Giveaway

Today is the publication day of Classic German Baking! I woke up this morning feeling like a child on Christmas morning, all full of the jitters and happy adrenaline. What an incredible journey it's been, from signing the contract in the spring of 2014, through all the months of testing and writing and testing again and writing some more, getting through the cover design, up through today. I poured my heart and soul into the book and feel so honored to be bringing not just these recipes but all this information about the wonderful German baking culture and its inherent coziness and comfort to readers everywhere. Those of you who pre-ordered your book online should be receiving it today or at least this week. As of today, you can find the book in stores. On Goodreads, you can read the first reader reviews. And next week, I start my book tour in the US. Dearest readers, I hope you love the book!

In honor of today, I'm doing a giveaway on Instagram, so head on over there to enter (click!). The winner receives a copy of the book, an antique stoneware Gugelhupf pan, and a little starter kit of specialty ingredients for German baking, which I hope is especially useful with Christmas baking lurking just around the corner. The kit includes almond paste (a recipe for which is in the book), poppy seeds, candied citron and orange peel, Lebkuchen mixed spice (a recipe for which is in the book), baking wafers for Elisenlebkuchen, baker's ammonia (not pictured, because I still have to track it down!), and potash (also known as potassium bicarbonate or potassium carbonate). Sources for all of these ingredients and more are in the book, on page 270.

As I mention in the book's acknowledgments, I could not have written the book without the essential help I received from Maja Welker, a home baker extraordinaire who assisted me throughout all the entire recipe testing process. It's no exaggeration to say that finding Maja felt like some kind of cosmic fate. I quite literally could not have found a better person to work with on this particular book. Maja kept me company in the kitchen and as I researched, got as excited about leavener variations as I did (more even, maybe?), contributed some of her favorite recipes (her Marmorkuchen, marble cake, is the best version of marble cake I've ever had), never lost steam, even in the face of nearly 10 rounds of Pfeffernüsse testing, pinch-hit on our photo re-shoot day when I was actually delirious with the flu, and generally has been an amazing friend and inspiration throughout. Which is why, on this marvelous day, I'd like to publish a little interview I did with Maja, so you can read more about the person who practically overnight became such an integral part of the book.

Maja and Aubrie

Maja and Aubrie Pick, the photographer, on the day we re-shot ten (!!) recipes for the book in my apartment.

1. So, Maja, where in Germany are you originally from?

I grew up in Uelzen, a small town south of Hamburg in the Lüneburger Heide, where Heidesand (Almond Sugar Cookies, page 15) and Heidjertorte (Lingonberry Buckwheat Cream Torte, page 119) originate from.

2. And how did you end up in Berlin?

My husband got a job here seven years ago and since I still worked as a freelance translator back then, I just packed up my desk and followed him.

3. What got you to answer my (desperate) call for help?

I had stumbled upon your blog relatively recently (on the day of the Cold Summer Borscht to be exact – where normal people have a visual or auditory memory, I have a culinary one), but was instantly hooked. Within a couple of weeks I had read your entire blog from end (= the most recent recipe) to beginning. When I saw your "Help Wanted" post it seemed as if you had tailored it just for me – but moreover, I felt we had a common style. The recipes on your blog came from real life, were meant for everyday cooking and baking and not just for show. It would have felt difficult to work in the kitchen with someone who wanted every dish and every cake to be perfect and a masterpiece. Since I had gotten tired of the solitary translator work and my other job at Pfefferkontor, a small mail-order spice shop, only kept me occupied three days a week, I decided to jump at it.

4. How old were you when you started baking?

I actually can't remember NOT baking. There is photographic evidence of me at 20 months standing next to my older sister, both of us on chairs to be able to reach the work top, rolling out dough and cutting out cookies. I actually still have some of these cookie cutters and use them every Christmas!

