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Nut and Chocolate Gugelhupf

  1. Beat the egg yolks with the icing sugar, add the butter and cream.
  2. Preheat oven to 180 °C (fan) and grease Gugelhupf mould with melted butter.
  3. Whip up egg whites with a small pinch of salt and the granulated sugar to a stiff peak. Melt the chocolate coating in a bain-marie.
  4. Mix the flour with the baking powder and add to the egg yolk mix together with grated nuts, cocoa powder and melted chocolate. Carefully fold in the egg whites.
  5. Pour the mixture into the mould and bake 50 – 55 minutes. Cool slightly, and tip out. Dust with icing sugar or glaze.
  6. Glaze: Cover the lukewarm Gugelhupf with the currant jam and leave to cool. Melt the chocolate in a bain-marie together with butter and coconut fat and stir. Continue stirring until it has cooled. Cover the Gugelhupf with the glaze and sprinkle with cracknel or chopped nuts.

 

Source: Austrian National Tourist Office

 

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Pasties with Sheep Cheese

The traditional Slovak dishes are most commonly referred to as gnocchi with sheep cheese (Bryndzové halušky), sheep cheese (Bryndzové pirohy) and other dishes produced using traditional methods.The sheep cheese is a soft salty cheese made of sheep’s milk with a strong aroma and taste. Like Bryndzové halušky, Bryndzové pirohy is a characteristic Slovak dish that belongs to traditional Slovak specialties. The recipe is quite simple. The preparation procedure, however, is quite different and we can distinguish them reliably by sight and taste.

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Wachau Apricot Dumplings

The apricot dumpling, or Marillenknödel, is emblematic for the Wachau region. And it is also a clear illustration of how the Austrian people are open to other cultures. This delicacy combines what is originally a Chinese fruit (the apricot) with a plant from Polynesia (sugar) and an Upper Austrian idea for preparing food (the dumpling). Moreover, the EU certification of controlled origin “Wachauer Marille g.U.” guarantees that these fruits belong to the best of their species.

Recipe

Carinthian Cheese Noodles

The borders between today’s Austria and its southern neighbours are particularly dissipating in Carinthia. Instead of drizzling with melted butter, here the famous ‘Kasnudel’ are topped with melted Sasaka: the word comes from the Slovenian language and simply means finely-diced bacon or a type of lardons. Besides being a wonderfully spicy spread for bread, it also figures prominently in Styrian cuisine, proving that the colorful culinary merry-go-round in the former territories of the Habsburg Monarchy is still vibrant today.

Ingredients

  • 5 eggs
  • 150 g icing sugar
  • 2 tbsp. granulated sugar
  • 180 g butter
  • 100 g grated hazelnuts
  • 100 g cooking chocolate
  • 2 tbsp. cocoa powder
  • 100 g plain flour
  • 1 level tsp. baking powder
  • Pinch of salt
  • Butter for the mould
  • Redcurrant jam
  • Cracknel or roughly-chopped nuts

Chocolate glaze

  • 130 g cooking chocolate
  • 130 g butter
  • 1 tbsp. of coconut fat

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