It was an ordinary afternoon when I was picking up my son from his grandparents’ house last week. Usually I have coffee with my parents and discuss the joys and sorrows of life. My dad loves antiques and he is crazy about history, and I love to task him with finding me different items from the past. We were talking about antique cookbooks and I was complaining how expensive they are. He showed me few of his cookbooks which date back to the 1800s, explaining who used this or that book, or where and when he bought it. A few times he mentioned his great-aunt who was a housewife and cook in Budapest. She worked also for Kalman Mikszath, who was a famous Hungarian writer, journalist and politician. Then he pulled out a big pile of handwritten recipes, saying: “these are her recipes”. My jaw dropped. Who cares about the old books of unknown people when we have recipes directly from our family? My dad is like that.
Along with those of his great-aunts, Katicza and Agota Gyurkovics (pictured above), he has a few recipes by a magnificent woman Countess Marica Ordody, whose godfather was Kossuth Ferencz (son of Kossuth Lajos) and some from his mother Valeria. We will post some of these recipes. The very first one I wanted to try my grandma’s recipe for Linzer bars. I love linzer and my dad always asked my mum to make linzer like his mum used to make. So I was curious about two things.
1. How does my grandmother’s linzer taste, obviously.
2. Would my dad recognize the taste and would he mention that “this is like my mother used to make it” or is he just cruel to my mum and he wants to make her something that does not exist.
The test won in the 1st case but lost in the 2nd. I loved this Hungarian linzer. It is very easy to make and tastes great! After feeding crumbs to my dad (it is a small recipe… not too much left) he did not instantly recognize it as a miracle from the past though. When I told him that it is my grandmother’s recipe he said… oh yeah that’s right…that’s how my mum used to make it. So, some success but I was expecting more. After this I had a third question: why did’t he show the recipe to my mum, because if she knew it is so easy she would have been delighted.
Linzer Bars/Cake/Cookies
This is a small recipe so do not make it as your main dish.
Ingredients
Makes 4-5 portions.
- 1 stick/113 grams butter
- 1¼ cup/240 grams sugar
- 2 egg yolks
- 2.2 ounces/60 grams crushed almonds
- 3/4 cup + 2tbs/100 grams flour
- small jar of you favorite jam (I used cherry)
- a few blanched almonds for decoration
Method
- Work the flour, butter, sugar, egg yolks, and crushed almonds into a dough.
- Roll them 1/2 inch/2 cm thick into your desired shape: it can be one big square, one big circle or small circles. This might be a bit tricky with the rolling pin because the dough is very fragile and may fall apart. I used my fingers and pressed it into shape. Reserve a little bit of dough to make shapes on the top of the linzer. I made a lattice. Or tried to — as I mentioned, the dough was very fragile.
- Spread the jam over it, and add a dough design if you choose. Place blanched almonds on top for decoration.
- The recipe says you should bake them in a very hot oven. So I tried 350 F (180 C). I baked them for 25 minutes, but I think 30 minutes or a higher temperature might work better. The dough under the jam was slightly undercooked.
- When the sides and the lattice are getting golden, take out the linzer and let it cool.
- Do not touch! Let it cool completely. And enjoy.
4 Responses
Hi, I did your recipe today but it was a complete disaster… I’ll post the photos ‘before’ and ‘after’ baking later. Before baking it seemed to be alright, but I baked it on 200C and the dough had completely melted and the linzer bars became a huge non-identified mass. I used your european measures (grams), can you check if it’s converted correctly? I was especially uncertain about the flour, if 3/4 cup + 2 spoons is 100 grams…
Sorry for the late answer, but we are a week and smthing before the move and things are crazy. I will be curious about the photos. I will try to make this recipe again and let you know. The dough should be a “greasy ball” you have to push it into half inch thickness. if ou roll it too thin it will fall apart. But i will try it and let you know.
Here are the photos of my linzer bars… This one is before baking: http://tirka.smugmug.com/Food/Cuisine/P1200543/799858729_DuWre-M.jpg and this one is after: http://tirka.smugmug.com/Food/Cuisine/P1200546/799858763_AUVpp-M.jpg
The dough was greasy up to point that i was unable to roll it, I have created the shapes manually. Good luck for your international move and new life in US.
oh i see. in the first picture they look ok. I had to make the shape with hand too. Otherwise it stuck to the rolling pin. in the other picture they melted into a one big “thing”. I will try the recipe again and let you know.