MajaKüche

5. Okay, so I guess that partially explains how you got to be so incredibly good at it!

It certainly helped that I like to eat! As you can see above, we were encouraged to help in the kitchen early on. I had barely learned to read when I fell in love with cookbooks (which I still read like novels, picture books and encyclopedias) and whenever I wasn't lying on the living room couch or my bed with an actual novel or a food magazine, I could be found in the kitchen baking. All in all, I spend quite some time there: braiding rich yeasted loaves for Easter breakfast, swirling Marmorkuchen for birthdays, building gingerbread houses during Christmas time – but it almost never feels like a chore. And when you find yourself with your apron on so often and loving it, you can't help but become good at it.

Lebkuchenhäuser

Maja and Bertram's homemade Lebkuchen houses. I mean!!!

5. What role did baking play in your childhood?

My mother was a wonderful cook and baker and we always had home-baked cake or cookies for Nachmittagskaffee (yes, we had some kind of baked goods and tea or coffee every single afternoon!). My father loved cake so much that every time he went grocery shopping he returned with at least one additional package of yeast "just in case you ladies were in the mood for baking a yeasted plum cake or Swedish cinnamon buns". What a shame it would have been to be out of yeast then!

6. And so what role does baking play in your life today?

Somehow, baking is therapy for me: punching and pummeling a yeasted dough, the comforting reliability of a sponge cake, the fascination of Pfitzauf (a Swabian cousin to Yorkshire pudding) rising in the oven – it always works wonders! Plus I discovered that you can make other people really happy by baking for them. In recent years we have basically stopped buying "real" birthday or hostess gifts, and make cookies instead. I had never thought about it becoming an obvious routine until I heard our friends' 5-year-old son say to his parents, "I TOLD you Maja and Bertram would bring cookies." Luckily, Bertram loves to eat and bake as well (although I'd say he has more of a normal person's approach to baking as opposed to my obsession). There are a couple of recipes in our household that he is always responsible for, like Zupfkuchen (Chocolate Quark Cheesecake, page 54), Quarkstollen (Quark-Almond Sweet Bread, page 256) or Nusskuchen (Toasted Hazelnut Loaf Cake, page 42).

Schachbrettkekse

A gift for a 4-year-old's birthday…

7. What was your favorite thing about working on Classic German Baking?

Working with someone who didn't take the German cake culture for granted but recognized it for something worth writing home about! And I loved that you are as excitable about small things as I am: the flaky crust of our very first Pflaumenstrudel (and the second! and the third!!), the soft, yielding texture of a well-kneaded yeast dough,… this list could go on for a while.

IMG_9187

Testing rhubarb cake with and without Streusel.

8. And, I have to ask…what was your least favorite thing (ack!)?

Having to drop some recipes! It wasn't so hard with a couple of them (a truly disappointing applesauce cake or some of the blander Linzer tortes) but the Rhubarb Meringue Cake? Apfelbrot? Weiße Lebkuchen? None of them made it into the final selection, but they were all delicious in their own right and I will definitely give them second (or third) chances! Oh, and sometimes it was difficult to remember to measure everything carefully. And things like, "How much longer did we bake this version of the cake until the filling finally set?" or "How much cinnamon did I add to this next batch, because the flavor of the last one was much too weak?" I guess I learned that testing recipes for a cookbook is quite different from impulsive home-baking…

Amerikaner

Testing Amerikaner with different raising agents.

9. Do you have a favorite recipe in the book?

No chance! I couldn't even pick one favorite from each chapter, so I won't try.

10. Which of the recipes in Classic German Baking have become favorites in your home now?

Some of them were favorites even before (like Marmorkuchen (Marble Cake, page 72), Zwiebelkuchen (Savory Onion Cake, page 152) or Schwarz-Weiss-Gebäck (Checkerboard Cookies, page 16). But I have definitely added Quarkbrötchen (Sweet Quark Rolls, page 188), Schwäbischer Prasselkuchen (Swabian Streusel-Jam Slices, page 34) and Salzekuchen (Hessian Potato Cake, page 156) to my monthly rota!

Mohnhörnchen

Testing Mohnhörnchen on a weekend.

