A few of you have written to check if I'm doing okay. Thank you so much for your sweet notes. I'm doing just fine. December was a blur of working on the developmental edit of the German baking book, which is now officially titled Classic German Baking (ready your bookshelves!) and then the utter madness of the holidays. We stayed at home in Berlin, hoping for a quiet break, and ended up hosting countless breakfasts, lunches, and teas with friends and family from out of town. The dishwasher ran once a day and the days flew by. It was lovely and fun, but not what I'd call restorative. So January is turning out to be a slow one for me and I'm very grateful for it.

The work on the book is not yet over. I'm waiting to get the manuscript back from the copy editor because I have countless little fixes here and there to make, testing notes to incorporate and final cuts to make. To give you just the tiniest glimpse of what the past 18 months have been like in terms of recipe testing on the cookbook, here's just a small selection of the hundreds and hundreds of recipes we – my intrepid assistant Maja and I – tested. It's funny to look back at these photos now. It's like gazing at a beloved relative. They all seem so familiar and easy to me now that I've made them dozens of times. I can't wait for the book to be published for many reasons, but one of the main ones is that I'm really looking forward to baking from it myself. For the rest of my life!

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Bite-sized Elisenlebkuchen, flourless and rich with nuts and marzipan.

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Two-month-aged (yes!), old-fashioned Lebkuchen dough. These cookies, once baked and cooled, get enrobed in chocolate. They keep forever and get more and more delicious as they age. I'm obsessed. Worth mixing the batter in October, I swear.

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Hessian potato cake studded with caraway and bacon. Can't remember the number of times this was made – we loved it immensely.

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Zimtsterne, only the fussiest cookie known to man. So crisp-chewy and wonderful that they're worth the effort, though.

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Yeasted dough, number 6,754. I can make this stuff in my sleep now.

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Russischer Zupfkuchen, not Russian at all, but much loved all over Germany. Cocoa crust, sweet Quark filling, more cocoa crust on top. Yeah, it's pretty great.

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Yeast dough number-who-even-cares-anymore. Still beautiful, each time I make one.

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Ground poppy seed filling. Prepare yourselves, bakers: You are going to want a poppy seed grinder come this autumn. I have this one (it's a third of the price here in Germany).

I'd love to keep you posted and updated on the book as it goes forward. Do you have any questions about the process that you'd like me to write about? And soon: bonus recipes for you to try!

Happy new year to you all. xo

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57 responses to “Classic German Baking Comes to Life”

  1. Lindsay | Please Pass the Peas Avatar

    Thanks for the update. I never even knew I was interested in German Baking, but I am very much looking forward to your book. I would love to hear more about the process, especially the recipe selection/testing. Are most of the recipes things you have always loved to make or recipes you tried and developed specifically for the book? Did you have any total flops? Does the publisher also test the recipes and do you test with specific brands of flour, butter and so on? How much of a say do you get in things like the cover photo and overall look of the book? So many questions… Congrats on the book.

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  2. Gerlinde Avatar

    Good morning from Santa Cruz, I’m so glad your are well and your new book is almost finished. I can’t wait to buy it for myself and my friends. It looks wonderful and I can just imagine all the work and effort you put into it. A happy and healthy New Year to you and your family .

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  3. Molly Avatar

    Beautiful photos, and I CANNOT WAIT FOR THAT BOOK. xoxo!

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  4. Joy Avatar
    Joy

    Really looking forward to this book! We have German au pairs, so it will be nice to be able to make them treats from home. Sounds like you’ve thoroughly tested the recipes in Germany, but understanding is that US butter, flour, etc taste and bake differently than European ingredients. What will be your process for testing these recipes with US ingredients?

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  5. Chelsea Avatar

    Happy New Year! It’s so nice to have you back, and I can’t wait for this book to come out. What an absolute gem this will be for all those who are (rightfully) fascinated by traditional German treats. It’s so fun to see some images of what you’ve been up to!

    Like

  6. Carla Kremer Avatar
    Carla Kremer

    Hi Luisa – I am very excited about your new book. What are you suggesting as an American substitute for Quark?

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  7. claire Avatar
    claire

    hi Luisa, good to hear from you! I am looking forward to recipes using poppy seeds, I buy them for a specific cake and never seem to manage to finish them.. cheers from Göttingen

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  8. Bethia Avatar

    Is there a release date planned yet? Hoping we’ll have the book in time to make the lebkuchen dough 🙂

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  9. Jennifer Jo Avatar

    Can not wait!!!!

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  10. amelia Avatar

    Holy sh*t. This book is going to be amazing.

