What's Cooking America » Cooking Articles » Dessert Recipes » Cookies » Christmas Cookies » Springerle Cookies Recipe
- Recipe
- Comments
Springerle Cookies have been and still are traditional Christmas cookies in Bavaria and Austria for centuries that date back to at least the 1600s. Springerle are white, anise-flavored cookies, made from a simple egg-flour-sugar dough. Usually rectangular or circular in shape, they have a picture or design stamped on the top. The images are imprinted with specially carved Springerle Rolling Pins or flat molds (Springerle presses or boards). After the cookies are baked, the designs are sometimes enhanced with edible food colors, tempera, or acrylic paints if the cookies are to be used as decorations.
The name Springerle (SPRING-uhr-lee) comes from an old German dialect and means “little knight” or “jumping horse.” Historians trace these cookies back to the Julfest, a midwinter celebration of pagan Germanic tribes. Julfest ceremonies included the sacrificing of animals to the gods, in hope that such offerings would bring a mild winter and an early spring. Poor people who could not afford to kill any of their animals gave token sacrifices in the form of animal-shaped breads and cookies. Vestiges of these pagan practices survive in the baking of shaped-and-stamped German Christmas cookies such as Lebkuchen, Spekulatius, Frankfurter Brenten, and Springerle. Scenes from the Bible were some of the earliest images portrayed on the springerle molds. and were used to educate those who couldn’t read or write. Eventually, other scenes were carved and the cookies soon reflected images of holidays, events, and scenes from every day life.
The cookies were also used to celebrate births, weddings, and used as betrothal tokens. Exchanging springerle cookies during the holidays was a common practice very much like we exchange cards today.
This is a family recipe for Springerle Cookies that was shared with me by Ann Pratt of Aloha, Oregon. Ann says that this is the Schachner family recipe.
More favorite Cookie Recipes and Secrets To Making Perfect Cookies. Also learn How To Have A Successful Holiday Cookie Exchange or Cookie Swap.
Springerle Cookies Recipe:
Prep Time
20 mins
Cook Time
10 mins
Total Time
30 mins
Course:Dessert
Cuisine:German
Keyword:Springerle Cookies Recipe
Ingredients
- 4largeeggs
- 2cups granulatedsugar
- 1 1/2tablespoonsbutter,room temperature
- 1teaspoonsbaking powder
- 1/2teaspoonanise oilor 1 teaspoon anise extract
- 4cups all-purposeflour,sifted
Instructions
Line cookie sheets with parchment paper or use the Silicone Baking Mats to prevent the cookies from sticking. Avoid insulated cookie sheets as they will cause the Springerle cookies to brown during baking.
In a large mixing bowl, beat eggs on high speed of your electric mixer until light and fluffy. Add sugar, butter, and baking powder; beat at high speed for 15 minutes, scraping sides of bowl occasionally. Beat in anise oil or extract. Gradually beat in flour until well mixed.
Lightly flour your springerle rolling pin (see photo below); set aside.
On a lightly floured board, knead the dough a few time (the dough will be sticky at first, so knead in just enough flour to make it manageable). You want the dough just firm enough not to stick in the mold. On large molds or very intricate molds, also lighty dust them with flour. Useyour pastry brush to get the excess flourfrom the details in the mold. This helps get a clearer image.
Using a standard Rolling Pin, roll into a rectangle about 1/2-inch thick (be carful not to roll the dough too thin).
Using your floured Springerle Rolling Pin, roll slowly and firmly over the previously rolled dough to make a clear design.
Using a sharp knife, cut cookies apart and trim off outside edges. Place cookies on your prepared cookie sheets.
Roll out scraps of dough and repeat. NOTE: Be sure to flour the rolling pin and board before each pressing. This will insure the dough will not stick.
Place cookies on your prepared cookie sheets. Let cookies stand, uncovered, at least 12 hours to dry. Sometimes they may need to dry as long as 36 hours before baking. NOTE: Drying preserves the image during baking.
When ready to bake:Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Place oven rack in middle of oven.
Bake one (1) baking sheet at a time only. Bake approximately 10 minutes until slightly golden on bottoms, but white on top. NOTE: Be observant while baking your Springerie. If they puff up too much, gently push the bubble down. Rotate the pan front to back top to bottom once while baking.
