© 2025 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
© 2025 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
© 2025 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
A delicious braided yeast bread with hazelnut and poppy seed fillings. Almonds or walnuts can be used instead of hazelnuts. If desired, you can also add some raisins or apples into the poppy filling. The preparation is quite simple. The three main components are the yeast dough, the poppy seed filling and the nut filling. While the yeast dough is rising, you can prepare fillings, which saves time and is very practical. Or you can prepare the filling one day and the dough the next day.
Mohnstriezel has its roots in European baking traditions, particularly in countries such as Austria, Germany, Hungary and Czechia. Originally intended as a festive treat for Christmas and Easter, over the years it has found its way into everyday life and is now enjoyed all over the world. In addition to the classic poppy seed filling, there are numerous variations of poppy seed strudel. It can also be filled with jam, other nuts, raisins or chocolate. This allows you to adapt the recipe entirely to your preferences and the season.
| Dough | Hazelnut Filling |
- 250 ml Whole milk, lukewarm
- 70 g Unsalted butter, softened
- 450 g Plain flour
- 70 g Sugar
- 1 tsp Pure vanilla powder
- 1 pinch Sea salt
- 7 g Instant dry yeast
- 1 Medium egg, at room temperature
- 250-300 g Poppy filling
- 2 tbsp Quince jelly (or apricot jam)
- Toasted sliced hazelnuts for topping, optional
|
- 200 g Hazelnuts, toasted and ground
- 60 ml Whole milk
- 1 Large egg white
- 60 g Coconut sugar
- 1 tsp Cocoa powder
- 1/4 tsp Cinnamon powder
|
- For the dough, heat the milk and butter in a saucepan. Mix the flour, sugar, vanilla powder, salt and dry yeast in the bowl of your stand mixer fitted with a dough hook. Add the lukewarm milk mixture and egg and knead for about 6 minutes until you have a smooth dough. Cover the dough and leave to rest for 1 hour until it doubles in size.
- For the poppy filling, check it out here. For the nut filling, combine all the ingredients in a bowl. Cover and set aside.
- Divide the dough into two even portions and roll out each portion of dough on a lightly floured work surface (or directly on a piece of baking paper) into a rectangle, 30 x 40 cm.
- Spread the poppy seed mixture on one piece of dough and nut filling on another, smooth it out with an angled palette.
- Cut each rolled dough in half lengthwise and roll them up. Now you have 2 poppy seed rolls and 2 nut rolls. Now half each strand lengthwise and braid one nut strand and one poppy seed strand, with cut sides upwards, into a 2-strand plait. Cut each plait into two and place them in baking trays lined with parchment paper.
- Cover the braids with a tea towel and leave to rise for approx. 45-60 minutes.
- Preheat the oven to 180C/350F. Bake the braids, one tray at a time, for 25-30 minutes until golden brown.
- Warm up the quince jelly or apricot jam and brush the braids as soon as they come out from the oven. Sprinkle the toasted hazelnut slices over if using.
© 2025 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
© 2025 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
Such wonderful and lovely treat! YUM!
ReplyDeleteOh, I love hazelnuts! Splendid to see your post!
ReplyDeleteAngie, you are such an amazing baker. You could teach classes. What a beautiful dessert! You.
ReplyDeleteMe imagino una trenza buenisima, tienes una gran maestría para las masas en general, te quedan siempre perfectas.
ReplyDeleteThese look so delicious as well as pretty!
ReplyDeleteJulia x
https://www.thevelvetrunway.com/
Hello Angie,
ReplyDeleteThey look amazing and delicious, I wish i had one with my coffee this morning.
Take care, enjoy your day and happy weekend.
I am salivating! Your husband is so lucky, Angie, to have a wife who loves working with dough, I could live on pastries every day if I knew how to work with yeast and wasn't glufree. As a child I always dreamt of pastries and baked dough, bread and scones and such things, but my mother was not an overly dedicated housewife, so we spent the childhood wanting and dreaming of it.
ReplyDeleteThis looks delicious 😋
ReplyDelete...Angie, they look fabulous.
ReplyDeleteThey look yummy.
ReplyDeleteThose sure do look most inviting!
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteGracias por la receta. Te mando un beso.
ReplyDeleteLooks delicious -Christine cmlk79.blogspot.com
ReplyDeleteThese are gorgeous Angie. One with a cup of tea would be perfect for me as a re-bedtime snack-grin. Have a super weekend,
ReplyDeleteOnce again, I remember my grandmother making something similar for the holidays. It's been so many years since I've had it, but I can still remember how good it was!
ReplyDeleteI am adding these to my long list of bakes! My grandmother would have had many treats like these growing up.
ReplyDeleteTandy (Lavender and Lime) https://tandysinclair.com
Lovely! Now if I could just find someone to bake them for me.
ReplyDeleteThese are such a great idea and so pretty too!
ReplyDeleteBack from Colombia and you are still tempting me with your delicious creations, Angie. Mind you, there were many treats in Colombia, too!
ReplyDeletewow favolose!
ReplyDeleteThese little striezels look so lovely - nutty, soft, elegant, and delicious.
ReplyDeleteA delicious treat to start the day with a cup of coffee. Karen (Back Road Journal)
ReplyDeleteLooks delicious and beautiful too.
ReplyDeletersrue.blogspot.com
oh yum i love hazelnuts and i love poppy seeds. sounding delicious angie.!
ReplyDeleteHazel Nuts grows wild here.
ReplyDeleteAngie! I am tremendously impressed with your ability to make such beautiful pastries. I’ve been watching a lot of German television, and the food is really drawing me in. These look so good. In all honesty, this is probably not something I would tackle on my own, but I would love to know someone who would.
ReplyDelete... and extra tasty with raisins or apples added to the poppy filling.
ReplyDeleteAll the best Jan
They look very attractive, Angie.
ReplyDeleteMniam - delicious! Looks very good 👍
ReplyDeleteBrushing the braids with warm quince jelly right out of the oven is such a brilliant finishing touch for shine and flavor.
ReplyDeleteA very nice treat I would love to have for my breakfast!
ReplyDelete