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Orange and Poppy Seed Stollen

Sliced end of a fruitstudded bread loaf with its top blanketed with powdered sugar.
Photo by Jonathan Lovekin

It is with some relief, as I look down at the untidy bundle that is my home made Christmas stollen, that I remember the cake is meant to resemble the baby Jesus in swaddling clothes. There's nothing like the word 'swaddling' to give an amateur baker a comforting amount of artistic license. This recipe looks more daunting than it actually is. You basically make a bread dough with a bit of butter and egg in it, knead it for a while, the leave it alone to do its thing. Later, you knead it with fruit and spice, tuck in the marzipan and let it rest before baking. Despite its length, the recipe really couldn't be simpler, but because of its unavoidable double rising, may I suggest giving yourself plenty of time.

Ingredients

Makes one large stollen / 8 servings

For bread dough:

100g butter
500g plain all-purpose flour
40g fresh yeast (or 7g active-dry)
225ml warm milk
30g sugar
1 tsp salt
1 egg

For filling:

125g golden raisins
125g candied citrus peel
1 medium-sized orange
4 Tbsp rum or brandy
1 tsp vanilla extract
8 green cardamom pods
2 tsp poppy seeds
1 tsp ground cinnamon
50 g blanched, sliced almonds
200g marzipan
A little beaten egg

For glaze:

50g butter
Powdered sugar

Special Equipment

You will also need a large baking sheet, lined with baking parchment.

Preparation

  1. Make filling:

    Step 1

    Put the sultanas into a mixing bowl. Chop the candied citrus peel into small dice and add to the sultanas. Finely grate the zest from the orange and add to the bowl. Squeeze in the juice of the orange, pour in the rum or brandy and vanilla, then toss together and leave for an hour.

  2. Make dough:

    Step 2

    Melt the butter in a small pan, then leave to cool down. Put the flour into a large mixing bowl. No need to sieve it. If using fresh yeast, warm the milk to body temperature (it should feel comfortable rather than cold or scalding when you insert your finger), then crumble in the yeast and stir to dissolve. Add the sugar and salt to the flour and mix well. Beat the egg. Stir in the egg and the warm milk and butter. (If you are using dried yeast, add the yeast straight to the flour, then stir in the other ingredients followed by the warm milk, egg and butter.)

    Step 3

    Mix thoroughly—the dough should be soft, shiny and rather sticky. In all honesty it may be very sticky. Turn out on to a generously floured board and knead for a good eight minutes. As you knead, the dough will become less and less sticky and more like a bread dough—though it will be heavier because of the butter and egg. When the dough is soft, elastic and no longer sticking to the board, scoop it up and put it into a floured bowl. Set aside, covered with a clean tea towel, somewhere warm and draught-free for a good hour or until it is well risen. (It won't be quite twice the size of the original dough but well on the way.) Alternatively, mix and knead using a food mixer fitted with a dough hook until the dough comes cleanly away from the sides of the bowl.

  3. Assemble:

    Step 4

    Break the cardamom pods open and remove their seeds. Crush the seeds to a coarse powder using a pestle and mortar or a spice mill, then mix in a small bowl with the poppy seeds, cinnamon and almonds. Dust the work surface in the flour and tip your risen dough onto it. Knead the spice and seed mixture and the soaked fruits, leaving behind most of the liquid, into the dough.

    Step 5

    Roll into a long loaf about 22cmx16cm and flatten it slightly: Roll the marzipan into a cylinder nearly the length of the dough, then place it in the centre. Brush the edges with a little beaten egg and press together. Turn the dough over and place it on a lined baking sheet, cover with a towel and return it to a warm place to prove for a further hour and a half.

    Step 6

    Heat the oven to 350°F/180°C/Gas 4. Place the loaf in the hot oven and bake for about thirty-five to forty minutes, until pale gold. Melt the butter for the glaze and brush over the loaf. Cool on a wire rack, then dust generously with icing sugar.

  4. To Keep

    Step 7

    When the loaf is thoroughly cool, wrap loosely in waxed paper or clingfilm and keep in a cookie tin.

Note

Ring the changes with chopped dried apricots, dried cranberries or chopped and stoned prunes. You can freeze a baked stollen quite successfully.

The book cover with a slate grey background and a foreground graphic of ombré copper birch trees.
From The Christmas Chronicles: Notes, Stories & 100 Essential Recipes for Winter © 2018 by Nigel Slater. Reprinted by permission of Fourth Estate, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers. Buy the full book from HarperCollins or from Amazon.
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  • Have made this twice, once as written and once using dried blueberries instead of raisins and without Marzipan and nuts for family members with nut allergies. Comes out as a very large dense loaf. Used the mixer method. The spice mixture is excellent, although I added 1/2 tsp. Mace as well to the second loaf and I added it to the flour mixture in the second loaf for better distribution. Some minor tweaks for next time: use almond liquor to soak fruit if using Marzipan, skip the poppyseeds as they have no effect, and make 2 smaller loaves instead of the large one. While it comes out of the oven very rough looking, a generous dusting of icing sugar easily makes it attractive. Better than purchased imported ones.

    • kschubert

    • Calgary,AB

    • 12/18/2018

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