11. Okay, now the really important questions: First of all, when do you start baking for Christmas?

As we always get together with my sister on the first Advent weekend, I try to have at least 5 or 6 different homemade cookies for our Adventskaffeetrinken ready by then. To be able to achieve this, I usually start preparing different doughs sometime in early November and stash them in the freezer. Nussstangen (Hazelnut-Almond Batons, page 238) are always among these! Other cookies have to ripen anyway, so I start baking Lebkuchen in the middle of November.

12. And what are you planning on baking for Advent and Christmas this year?

The usual: some new recipes, some old ones (the old ones being traditional cookies from Bertram's family, or from my family, the better ones in the "new" category from recent years – it's an ever-growing list!). I never manage to bake all of the different cookies I write down on my "to-bake" list sometime in November, but we usually have between 14 and 18 different kinds. Plus I really want delve into Lebkuchen a bit more this year. And yes, Christmas in our home is mostly cookies – plus Linzer Torte (page 134) and maybe a Baumkuchen (page 259).

As usual, Maja, I'm in awe. Thank you, thank you, thank you for everything!

Note: This post includes affiliate links and I may earn a commission if you purchase through these links, at no cost to you. I use affiliate links only for products I love and companies I trust. Thank you.

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84 responses to “Classic German Baking, Out Now!”

  1. Joe Avatar

    I thought the streusel above was feta until i looked closer 😉
    You two! Congrats!!!

    Like

  2. lw Avatar
    lw

    The library’s copy came last week and I peeked. What a wonderful book! I’m sure it will be very popular here.

    Like

  3. jemima Avatar
    jemima

    What a lovely person and a lovely interview! Pairing up on this project was clearly kismet for both of you. Now I REALLY can’t wait for my copy of Classic German Baking to arrive. Face pressed up against the window watching for the little Amazon truck to come tootling along. xo

    Like

  4. alexandra Avatar

    I LOVE the cover, and I’m so excited for your book!! Fun reading all of this.

    Like

  5. Wendy Avatar
    Wendy

    Mazel tov! A true labor of love and friendship. Looking forward to trying many of these recipes.

    Like

  6. Maja Avatar
    Maja

    Luisa, it was an honour working with you on this book and a pleasure talking leavener!
    I miss how my hands always smelled of butter when I came home after a day spent in your kitchen and as of today, I will sit next to the phone waiting for your call that I may start researching for “Even More Classic German Baking”.
    Tonight, Bertram and I will celebrate with an extra-large Salzekuchen!
    And yes, I tend to re-use my baking parchment…

    Like

  7. Zsuzsa Avatar
    Zsuzsa

    Luisa, congrats on your new publication! I am sure it will make its way on my bookshelf, like “My Berlin Kitchen” did…

    Like

  8. bea Avatar
    bea

    Congratulations! you made it!!!

    Like

  9. Emily Avatar

    I can’t wait to get my hands on a copy! And this is a great interview. Maja sounds so lovely and warm; I’d love to meet her and bake with her.
    Congratulations!
    (Also, rhubarb meringue cake?!? insert heart eyes emoji)

    Like

  10. Luisa Avatar
  11. Luisa Avatar
  12. Luisa Avatar

    Kismet indeed! Hope your copy comes soon and that you LOVE it! xo

    Like

  13. Luisa Avatar
  14. Luisa Avatar
  15. Luisa Avatar

    She is the best! Thank you.

    Like

  16. Luisa Avatar
  17. Luisa Avatar
  18. Luisa Avatar

    Ha, I’m still traumatized by the smell of butter in my hair, but I miss baking with you so much! Bis morgen… xo

    Like

  19. Becca Avatar
    Becca

    Luisa, I have been so excited for this book and eagerly following on Instagram. I couldn’t wait for my copy to arrive from Amazon so I actually bought it on my phone, too! It is absolutely gorgeous and makes me miss Europe terribly. You’ve even made me add Kassel to the list! I can’t wait to be back in Europe at Christmas. Congrats and enjoy the glow and sense of accomplishment that comes after years of hard work!

