Happy St. Lucia fuckers. Made some lussekatter (St. Lucia buns) for the occasion. I'm poor so no saffron. I followed this recipe (
https://true-north-kitchen.com/st-lucia-buns-lussekatter/), but I've followed other recipes in the past.
Otherwise, made some joulutorttu/tähtitorttu (aka swastika cookies as they've been called in our house) yesterday using cream cheese (normally you use ricotta). Apart from them opening up at the centre, they turned out pretty well. It's a very nice cookie because it's barely sweet. You normally dust with icing sugar, but I didn't do that because they were eaten in a flash. You also use prune jam typically, but I used some pear sauce and boozy canned blueberries and blackberries. They certainly leaked everywhere, but tasted great. I followed this recipe:
http://www.sweetpaulmag.com/food/finnish-holiday-cookies
>>675
I've never had rye malt before, but I don't see why it wouldn't work to use barley malt instead. You'll get a different flavour in the end, but the essence of the dish should be maintained.
As for grinding the rye malt in a blender, I would go with a coffee grinder rather than a blender. That way you can really get it powdery rather than grainy. Since it gets stewed for so long, I doubt it makes a difference, but having never made it, I don't know.
>>682
For both, I went with Weekend Bakery (
https://www.weekendbakery.com/posts/our-perfect-christmas-stollen/ for the stollen and
https://www.weekendbakery.com/posts/weekend-fruit-nuts-loaf-our-not-so-kletzenbrot/ for the kletzenbrot). The kletzenbrot was a sourdough rendition, but if you aren't into that, someone left a comment about making it with instant yeast. Or, looking it up online, they all seem pretty similar. Just try a range of fruit (I'm actually making apfelbrot right now with some apples I dried myself) and nuts (I'm making this one with pumpkin seeds added in).