Remove from oven and transfer cookies to wire cooling rack to cool (let cookies stand overnight to completely dry before storing). The longer Springerle sit the harder they become. Right out of the oven they are crunchy on the outside but soft and tender on the inside.
Storage: Keep cookies in a tight container for 2 or 3 weeks before using to achieve the best flavor.
Related Recipes
Categories:
Christmas Cookies Dessert Recipes German Tea Cookies
Comments and Reviews
42 Responses to “Springerle Cookies Recipe”
-
Heidi
Thank You!!! I have a recipe that was handed down from my German Grandmother but with little direction. This was the perfect bridge to being able to honor her recipe and have clearer instructions. One thing she did was to sprinkle anise seed on the baking tray and then place the unbaked dough on top of that while drying and baking. And now I understand why it dries. This was helpful. Danke.
Reply
-
Kristin
The recipe I have calls for MUCH less sugar, and it also calls for the cookies, once rolled and cut apart, to sit over night to dry. Instead of putting anise oil in the cookies, the parchment is sprinkled with anise seed and the cut cookies placed on top. Yes, they are supposed to be hard, sort of a German biscotti.
Reply
-
Ellen
Please share your recipe. I like things with less sugar.
Reply
-
-
Laura
If you want to preserve the softness, keep in an airtight container and place a piece of white bread on a paper towel on top of the cookies.
Reply
-
Karen
I would like to find out how I can order the Springerle rolling pen.
Reply
-
Whats Cooking America
Try searching in a gourmet kitchen appliance store like Willams Sonoma or you can also order online through Amazon.
Reply
-
Melanie
I found all of my springerle rolling pins at antique malls and flea markets. Most people don’t know what they are, so they sell pretty cheap.
Reply
-
-
-
Barbara Beck
I used to have my grandmothers . It has been lost.
Reply
-
Denise Puckle
Have made these cookies every Christmas. This is my 46th year. My late husband taught me. Seeds on baking sheet. Yes, let rest over night to keep imprint. Will try this recipe for fun.
Reply
-
Irene keane
Can I use the Springer let mold on my plain sugar cookies
Reply
-
Whats Cooking America
I’ve never tried it on sugar cookie dough, but you could try the same principal. Roll the springerle rolling pin over the dough for the markings, cut the shapes and then let the dough dry overnight before baking to see if the design stays in the dough.
Reply
-
-
Sue
My grandma was the same with recipes. Included with her recipe cards, I have about 25 strips of paper, store receipts, envelopes, with just ingredient lists, no directions. I also had this weird rolling pin.
Reply
-
German Grahdma
From my experience of both recopies, I do that this will NOT work on sugar cookie dough. That dough has too much leavening will raise too much and distort the design. . Springerle depend on the air whipped in i the eggs, and not on other agents While the cookies usually have some leavening agent, they are close to a meringue . Sugar cookie dough has a much higher ratio of fat to flour and sugar to the number of eggs, and would suffer greatly from being beaten and such high speed. Springerle molds have much fine definition that I do not think would transfer well to such a heavy dough.
Reply
-
Whats Cooking America
This is great feedback on the Sugar cookie dough. Thank you!
Reply
-
-
Kathy Bodnar
My dough is too dry. The first time i made this recipe, it was not. Can i fix this or do I need to start over? Thank you. It is a great recipe.
Reply
-
Josef Brugger
I suspect egg sizing standards have changed in the past century — if I make the family recipe with the large eggs called for, the dough is usually too moist. If the dough is still mixable, you could add a tiny amount of water or maybe beaten egg to the mix and see what happens. The line between “dry” and “just right” is a fine one.
None of the recipes I see here call for it, but the Brugger-Brucker-Willenborg-Steinebrunner consensus is that you put the springerle roller in the refrigerator a day ahead of baking to help it keep from sticking.Reply
-
-
Deborah Hegney
Wow! What great tips to learn & write down!! I am currently awaiting the arrival of 2 different rolling pins… Excited to try it…
Neither Gma made these, but my maternal grandmother had 21 kids, & no countertops… She did make an anise cookie dough, & cut them in triangles, & did an egg white wash before baking… Every thing had to be simple ingredients, and quick to make quantities.Reply
-
Eileen Mason
I will be substituting hartshorn for the baking powder. (King Arthur flour says 1/2t hartshorn for 1t bp. Elsewhere it says 1 to 1 ration. Any ideas? I can’t find my mother’s recipes. Do I need to dissolve the hartshorn in a liquid before adding it? Thanks for any help!