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  11. Beth Avatar
    Beth

    I’m so glad you shared your preferred poppyseed grinder, and that you have had good luck with it. I was going to order that very one from Amazon for my Christmas baking, but the comments from purchasers convinced me otherwise. I wonder if it’s more sturdily built for the German market?

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  12. Dani Avatar

    I am so excited for this book!! I’m glad your back online, I missed you 🙂
    Q, will it use cups, ounces or grams for the first print?

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  13. D Avatar

    I’m really looking forward to your book! My German-American grandmother was a wonderful baker but died when I was very young and she never passed on her recipes to my mom. My mom recalls longingly Grandma’s baking and I’d love to create some of the baked goods she remembers for her sake and to eventually pass on to our son (who is just a tad younger than your Hugo). So thank you so much for helping us recreate a connection to our family’s history.

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  14. Laura Giovanelli Avatar
    Laura Giovanelli

    Hi Luisa!
    I’m a big fan! And as a fellow writer, I’d love to know what the process was like collecting and narrowing down particularly “German” recipes, and for particularly for you, someone who has had many “homes,” including Germany, what that felt like.
    Many thanks! I’m looking forward to this book and gifting it liberally. When’s the publication date?
    Laura

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  15. Kelleyn Avatar

    Zimt Sterne are my favorite! Glad your back! Happy New Year!

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  16. Gabrielle Hagedorn Avatar
    Gabrielle Hagedorn

    Ich freue mich!

    Like

  17. jenny leigh Avatar
    jenny leigh

    Happy New Year Luisa from France!
    I look forward to your book. I am wondering if you will also have recipes for breads to make in bread machines? We got a fantastic bread machine which we use 3 times a week. Also, will your book have recipes w alternative to wheat flours, such as rice, quinoa, millet, buckwheat, teff, chickpea etc. No, I am German and loooove my gluten, but also love other high-protein flours. Just wondering.
    All the best,
    Jenny

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  18. Carmit Avatar

    I’d love to hear about the editing process, particularly the developmental edit.

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  19. Carol Avatar
    Carol

    Ich freue mich! I studied in Marburg for a year at the university there. Am looking forward to your book and recreating some of the delicious pastries, etc., I sampled that year.

    Like

  20. Carol Avatar
    Carol

    I have found Quark here in the U.S. You might surprise yourself by finding it not too far away.

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  21. Shaun Avatar

    Looks so good! I’m traveling to Germany in December and can’t wait to try the food!

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  22. kate Avatar
    kate

    So lovely to have you back!!!! Anxiously awaiting the book…the photos are tantalizing and bring back memories of my Grandmother’s baking many years ago.

    Like

  23. Ruth F. Avatar
    Ruth F.

    Happiest new year, Luisa. Nothing I’m looking forward to more than The Book. Just read this and thought of you:
    “Marie took out a pan of delicate little rolls, stuffed with stewed apricots, and began to dust them over with powdered sugar. ‘I hope you like this, Mrs. Lee, Alexandra does. The Bohemians always like them with their coffee. But if you don’t, I have coffee-cake with nuts and poppy seeds… ‘The Bohemians,’ said Alexandra,..’certainly know how to make more kinds of bread than any other people in the world.’” from O Pioneers!

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  24. gplauren @inforacupinforapound Avatar

    Thanks for that update. I’m glad everything’s going well.
    A poppy seed grinder, though? I’ve never heard of such a thing, actually! But I might have to look into that…what things do you make with it besides a paste?

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  25. Joy Avatar
    Joy

    I am so looking forward to your book. I can’t wait to read it. And bonus recipes…yeah!

    Like

  26. Elemjay Avatar
    Elemjay

    Can’t believe no one has asked this one yet – when you make so many trial recipes what do you do with all the end results? Probably not eat them all – pass on to others, throw away? Also I can imagine the cost of ingredients gets pretty pricey – is this something the publisher funds or does it come out of your own pocket?
    Hope these questions aren’t too cheeky……
    Thank you!

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  27. Charlotte Avatar
    Charlotte

    I was very happy to see this post. Cannot wait for the book especially after seeing all your photos on IG. Good luck with the tweaks.

    Like

  28. Anita Avatar
    Anita

    Luisa – thank you, thank you, thank you for all your hard work! I could not be more excited for this book – can’t wait! Sending you best wishes from Australia.

    Like

  29. Alexandra Holbrook Avatar
    Alexandra Holbrook

    Hello! I am SOOOOOO excited for “Classic German Baking” to come out! And Lebkuchen are my sister’s very favorite cookie in the whole world, so I am anxiously awaiting the tro-month ahead recipe!
    I would love to learn more above your recipe development and testing methods, or really anything about the process of writing a cookbook would be very interesting. How do you cater recipes for readers in US versus Europe, etc.
    Thanks from Boston!

