Traditional Christmas Stollen

Traditional Christmas Stollen with dried fruits and powdered sugar dusting, perfect for festive cele.

Many people in Australia have ancestral roots in Europe, which is why we wanted to share this Traditional Christmas Stollen recipe.

It might sound daunting, but stollen is one of the best Christmas breads, and its so easy to make at home instead of buying it. You will need a stand mixer with a dough hook attachment.

Traditional Christmas Stollen

Recipe by Stay at Home Mum
0.0 from 0 votes

A festive German bread filled with dried fruits, nuts, and marzipan, dusted with powdered sugar for a holiday classic.

Course: Baking, Christmas, Christmas Recipes, Occasions, Recipes, Xmas FoodCuisine: AmericanDifficulty: Easy
Servings
+

4

servings
Prep time

30

minutes
Cooking time

40

minutes
Calories

320

kcal
Total time

1

hour 

10

minutes
Cook Mode

Keep the screen of your device on

Ingredients

  • For Bread
  • .33 cup Milk

  • 1.5 tsp Active dry yeast

  • 1.66 cups Bread flour

  • 1.5 tbsp Brandy

  • 0.66 cup Raisins

  • .33 cup Granulated sugar

  • 1 Egg yolk

  • .5 tsp Salt

  • 6 tbsp Unsalted butter-softened

  • 4 tsp Orange zest

  • .5 cup Almonds-roughly chopped

  • 100 gram Marzipan

  • .5 tsp Vanilla extract

  • .5 tsp Mixed spice

  • For Topping
  • 4 tbsp Unsalted butter

  • 1 cup Icing sugar

Directions

  • Heat the milk in a saucepan until just warm. Pour into the bowl of your stand mixer and whisk in the yeast along with about 1 tablespoon of bread flour. Set aside and leave for 30 mins.
  • In the same saucepan, heat the brandy, raisins, mixed spice and vanilla until warm. Set aside.
  • Add 1 1/4 cups of bread flour, sugar and an egg yolk to the yeast mixture in the bowl. Mix using the dough hook attachment until the mix just starts to come together, not more than a minute or so.
  • With the mixer still going, add the salt and then the butter, slowly, to the mix. If the dough looks wet, add more flour as much as 1-3 tablespoons extra. Continue to mix until a soft and smooth dough forms, about 8 minutes.
  • To this add the raisin mixture, the orange zest and the almonds. Mix until distributed into the dough. Form into a ball and place in a greased bowl. Cover and leave for 1-2 hours, or until rough has risen by about 50%.
  • Place an oven rack in the middle of the oven and preheat to 180 degrees. Line a large baking sheet with baking paper. Place your dough onto a floured surface and shape into an oval about 20x25cm in size. Use a rolling pin to create a dip in the dough lengthwise, around 1/3 from the bottom.
  • Take your marzipan and roll into a log to fit into the trench in your dough, and flatten the marzipan to be 1.5-2cm thick. Pop this into the trench.
  • Lift the bottom part of the dough up over the marzipan and seal it inside. Don’t lift it so far that it touches the other edge of the dough, as the stollen is supposed to have a ‘hump’ on the top. You can use a rolling pin to seal the marzipan in the stollen. Move the dough to the baking sheet, cover loosely, and let rest somewhere warm for another 45 minutes.
  • Bake until golden brown and just cooked, around 25-30 minutes. Be cautious of over baking as this can make the stollen very dry.
  • For the glaze, brush your freshly baked stollen with half of the melted butter as soon as it’s out of the oven. Then sprinkle on a coat of icing sugar, brush on more butter, and sprinkle with more icing sugar.

If you’ve never tried it before, stollen is a dense, buttery, sweet bread with lots of Christmas flavours, and lots of character!

author avatar
Clare Whitfield Chief Editor
Clare Whitfield is the Editor of Stay at Home Mum and a recognised voice in practical home management for Australian families. Based in the northern suburbs of Sydney, she balances editorial leadership with life as a stay at home mum to two school age children. Her background in home economics and more than a decade of experience in recipe development, family budgeting, and household systems inform her work.

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