Reply
-
Mary Jane
Hartshorn is ammonia based isn’t it? Is that safe?
Reply
-
-
Stacy
I am so happy to find the recipe and directions for these! This was my dad’s Christmas tradition when I was growing up. He’s not able to make them anymore due to age. Now I will be able to carry the tradition on!
Reply
-
Jannie
My mama’s family is German and Springerle is the Christmas tradition passed down. My Aunt Esther made dozens every year. No one could make them as good as hers. She would only make them when the weather was just right (dry and cold) and the cookies needed to dry overnight in the attic. The cookies were soft on Christmas morning, but you kept them in tins for weeks and when they were hard they were dunked in coffee or cocoa. As a child I never really liked the springele cookies – not sweet enough, anise flavor, too dry and hard. But they remind me of my family traditions, and dear departed, so now I love them.
Reply
-
CARLA
I saw this cookie on another website with the rolling pin. I have one of these rolling pins and I use to make these cookies. My mother gave me the rolling pin over 54 years ago, therefore it is an antique like me. So glad I found a recipe to use my little rolling pin. I can’t wait to make these again. My father came from Sweden, so I guess maybe my grandmother gave my mother the rolling pin. No one is alive anymore for me to find out. We use to have the at Christmas time and my rolling pin has bird heads, wheat, flowers, etc on it. The rolling pin itself doesn’t spin like a regular rolling pin, so I guess you just have to push it to roll it out. Does anyone know about this not spinning?
Reply
-
Shannon
My grandmother used to make these every Christmas, I’ve always looked forward to these. But as far as I can remember my grandmother’s springerle’s had a licorice flavor and they were white. It’s been so long ago – and I don’t know anyone else that makes them. It’s sad that no one in the family got her recipe. I’ve always wanted to make them but I’m afraid I won’t find the right recipe and they won’t be like my grandmother’s.
Reply
-
Whats Cooking America
You should try it out and see what you think. Some recipes use anise seed for licorice flavor and some use anise extract.
Reply
-
-
Dyann
You can also soften them by adding a cut apple to them in an airtight container for a few days before eating. Never knew about the bread!
Reply
-
Mandy
can you use a different extract or does it have to be anise?
Reply
-
Nancy
The Springerle cookies traditional flavor is anise, of course you can use any flavor you want.
Reply
-
Jude White
My grandma used to make these every year for as long as she was able. She would send us a shoebox full of her traditional cookies… springerle, sugar, almond and sugar cutouts. They were all wonderful, but my favorite was springerle. My mother tried to get her recipe a few times, but my grandma never learned to measure ingredients with with measuring cups or spoons, she used her hands. A half handful of flour, or butter the size of a walnut! Of course her hands were smaller than my moms, so mom was left so exasperated she never tried to make them again! When I grew up I often wondered if that was grandmas way of not giving mom the recipes! Ha! Ha! After I got married I found a recipe for springerle cookies and have made them every year since, over 50 years! My recipe calls for anise extract and anise seeds on the baking sheet. I don’t have my stand mixer anymore, so will have to try to make them this year with a hand mixer. Groan!
Reply
-
-
KENNETH
I have a Springele rolling pin with 16 different designs which spins. I think my German grandmother gave it to my
stepmother. When I was a child I would eat these cookies while doing school work. Have not had these cookies
for over 30 years and now I am going to bake themReply
-
Carol Cowles
I have a receipt named “Springles” that uses 4 lg eggs, 4 cups XXX Sugar, 4 cups pastry flour, 1/2 tsp baking soda, 1/2 tsp salt, 1/2 tsp baking soda, 1/2 tsp anise oil, and anise seed for bottom of cookie. I have the rolling pin but no directions so I am glad I found this site. My mom has passed away and when I was younger she would make these for Christmas Time and I loved them and so did she but no one else in my family really cared for them cause they were “too hard”, I liked to dunk them in hot chocolate or milk.