    Like

  20. Abby Avatar
    Abby

    Luisa, I received my pre-order copy today and I have never been so happy getting a cookbook (or so moved I had to comment!!). I knew it would be full of wonderful recipes, but I did not expect so many beautiful photos of Berlin. I went to Berlin for the first time by myself when I graduated from college 2 years ago and spent a wonderful week wandering, drinking coffee, eating cake and cheesecake, and have been back three times since then with family. I have German heritage but it never really clicked for me until my sister and I were pounding down cake and marzipan on the grounds of Scholss Charlottenburg, or eating wonderful kirschestreuselkuchen with my mother as the snow fell outside. We’re blessed with my great grandmother’s old school american recipes from Boston, but I hope in 60 years I can bake beautiful German yeasted cakes that the next generations will remember. Thank you for a beautiful book, it is already a classic and a joy!

    Like

  21. Dani Avatar

    Congratulations!! and thanks for sharing this interview with Maja, it was lovely to read about your Classic German Baking kitchen ninja 🙂
    Cannot wait to get into Christmas baking this year, just need to find a springle mould and I’ll be sorted.
    Thanks again
    x

    Like

  22. Soulfoodgiesing.blogspot.com Avatar

    Dear Luisa, will the book also be available in German at some point?

    Like

  23. Luisa Avatar

    There are no plans for a German edition at this point…

    Like

  24. Luisa Avatar

    Thank you. I have lots of sources for Springerle molds in the back of the book! You might want more than one… 🙂

    Like

  25. Luisa Avatar

    Thank you so much, Abby. I hope that you’ll be baking lovely German things a lot sooner than 60 years from now! 🙂 Anyway, Schloss Charlottenburg may be one of my very favorite places in Berlin, sigh, how lovely to imagine you eating cake there! 🙂

    Like

  26. Luisa Avatar
  27. Thomas Avatar
    Thomas

    Danke! Danke! Danke! As someone who was raised in Germany but now lives in the US, I’ve been waiting for a book like this. I forgot that I had pre-ordered it and was thrilled when it showed up yesterday in my mailbox. Can’t wait to get in the Küche.

    Like

  28. Amanda Avatar
    Amanda

    I received my copy of Classic German Baking in the mail Monday and have been trying to find moments to read it – not so easy with a three-year-old little boy who just desperately wants to look at the beautiful pictures 🙂 My brother has lived in Munich for 15 years, and my favorite part of the years he gets to visit us here in Virginia for Christmas (aside from the quality time, of course!) are the packages of Lebkuchen and Vanillekipferl he brings us… we always have to ration them carefully! It’s still hard for me to imagine being able to make delicious Lebkuchen at home myself, but with your guidance, I will certainly give it a try! Many congratulations on your beautiful book.

    Like

  29. ulrike Avatar
    ulrike

    Recived my copy, decided to baker Spandauer Zimt brezel. Did so….and now 3 happy children asking for more. Thank you for this great collection! Will ask the Apotheke for bakers ammonia.

    Like

  30. Luisa Avatar

    So happy to hear it! You can get Hirschhornsalz at most grocery stores now; I know Netto is already stocking it for Christmastime…

    Like

  31. Luisa Avatar

    You can do it, I promise! 🙂 Thank you so much for your lovely words. Hope you get some quiet time with the book soon!

    Like

  32. Luisa Avatar

    You are so welcome! Viel Spaß beim Backen!

    Like

  33. Julia Avatar
    Julia

    The lovely Hermes delivery guy dropped my book off an hour ago and I haven’t had a chance to open it yet, because my baby won’t sleep without me by her side, but I’m sooooooo excited! The cover is just perfect. I really like the little cake. 🙂 Being German, I actually have a lot of German baking books, but somehow, they are not quite… right, I suppose. It’s difficult to explain, but I feel like there isn’t the same enthusiasm for food/baking in Germany as there is in the English-speaking world (plenty of counter-examples come to mind, of course, but I think it’s true in general). After all, one if not the most popular German baking book (the German “Joy of Cooking”, if you will) is on its umpteenth printing and is published by Dr. Oetker. I’ve always felt it was less about taste and more about showcasing their products.
    I guess what I’m saying is that it was about time that someone wrote and published a modern collection of well-tested German recipes.
    And judging from your blog, you were just the person to do it. We’re doing Eingewöhnung at the daycare tomorrow and I’m taking the book! I will have three hours to read it front to back and decide what I’ll be making first! 🙂

