Berliner Kranser-Norweigan Christmas Cookies-Winter

Berliner Kranser-Norweigan Christmas Cookies

Berliner Kranser-Norweigan Christmas Cookies
Every year my grandmother made these cookies at her oak wood kitchen table that now has a place in my kitchen. It was always the weekend after Thanksgiving. She and her sister mastered these cookies at a young age when the first arrived in Baltimore from Norway. They made them effortlessly, she shaped them with mechanical precision. The wreath shape and size were always consistent and they were never over or under baked. I'm sure the reason she could she could roll and cut Berliner Kranser (Berlin Wreaths) into perfect wreaths was she started making these for guests of my great-grandfather the sea captain when she was 8 years old.

These are my all time favorite Christmas cookies.The texture is unlike another cookie you've ever tasted. They are delicate but have character and complexity, the Liv Ullmann of Christmas cookies.

Changing the shape to a small ball makes them suitable for anytime you want a delicate butter cookie. But traditionally they were only for Christmas my grandmother would make so many they'd last until Easter stored in old pretzel tins.

Makes about 10 dozen cookies.

4 hard boiled yolks
4 raw yolks, reserve the whites for the topping
1 cup sugar
1 pound (4 sticks) unsalted butter, soft
4-5 cups all-purpose, sifted

Topping:
1 cup granulated sugar
4 egg whites

1. Line 2 sheet pans with parchment paper or use silpat. Preheat the oven to 350F degrees.

2. In a large bowl mix the yolks and sugar until smooth with a wooden spoon

3. Add ¼ the butter and ¼ the flour to the yolks continue alternating between the flour and the butter until all butter is mixed in. Add enough flour to make a firm dough that will hold its shape.* Mix well but do not over mix. Place on waxed paper shape into a log and refrigerate about one hour.

4. Roll the dough into a rope about 3/8" thick and cut into 5" lengths. Cross one end over the other to make a wreath shape.

5. Beat the egg whites in a shallow glass dish (pie plate) until they form very soft peaks. Place granulated sugar on a separate plate. Dip into the egg white and then the sugar. Place on sheet pan sugar side up about 1" apart and bake for about 12-15 minutes.

Store in an airtight container.
*For the most delicate cookies only incorporate as much as you need for the dough to hold it's shape. You can test bake a cookie to make sure it holds its shape if you are unsure.

©Julie Logue-Riordan

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Average: 3.3 (6 votes)

Comments

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5

This is a great recipe. My grandmother made these as well. I often have these at Christmas.

I do have a question for you: I wonder what the amount for the butter is? In the recipe it is listed as "1#"??? How many cups of butter should be used?

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5

Butter in the US is packaged with four 1/2C cubes. Each cube is 1/4 lb. So the whole container of butter is 1 pound. The symbol for pound is #. Thus it is one whole pound of butter. (All four cubes).

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0

There are 2 cups in a pound of butter. Enjoy.

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It is really a nice recipe and looking yummy as well. I will share it with my mom after my Cherry Blossom tour through TopBusTours to try it out.

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This is very close to my great grandmother's recipe. Definitely a Christmas tradition.

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4

Thank you for this recipe taking me back to my childhood. As a note, in step 5 there is no beat the egg whites. Berliner Kranser are not meringues. Just dipping the cookies in the egg whites will let the granulated sugar stick.

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Hi Robert, Thanks for your input. My grandmother, and her sister always beat the egg whites to make them a bit foamy. It was a light fluffy layer on top of the cookie under the sugar. Now you have another variation of the recipe.

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5

We have made these for 54 + years. My daughter loves them , however she just found out she needs to be gluten free. Do you know if there is a gluten free version?

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5

We have made these for 54 + years. My daughter loves them , however she just found out she needs to be gluten free. Do you know if there is a gluten free version?

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0

There is a gluten free flour recipe you can make from America's Test Kitchen which I heard from several people is good. And there is also "Cup for Cup" that is a premade gluten free flour which should work. The taste will be different but you should have success with either of these flours. Good luck.

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