What is the difference between using granulated sugar and powdered sugar?
Reply
-
Linda Cermely
Just remember the baking soda is very different then the American one. I would recommend using a Europe one to get a better rise from the cookies.
Reply
-
Marlene Siefert
Why would theses cookies puff too much and blow out the side or back, ruining the pretty top? My recipe calls for powdered sugar instead of granulated. Might this be the difference?
Reply
-
Lois Mauk
Marlene, how long did you dry the cookies after imprinting them, before baking?
Reply
-
Joshua Cating
THANK YOU FOR THIS RECIPE!!!
Growing up, I was lucky enough to have an Oma. Oma, for those who don’t know, is a traditional German child’s name for grandmother (Similar to an English speaking child’s “Grandma”). Oma was, in fact, my great-grandmother-my mother’s grandmother. She emigrated to America as a young woman, with her husband and son (my grandfather, who was a young boy then). My mother called her Oma as a child, and I wound up doing the same, as Oma lived until I was a teenager. Springerle were Oma’s Christmas speciality. and I always loved them, even though I never got them fresh (FYI, when a springerle is more than 24 hours old, you can repave the driveway with them.Fast-forward 25-30 years, I have had a springerle or two since Oma died, but not many. My son had a project to do on one of his ancestors, and wanted to do someone who wasn’t American born. He chose Oma. We talked about her, and got his project done. Then I got to thinking about Springerle. As it was Christmas time, I got to thinking about finding some, to take to the family Christmas celebration. I called my mother, who told me I should try baking them. A bit of online searching led me to this recipe. I learned a few things this weekend:
1. Springerle are NOT as hard to make as I thought
2. Anise extract oil and extract are easier to find than I thought.
3. You can substitute other extracts. (My wife is not a fan of anise, so I make a batch with almond extract)
I didn’t have molds, so we just cut out shapes.
Took them to the family Christmas Celebration to RAVE reviews. My childhood in a cookie. Thank you so much!
Reply
-
Nancy
What a great food memory, it’s funny how a cookie, such as springerle, brings such great memories of your childhood.
Thank you for visiting What’s Cooking America and Happy Holidays!
NancyReply
-
Nancy
Years ago my daughter gave me a cookie stamp and that’s made all the difference in the frequency of our springerlie making. Just roll out balls or use a cookie scoop, dip the stamp in flour and press down. So easy!
Reply
-
-
Gwen
I use a recipe passed down in my family for years. My mom used to bake them but since she has aged, I’ve taken it up. I’ ve been to Europe twice doing the Christmas Markets and shopping for more molds. Great time to shop. Anyway I use both the anise oil and cracked anise seeds on a Pam sprayed cookie sheet with lemon zest in the dough. Had an order for 200 this past holidays. will certainly try out other recipes.
Reply
-
Nancy
It is satisfying to carry on family traditions, I for one, make a special Christmas bread and Spritz cookies that were my Grandmother’s specialities. I hope that my kids will carry it on one day.
Thank you for visiting What’s Cooking America!
NancyReply
-
-
Jen
My Great Aunt Mimi always made our Springerles. She had learned from her mother. The Springerle Board was “lost” after her death as well as the recipe. I got my replacement Springerle Board on Cookiemold.com. It’s not the one carved by a great great great grandfather after coming to the United States from Bavaria, however, it is beautiful and hanging on my kitchen wall. I have searched and searched for a recipe and I believe this one might be the one …. it was short and simple and fit on one side of a recipe card. I’m so excited to be able to make this for my Daddy at Christmas.
Reply
-
JON MORRISSEY
I made them last year with success. This recipe makes 24 cookies, correct?
Reply
-
Ruth Anne Shattuck
My 68 count cookies are drying on the kitchen table as I write this. It is snowing in Indiana and we are ready for Christmas. Springerle Cookies are a tradition in our home and this is a very good recipe. Merry Christmas.
Reply
-
Janice Messina
Thanks so much for the recipe , was so happy to fined it on line, missed placed mine from many year ago.
MERRY CHRISTMAS TO ALL !!!Reply