© 2026 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
© 2026 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
Moist, soft and wonderfully aromatic – this Rosinenstuten tastes just like the one from the bakery and is perfect for Sunday breakfast! A sweet white chocolate glaze drizzled over the top makes it even more tempting, but entirely optional.
A Rosinenstuten is a sweet, fluffy yeast bread filled with raisins (or currants/sultanas) and is particularly popular in northern Germany and Nordrhein-Westfalen. It is often enjoyed for breakfast or with afternoon tea with butter and jam, honey or simply on its own, but can also be eaten savoury with cheese and sausage. Often, more butter and sugar are used in Stuten than in regular raisin bread, which makes the Stuten particularly soft and slightly sweet.
The name Rosinenstuten comes from the German words Rosinen (raisins) and Stuten, which is derived from the North German word Steiß, which refers to the thick part of the thigh, thus referring to the characteristic shape of the bread.
Rosinenstuten – German Raisin Bread
adapted from
Einfach Kochen
| | |
- 500 g Plain flour (German #405)
- 1/2 tsp Sea salt
- 60 g Caster sugar
- 250 ml Whole milk
- 20 g Fresh yeast
- 60 g Unsalted butter, softened
- 1 Medium egg
- 1 Egg yolk
- 150 g Raisins (or currants/sultanas)
- 1 Egg yolk + tbsp Milk (for egg wash)
- 60 g White chocolate, melted (optional)
|
- For the yeast dough, sift the flour into the bowl of your mixer, sprinkle the salt around the edge and make a small well with a tablespoon. Sprinkle the sugar into the well.
- Briefly warm the milk (do not boil!), crumble the fresh yeast into the milk and dissolve it. Pour the yeast milk into the flour well and carefully mix in a little flour. Cover the mixing bowl with a kitchen towel and leave the starter to rise in a warm place for about 15 minutes.
- Attach the dough hook to your mixer. Add the softened butter, egg and egg yolk and mix for 3 minutes, then knead for another 5 minutes. Finally, knead the raisins into the yeast dough, then turn out the dough on a clean work surface and shape it into a loaf.
- Grease a 25x11x10 loaf tin with a little butter and dust with flour or line with baking paper.
- Place the yeast dough in the loaf tin, cover and leave to rise again in a warm place for about 45 minutes. Preheat the oven to 180C/350F. Whisk the egg yolk with the milk and brush the top. Bake the bread in the middle of hot oven for about 35-40 minutes until golden brown. If crust browns too fast, cover with foil last 5 to 10 minutes of baking.
- Transfer to a rack and cool in the pan for minutes, then turn the loaf out of the pan onto a wire rack and cool completely.
- For the glaze, if using, melt the chocolate and leave to cool for about 5 minutes before slowly pour over the bread.
© 2026 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
© 2026 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
...Angie, I'd like loaf without the frosty!
ReplyDeleteOttimo, adoro l'uvetta!!!
ReplyDeleteQue buena mano tienes para el pan, te quedan perfectos todos los que haces.
ReplyDeleteGood morning, Looks so delicious (I pinned it to my bread board)
ReplyDeleteLooks like my kind of treat. I’d love a piece.
ReplyDeletersrue.blogspot.com
That looks so tasty :-D
ReplyDeleteIt does look wonderfully soft und pretty with that white glaze.
ReplyDeleteI love the idea of white chocolate glaze. It adds a whole other level to the bread. And just responding to the cost of the socks you mentioned when you commented on my blog. Yup, pricey, but these were kids socks and they came with 3 socks not 2. I guess they know that kids will lose one at sometime. I didn't show that in the photo, but I liked that idea.
ReplyDeleteI like breaded 🥪🍞, delicious 🤤
ReplyDeleteMy husband would love this. I am going to have to attempt to make it for him.
ReplyDeleteHappy Friday Angie!!
OMG! Never heard of this. Looks so delicious. Thank you for the recipe. :)
ReplyDeleteYummy
ReplyDeleteI would love to try this, looks delicious!
ReplyDeleteTake care, Happy Friday! Have a great weekend!
Very nice and yummy.
ReplyDeleteLooks fantastic.
ReplyDeleteFabulous looking bread
ReplyDeleteGracias por la receta. Te mando un beso.
ReplyDeleteOh what a wonderful breakfast that would be!
ReplyDelete... perhaps without the glaze for me.
ReplyDeleteAll the best Jan
Angie, this German raisin bread looks so lovely and homey. I love the warm, fruity touch - such a classic loaf.
ReplyDeleteWonderful recipe, well explained.
ReplyDeleteGreetings
My mom would love this as I'm sure she would have had it often growing up.
ReplyDeleteTandy (Lavender and Lime) https://tandysinclair.com
Looks good, Angie and I love raisin bread though we don't have it often.
ReplyDeleteThe Germans knew their raisins
ReplyDeleteIt looks so good. I wish I could have some right now!
ReplyDeleteI am an oddity among my crowd for liking raisins. In fact, I love them. At no point do I not have a big apothecary jar of golden raisins, dark raisins, and currants, and, if I’m honest, chocolate covered raisins. This bread is right up my alley and I am definitely going to be trying it.
ReplyDeleteI was in Germany last week and bought German bread! Not like yours however, which must be very good with raisins and this yummy frosting.
ReplyDeleteWhen you mention raisins and bread, I instantly thought of panettone! that's because it's been more "commercialized" here...
ReplyDeleteIt looks so soft and fluffy!....delicious!!........Abrazotes, Marcela
ReplyDeleteThat is so pretty! Wishing I had a piece right now.
ReplyDelete