    Like

  30. Helena Avatar
    Helena

    Really looking forward to the book. And I’m also concerned to know if it will be out in time for us to make the lebkuchen dough two months before Christmas 🙂

    Like

  31. Lisa Avatar
    Lisa

    I’m personally on the hunt for a good Marmorkuchen recipe, because my favorite bakery has stopped carrying it recently, and their version had such a velvety crumb with i think a light lemon syrup. it was delicious. so if you are thinking of posting a recipe as an early gift, that would be very much appreciated! i’m very much looking forward to this book, as an American living in Germany, i’ve definitely looked for recipes of german cakes, but i find the websites lacking and the books, well i don’t know them. Except for Hildegard von Bingen 🙂

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  32. Anne Avatar

    The pictures look great and indeed very German, but Elisenlebkuchen with Marzipan…? Where do you find the small size wafers in Berlin? Good luck with the book!
    Wish I would have time to publish all the delicious baking recipes of my mother, grandmother and aunts handed down since generations from all parts of Germany. They are and were famous as bakers, especially for Christmas baking.
    To Lisa: There is wonderful new book full with all the good old German/Austrian christmas bakery: Ulrike Hornberg and Pierre Reboul, “Feinste Weihnachtsbäckerei”.

    Like

  33. Deborah W Avatar
    Deborah W

    Very much looking forward to the book. Will it by any chance have a recipe for mandelhoernchen? I have become slightly obsessed with perfecting them and recipes differ very widely.

    Like

  34. nina Avatar
    nina

    I grind mine in a little Krups coffee grinder/spice mill which seems to handle poppy seeds well also.

    Like

  35. Luisa Avatar

    Yes, Elisenlebkuchen made with Marzipanrohmasse along with tons of ground nuts. Can I ask why the question mark? We found many, many recipes for them which included it and the results are fantastic. Rich, chewy, delicious. I have found the small wafers everywhere from my local Kaisers to Netto.

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  36. Luisa Avatar

    Yes, there is a recipe for Mandelhörnchen!

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  37. Luisa Avatar

    Yes, a coffee grinder is a great alternative. I was a little perplexed by all those negative reviews. The Westmark one I have is quite sturdy and we used it a lot. (A LOT. Sigh.)

    Like

  38. Luisa Avatar

    That is so perfect!! xo

    Like

  39. Lisa Avatar
    Lisa

    Thanks Anne for the recommendation! I ended up eating cookies from friends this season, although I did make lemon bars to give away 🙂

    Like

  40. Clara Avatar

    It’s so good to hear from you! Boy have you been busy. Thank you for doing this book. Your pictures and descriptions are captivating. Keep on huffing and puffing and doing the noble work of birthing a book, and know that we are here, ready to snatch our copies and hold your back.

    Like

  41. Lisa Avatar
    Lisa

    Also, can someone point me to a Marmorkuchen recipe? I love a good one, but a lot of the ones I taste are a bit dry.. much appreciated 🙂

    Like

  42. Anne Avatar
    Anne

    Yay! You’re back! I checked earlier this week and was slightly worried but I can see that this wonderful book has clearly taken up all of your time. I am really excited as my grandmother was German, an excellent baker and NEVER cooked from a recipe! I can’t wait to see what’s in it and hope I can make things for my father that he loved. We both pine for a plum cake she made in late summer that had juicy italian plums that were submerged in a buttery cake.
    I was wondering if a baking cookbook was harder to write or if each cookbook has it’s own set of challenges. Also, where do you get your recipe ideas from for baking and when do you stop writing or searching for recipes? And, of course the most crucial question: when will it be available in the US or in English (my German is extremely limited) Many thanks! answer what you can!

    Like

  43. joy Avatar
    joy

    If you live near a Russian store, Russian tvorog can be a good substitute for quark.

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  44. Luisa Avatar

    Thank you, Clara!! xo

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  45. Luisa Avatar

    Yes, it will! Pub date is October 18.

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  46. Luisa Avatar

    I’ll answer your question in the next go-around!

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  47. Luisa Avatar

    Not cheeky at all! I’ll answer your questions in the next go-around.

    Like

  48. Luisa Avatar

    The book is being published in English! All your other questions I’ll answer in the next go-around.

    Like

  49. Adelaide Mueller Avatar
    Adelaide Mueller

    Hi, I’d love to help test kasekuchen. Just sent an email to you. Thank you!

    Like

  50. Anja Avatar

    Looking at your photos makes me miss Germany and German food so much. I can’t wait for the book to come out!

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