    Like

  34. Katharina Avatar

    Waiting for my copies (2 to give for Nikolaustag) and in awe how much binds so many of us in what our mothers, grandmothers, aunts and cousins baked and cooked for us. I do hope we will get to see some of the “dropped” recipes sometime soon! Thank you for creating such a wonderful project!

    Like

  35. Joanne Bayly Avatar
    Joanne Bayly

    Maja sounds so wonderful…thanks for the interview with her. I have pre-ordered your book here in Montreal and expect it next week, just in time to practice recipes for Christmas!

    Like

  36. Giulia Avatar

    Congratulations! And I loved that you used publication day to take the spotlight off yourself and share Maja with us! I also love that this is a project backed by strong and distinctive women – we need a little girl power these days so close to the election (or a lot).

    Like

  37. Kylee Avatar
    Kylee

    My book came today!! I love it and can’t wait to get started. My husband is German and we (we being me! He eats it 😉 have already started a Saturday morning baking ritual with our three year old twins. I just cannot wait to start baking from your book! I’m reading it cover to cover right now and was moved to comment on how lovely it all looks. (It’s even dragging me away from the debate, ha)

    Like

  38. Mary Avatar
    Mary

    That’s what caught my eye too! I was sohappy to see a rhubarb cake in the book, but now I must know more about the rhubarb meringue cake.
    Wonderful interview! I will have to have a closer book to see where potash is used. Intriguing!

    Like

  39. Mary@Sifting Focus Avatar

    Congratulations Luisa! I just received my copy of your book. I’m beyond delighted to have this treasure of recipes in my hands, and what wonderful timing. For most of my childhood, my mother worked at our neighborhood German bakery. Sadly, the bakery went out of business years ago, and with that closing went the recipes. I have been obsessing lately on memories of several baked goods from that bakery of my childhood. I’m so delighted to have already found recipes for two of those baked goods in your book. I can’t wait to get baking. This Christmas, I plan on surprising my siblings, who share the same cravings as I, with some baked goods from our youth.

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  40. Luisa Avatar

    Julia, I am so glad you like the cover and I hope you love the book!

    Like

  41. Luisa Avatar
  42. Luisa Avatar
  43. Luisa Avatar

    Thanks, Giulia!

    Like

  44. Luisa Avatar

    How lovely are baking rituals with children? The best. Thank you!

    Like

  45. Luisa Avatar

    Oh, how lovely. I very much hope the book feeds you well over the years! Thank you.

    Like

  46. Julia Avatar
    Julia

    Coming back here to say that I do indeed love the book! I’ve never wanted to make every single recipe in a book before! Also, I will be paying a visit to Hutzelmann’s bakery very soon. Thank you again, Luisa!

    Like

  47. Donna Avatar
    Donna

    This looks just lovely and is on my Christmas wish list! I know it would bring joy to my German husband’s heart if we were able to bake goodies from his childhood at home. I just have one question: we don’t have a stand mixer (only a food processor and a handheld electric beater). What proportion of the recipes are likely to be difficult or impossible without one?

    Like

  48. Lindsay | Please Pass the Peas Avatar

    Lovely of you to recognize her in this way. Also, rhubarb meringue cake!?! Tell us more, please.

    Like

  49. Luisa Avatar

    Out of more than 100 recipes, only two or three really require a stand mixer! A handheld beater is way more important, especially if it has a whisk attachment for beating egg whites and whipping cream…

    Like

  50. Donna Avatar
    Donna

    Oh that’s great to know Luisa – thanks for taking the time to reply!

    Like

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