
3 comments:
This is absolutely too cute and looks fantastic (your photography skills are top notch!)
I adore the fact that it is both fruity and nutty and knowing me, I will eat it breakfast, lunch and tea :D
Awesome blog post and blog itself!
Cheers
Choc Chip Uru @ Go Bake Yourself
Latest: Nutella Baking Week
http://gobakeyourself.wordpress.com/
Thank you so much, Guru Uru, and nice to meet you. You are so welcome here!
Wow! Beautiful AND delicious! I particularly liked that it had kirsch in it!
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