Dutch Cookbook

          Banket (Almond Bars)

3 cups flour
½ cup butter
1 cup oleo
¾ cup water

          Mix and put above crust in refrigerator overnight. Then cut dough in 6 pieces and roll out long as for pie crust.

Filling:
2 cups almond paste - softened (at least 1 pound)
1 cup white sugar
1 cup powdered sugar
3 eggs (save 1 white to brush on top of crust)
1 teaspoon almond extract

          Put filling on 6 pieces and roll up and bake.
          Freezes well before baked.

          Krakelingen (Butter cookies in 8 shape)

2 cups butter
4 cups flour
½ cup water
sugar

          Cut butter into flour. Gradually stir in water forming a dough similar to pastry. Cover and refrigerate overnight. Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Roll small amount of dough into a pencil shape. Bring ends together and twist into a figure 8 shape. Dip both sides in sugar. Place on ungreased cookie sheet. Bake until brown on bottom. Makes 6 dozen.

          Zeeuwse Babbelaars (Dutch candy)

1 cup brown sugar
1 cup sugar
2 tablespoons butter
1/3 cup vinegar
1/3 cup water

          In a saucepan, combine sugars, butter, vinegar and water. Boil without stirring, until mixture reaches hard crack stage. Pour onto large, buttered pan. When cool enough to handle, butter hands and pull candy into long strips. Cut at once into small square pieces. Wrap in waxed paper.

          Erwtensoep (Dutch Pea Soup)

2 cups split green peas
3 quarts of cold water
1 pig's trotter*
1 pig's ear*
1 cup bacon squares
4 Frankfurters
1 pound potatoes
4 tablespoons of salt
1 celeriac (the root of a celery plant)
1 bunch of celery green
2 leeks
2 onions

          Wash the peas, soak for 12 hours (unless you use quick cooking peas) and boil gently in the water they were soaked in for at least two hours. Cook in this liquid the trotter and the ear and the bacon for at least one hour. Add the sliced potatoes, salt, diced celeriac, chopped leeks, and celery green and cook until everything is done and the soup is smooth and thick. Add the Frank-furters for the last 10 minutes. The longer the soup simmers the better the taste. Three hours is the usual time in Holland. The soup gets so thick when it cools that it can almost be cut next day. The soup tastes best the next day, which is why it is made in such big quantities.

          * more bacon or ham could be substituted if these items are not available

          Hutspot

1 pound lean boneless chuck (thin flank) (UK: lean brisket)
2/3 pound onions
4 pounds potatoes
2 pounds carrots
milk
4 tablespoons fat, butter or margarine
pepper

          Wash meat, boil in 2 cups of water and salt for about 2 hours. Scrub and mince carrots. Peel, wash and slice onions and add them to the meat together with peeled and cut potatoes and carrots. Boil until done (about 30 minutes). Remove meat from pan. Mash all the vegetables and add fat, butter or margarine and pepper. If too thick add some milk (but a spoon must be able to stand up in it). Serve with the sliced meat. The dish is eaten as a main meal dish, either with some soup to start, and followed up with fruit, as the dish is very nourishing. The recipe serves 4 people.

          Ontbijtkoek (Dutch spice cake)

2 cups of self-raising flour
1/2 cup dark brown sugar
1/3 cup molasses or treacle
1 cup of milk
1 teaspoon ground cloves
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon ginger
1/2 teaspoon grated nutmeg
pinch of salt
butter or margarine

          Combine all the ingredients to a smooth paste. Preheat oven to 300 degrees F. Butter an oblong 8" x 3" cake pan, fill with dough and bake for about one hour. When cooked, allow to cool and keep in a pan or in the bread-bin for 24 hours before serving.

          Oliebollen (± 40) (Oil-dumplings)

1 pound flour
10 grams salt
1 egg
24 grams yeast
450 mL milk
100 grams raisins
100 grams currants
50 grams cut up candied peel**
1 or 2 cut up apple(s)**
oil
powdered sugar

          Mix the salt and the flower. Break the egg and put it on the flower. Mix the yeast with some milk, and put it on the flower, just like the rest of the milk. Stir this good, beginning in the middle, and let it beated up for some minutes. (If the batter is all right, then it falls in pieces from a spoon.) Wash the currants and the raisins, let them leak out very good, and add them, maybe with the candied peel and/or the apple, on the batter. Cover the batter, and let it rise for one hour on a bit warm place. Fill a cast iron pan for 50% with oil. Make two spoons fat. Heat the oil, and put the first oil-dumplings in it, made with the spoons, as the steam comes from it. Turn them around after ±three minutes, if they didn't their own. Bake them done and gold-brown, in ±2 minutes. (They're good if a knitting needle comes dry out of it.) Let them leak out good and serve them, warm, with powdered sugar.

          ** official recipe is without, but you can add them if you want

          Appeltaart (ø 24cm) (Dutch Apple Pie)

300 grams baking meal
200 grams butter
pinch of salt
160 grams bastard sugar
1 sack vanillasugar
1 egg
2 tablespoons (30 mL) bread-crumbs
vanillacustard***
whipped cream****

          Butter the spring cake tin. Mix the salt, vanillacustard, bastard sugar and baking meal. Add small pieces butter to the baking meal. Whip the egg, and add ¾ of the egg to. Knead a connected ball of it. Let it rest on a cool place. Make now the filling. Cover the bottom and the borders of the spring cake tin equally with the paste, don't use everything! Sprinkle the bread-rumbs over the pastebottom and put the filling in it. Make a diamond-shape with small rolls of the paste. Spread the paste at the top, with the rest of the egg. Put the pie in a prehitted oven on the lowest gridiron (±175 °C, ±347 °F), and let the pie in there for ± 70 till 80 minutes till it's done and brown. Let it cool down before you eat it!

          ***  put vanillacustard over the pie, and then into the oven
          **** you can put whipped cream on it

Filling:
1 kg hard sour apples
1 tablepoon (15 ml) lemon juice
40 grams sugar
2 teaspoons (10 ml) cinnamon
50 grams raisins

          Mix everything.

          Pannekoeken (10 thin ones) (Pancakes)

300 grams baking meal
600 mL milk
1 egg
pinch of salt
treacle
sugar
cinnamon
pork*****
apple*****
ham*****
cheese*****

          Break the egg and put it on the meal, together with a pinch of salt. Mix it with 50% of the milk. Shake or beat up good, till you have an egal batter. Add the rest of the milk, and mix that. Bake, immediately, pancakes of it in a frying-pan, with every time a bit butter in it. Serve with treacle, sugar and cinnamon.

          ***** pork, apple, ham, cheese or ham/cheese can be baked with the pancakes

          Wentelteefjes (Pain Perdu or French Toast)

bread
cinnamon
milk
butter
sugar
jam

          Put some milk in a diep bord with some cinnamon over it. Pull the bread through it. Put (much) butter in a frying-pan, and bake the bread gold-brown. Serve it warm with sugar and jam.

 

Back to Culture