Browsing Tag

fruited bread

Christmas

Christmas Stollen (Fruited Sweet Bread)

December 12, 2025

Everyone knows the Brothers Grimm, but there’s another pair of German brothers to thank for the origins of stollen, the rich, fruit-laden bread that’s become a holiday tradition. In medieval Germany, the Advent season was marked by fasting, and bakers were forbidden by the church to use butter–only oil was allowed. But in 15th-century Saxony, oil was scarce, expensive, and (if food historians I’ve researched are accurate) made from turnips (!) So, Prince Elector Ernst and his brother Duke Albrecht, petitioned the Pope in Rome for permission to use butter instead of oil in their Advent bread.

Their request was denied. Repeatedly. It took five popes and nearly 40 years before Pope Innocent VIII finally issued the famous “Butter Letter,” granting Saxon royals the right to use butter in their holiday bread. (The general public could only do too–but only if they paid a fee.) 

Centuries later, stollen remains a beloved holiday treat in Germany and beyond. The Saxon brothers would be pleased to see today’s recipes loaded with butter, dried fruit and even bits of marzipan. Our version makes four small, or three medium, loaves–perfect for your holiday table with enough to share. Continue Reading…

St. Patrick's Day

Irish Barmbrack Bread

March 15, 2025

Happy St Patrick’s Day (!) from me and this beautiful barmbrack (bairin breac or speckled loaf” in Gaelic,) a fragrant Irish bread studded with whiskey-and-tea-soaked dried fruit.   Like Mardi Gras king cakes which come with good luck tokens hidden inside (coins, rings, plastic baby figurines), Irish barmbrack is also often baked with trinkets in it that follow Druidic fortune-telling traditions: Coins for good fortune, thimbles predicting spinster or bachelorhood, beans portending poverty etc. I kept this recipe trinket-free, figuring that the whiskey-soaked fruit is treasure enough.  Recipe yields one, fragrant, lightly sweet bread that’s very good eaten right out of the oven or toasted the next day and spread with plenty of Irish butter. And for more St. Patrick’s Day fare, try our Colcannon, our Ballymaloe Irish Stew and our  Corned Beef Hash for corned. beef leftovers the day after.