© 2026 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
© 2026 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
© 2026 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
Franzbrötchen (literally French roll) are Hamburg’s iconic pastry. Basically, it is nothing more than a yeast Danish pastry with cinnamon, and yet the Franzbrötchen is something special for the Hamburgers. They are usually served in the afternoon with coffee or even for breakfast. This sweet treat was initially limited to the greater Hamburg area, but since the early 20th century, Franzbrötchen have become popular in many German cities. Today you can easily get a Franzbrötchen from many bakeries across Germany. They are now available in various versions, including with raisins, crumble topping, chocolate chips, marzipan and poppy seeds.
The Franzbrötchen gets its name because it was first made in Hamburg during the French occupation in the 19th century (1806–1814). It is a blend of the French croissant style (Plunderteig / puff pastry) and German baking traditions.
Today I’m turning this sweet pastry from Hamburg into something savoury with seasonal wild garlic. Wild garlic season has just begun! So I simply couldn’t resist. If you’d like to try the recipe, you’ll need to hurry, because wild garlic season is short and usually starts in late March. Around May, the plant begins to flower and the leaves lose their distinctive aroma.
| Pastry | Filling |
- 400 g Plain flour
- ½ tsp Sea salt
- 1 tbsp Sugar
- 7 g Instant dry yeast
- 80 g Cold butter, in pieces
- 150 ml Milk
- 1 Medium egg, beaten
- 150 g Butter, in pieces, softened
- ¼ tsp Fleur de Sel for topping
|
- 50 g Wild garlic, finely chopped
- 3 tbsp Blanched almonds, ground
- 2 tbsp Olive oil
- ½ tsp Sea salt
|
- For the pastry, place the flour, salt, sugar and yeast in the bowl of your mixer and mix together. Add in cold butter and rub in by hand until the mixture resembles fine breadcrumbs, then make a well in the centre. Pour the milk and egg into the well, mix together, then quickly knead into a smooth dough. Shape the dough into a rectangle, cover and leave to rise at room temperature for 1½-2 hours.
- Roll out the dough on a lightly floured surface into a rectangle about 1 cm thick. Spread butter evenly over one half of the dough, leaving a border of about 1 cm free. Place the other half of the dough on top, press the edges together firmly, cover and chill for about 30 minutes. Roll out the dough again on a lightly floured surface into a 1 cm thick rectangle. Fold the short sides in towards the centre, then place one half on top of the other so that you have 4 layers of dough. Cover and chill for 1 hour, repeat the process, then cover and chill for a further 1 hour.
- Meanwhile, make wild garlic filling. Place all the ingredients in a measuring jug and purée.
- Roll out the dough on a lightly floured surface into a 25x50 cm rectangle. Spread the wild garlic mixture evenly over the whole surface of the dough. Roll up the dough from the long side, then cut into 12 pieces. Use the handle of a wooden spoon or chopstick to press down in the middle, creating the typical Franzbrötchen shape. Place them on a baking tray lined with baking paper. Cover and leave to rise at room temperature for 30 minutes. Brush with a little water and sprinkle with Fleur de Sel.
- Preheat the oven to 200C/400F. Bake the Franzbrötchen for 20 minutes until golden crispy. Remove and cool on a wire rack.
© 2026 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
© 2026 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
Those are so pretty and I bet they taste just as good as they look!
ReplyDeleteEsses pães devem exalar um aroma capaz de espantar vampiros, mas eu quero uma dúzia deles. Poderia me servir, por favor? rsrsrsrsr
ReplyDeleteNova tirinha publicada. 😺
Abraços 🐾 Garfield Tirinhas Oficial.
Never heard of this before.
ReplyDeleteI can just imagine how fragrant these are.
ReplyDeleteTandy (Lavender and Lime) https://tandysinclair.com
Que ricos se ven, me gustará hacerlos, aunque seguramente compraré la masa para ahorrarme ese paso que es el más laborioso. Quedan espectaculares.
ReplyDeleteIt looks good but I wouldn’t want to order it at a restaurant
ReplyDeleteSomething different, Angie.
ReplyDeleteThe mere thought of wild garlic sends me into raptures!
ReplyDeleteLooks amazing. I love wild garlic :-D
ReplyDelete...goodness rolled up in a little package!
ReplyDeleteOne could probably live on these, they are so soft, fragrant, tasty und perfect, I would eat them for breakfast, lunch and dinner as well. I wish my mother baked things like these when I was little, but she did not, we were constantly yearning for it.
ReplyDeleteLooks delicious, Angie! Take care, have a great day!
ReplyDeleteThey are gorgeous and I'm sure just as delicious.
ReplyDeleteYummy
ReplyDeleteBeautiful & delicious. Yum.
ReplyDeleteI can't imaging making this but I would definitely order one.
ReplyDeleteWhat a gorgeous little roll, I love that you made it savoury. The wild garlic must lend a wonderful aroma as it bakes.
ReplyDeleteSuch a fun twist, Angie! I love this savoury pastry idea - that wild garlic must make it so fragrant and flavourful.
ReplyDeleteI'm playing catch up today. Sorry I missed so many posts. :) I wish we had wild garlic. Maybe we do, but I've only heard of it on blogs. Your buns look amazing. I bet they were tasty too.
ReplyDelete