This German coffee cake recipe is a delicious way to Making this German coffee cake recipe to get a Zimt-Kaffeekuchen just like Oma used to make is so easy. Just mix, layer with nuts and cinnamon, and bake. YUM!
A family German coffee cake recipe that has been passed down in my family for generations. One delicious mistake in the newest generation made a new iteration of an old classic.
Streuselkuchen, a classic German yeast cake, is soft on the inside and loaded with sweet and crumbly Streusel or "crumbles" on the top! It's the perfect cake to go with coffee or tea!
This one-bowl German coffee cake called Blitzkuchen is ready in under 1 hour! Light & moist cake is topped with crunchy brown sugar streusel.
This German butter cake has a moist cake layer covered with a crispy almond layer and tastes just like it came straight from a German bakery.
Oma's Butterkuchen, aka Zuckerkuchen, is a traditional German Butter Cake (Sugar Cake) that's often served for afternoon coffee. Loved by all, easy to make and so delicious to eat!
Streuselkuchen, a classic German yeast cake, is soft on the inside and loaded with sweet and crumbly Streusel or "crumbles" on the top! It's the perfect cake to go with coffee or tea!
This German classic is such a part of our reunions, we designate a special place to serve it. Five generations flock to the "Kuchen Room" for this coffee cake. —Stephanie Schentzel, Northville, South Dakota
Grandma's Streusel Coffee Cake My Grandma Kelly used to make this coffee cake for us when we would visit her and Grandpa Kelly up in Santa Cruz. I don't know if I ever saw her make it because I think the woman would spend the two or three weeks before our arrival, baking and freezing coffee cake and Parkerhouse rolls. I think my favorite was the rolls, while my brother loved the coffee cake just a little more than the rolls. I think we both devoured more than our share of each. Now that I'm an adult, when I make this coffee cake, I think I either tend to over-bake it, or it's just not what I remember, but this coffee cake is a little bit on the dry side. I still love it because it is chock full of memories for me. Memories of sitting in my Grandma and Grandpa's light blue kitchen early in the morning while Grandma worked on dinner. She always seemed to be standing there in her kitchen cooking up something, which is kind of funny, because I think that describes me now. When I'm not cooking and baking, I'm taking pictures of food or blogging. At any rate, here's to Grandma Kelly who got this recipe from her Grandma Schmidt. God bless them both. Streusel Coffee Cake Ingredients: Dough 1/4 cup butter 3/4 cup milk 2 1/4 tsp active dry yeast 1/4 cup lukewarm water 1/4 cup sugar 3/4 tsp salt 2 eggs, beaten zest of 1/2 lemon 3 cups King Arthur Unbleached All-Purpose Flour Streusel Topping 1 cup sugar 1 cup King Arthur Unbleached All-Purpose Flour 1 1/2 tsp cinnamon 1/2 cup butter, cut into slices or chunks Instructions: 1. Place lukewarm water in a small bowl and sprinkle with the yeast. Allow to soften, about 5-10 minutes. Scald the milk in a heavy saucepan over medium-high heat (scalding means to bring to a boil), and then remove from heat immediately. Place 1/4 cup butter in a large heat-proof bowl and pour scalded milk over it. Stir to melt butter and then let mixture cool to lukewarm or a little cooler. 2. Once milk/butter has cooled somewhat, add the softened yeast, sugar, salt, eggs. lemon zest, and flour. Stir with a sturdy spoon until completely mixed. Dough will be the consistency of a thick batter, more than a dough. Cover with plastic wrap and set in warm place to rise until double in bulk. (Grandma's original recipe called for a greased bowl, but really, why dirty another bowl?) 3. Preheat oven to 400 degrees Fahrenheit. Prepare streusel topping by mixing the sugar, flour, and cinnamon in a medium bowl. Add butter chunks and mix with your fingers until all the butter is incorporated into the dry ingredients. Squeeze and crumble so you have a nice semi-chunky consistency. 4. Grease two 9" round or square pans. (I like to use butter, of course.) Once dough has risen, punch down and scrape down sides with a rubber/silicone spatula. Divide dough in half with rubber/silicone spatula and scoop half into each pan. With greased fingers, spread the dough out to the edges of the pans. Top each with half of the streusel, spreading the streusel out evenly and to the edge of the pan. 5. Let it rise again (about 45 minutes) and bake at 400° for about 20 minutes, or until top is a deep golden brown color. Move pans to wire rack to cool. Serve warm. Makes about 16 healthy servings. Note: These freeze really well too. If you want to freeze one, wrap cooled coffee cake tightly in aluminum foil and then place in a gallon zip-top bag. Freeze it. If you want to eat it in the morning, remove from the freezer the night before and leave on the counter. Reheat in a 350 degree oven for about 10-15 minutes, loosely wrapped in foil. This one came out fairly moist. I only let it bake the 20 minutes.
A yeasted German-style coffee cake with a cinnamon sugar topping.
This German coffee cake recipe is a delicious way to Making this German coffee cake recipe to get a Zimt-Kaffeekuchen just like Oma used to make is so easy. Just mix, layer with nuts and cinnamon, and bake. YUM!
Kuchen (the German word for cake) is a treat that I enjoyed as a little girl visiting my paternal grandparents in Iowa. My great aunt Carrie made a wonderful German Streusel Kuchen that I still remember, nearly 30 years after she passed away. I would describe it as a rich sweet bread with a buttery […]
This one-bowl German coffee cake called Blitzkuchen is ready in under 1 hour! Light & moist cake is topped with crunchy brown sugar streusel.
A family German coffee cake recipe that has been passed down in my family for generations. One delicious mistake in the newest generation made a new iteration of an old classic.
This one-bowl German coffee cake called Blitzkuchen is ready in under 1 hour! Light & moist cake is topped with crunchy brown sugar streusel.
This German coffee cake recipe is a delicious way to Making this German coffee cake recipe to get a Zimt-Kaffeekuchen just like Oma used to make is so easy. Just mix, layer with nuts and cinnamon, and bake. YUM!
A family German coffee cake recipe that has been passed down in my family for generations. One delicious mistake in the newest generation made a new iteration of an old classic.
This German coffee cake recipe is a delicious way to Making this German coffee cake recipe to get a Zimt-Kaffeekuchen just like Oma used to make is so easy. Just mix, layer with nuts and cinnamon, and bake. YUM!