Kringle
Updated Jan. 2, 2020

- Total Time
- 2 hours, plus at least 5 hours’ chilling
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1cup/130 grams all-purpose flour
- 1cup/130 grams bread flour
- 3tablespoons/40 grams granulated sugar
- 2teaspoons instant yeast
- ¾teaspoon fine sea salt
- 1cup/225 grams cold unsalted butter (2 sticks), cut into ½-inch cubes
- ⅓cup/80 milliliters cold whole milk
- 1large egg, cold
- ¾cup/170 grams almond paste
- 4tablespoons/60 grams unsalted butter (½ stick), at room temperature
- ¼cup/30 grams confectioners’ sugar
- ¼cup egg whites, well-beaten (from about 2 large eggs)
- Pinch of fine sea salt
- ¼teaspoon freshly squeezed lemon juice, plus more as needed
- 1cup/125 grams confectioners’ sugar
- ½teaspoon vanilla extract or lemon juice
- Pinch of fine sea salt
For the Dough
For the Filling
For the Icing
Preparation
- Step 1
Prepare the dough: In the bowl of a food processor, combine all-purpose flour, bread flour, sugar, yeast and salt. Pulse a few times to blend. Add butter and pulse 10 times, or until butter chunks are broken down by about half.
- Step 2
In a medium bowl, whisk together milk and egg. Scrape flour mixture into the bowl and use a flexible spatula to stir together until nearly all the flour is moistened. Use your hand to quickly knead the dough to bring it together. Transfer dough to a work surface, pat into a rectangle, and wrap with plastic wrap. Refrigerate for at least 4 hours and up to 2 days.
- Step 3
On a lightly floured surface, roll chilled dough into a roughly 8-by-15-inch rectangle. Fold the two short sides of the rectangle toward the center, folding the rectangle into thirds, like a letter. Rotate dough 90 degrees, then roll out again into a 8-by-15-inch rectangle; fold into thirds again. Wrap dough in plastic wrap and chill for at least 20 minutes.
- Step 4
Roll the dough out into a roughly 8-by-15-inch rectangle, fold into thirds, wrap in plastic wrap and chill for at least 20 minutes two more times. At this point, wrapped dough can be kept in the refrigerator up to 3 days, or freezer for 2 months.
- Step 5
Prepare the filling: In the bowl of an electric mixer, combine almond paste, butter, confectioners’ sugar, 2 tablespoons of the egg whites and the salt. Beat to combine, then beat in lemon juice, adding more to taste, if you like.
- Step 6
Line two rimmed sheet pans with parchment paper. Unwrap the dough and cut in half.
- Step 7
On a lightly floured work surface, roll each half into a 6-by-24-inch rectangle. Spread ½-cup filling on each in an even strip down the center (about 2½-inches wide).
- Step 8
Fold one long side over the filling, leaving the remaining third of the dough exposed. Use a pastry brush to the open border of dough with reserved egg whites on both the long side and two short ends. Fold the second long side over the first; pinch and press the seam tightly along the length and at both short ends, sinking your fingertips into the pastry to create a tight seal.
- Step 9
Remeasure dough to make sure it’s at least 24 inches long; if necessary, stretch it back out. Form into an oval, then tuck one end into the other. Pinch and press the seam together, then transfer oval to prepared sheet pans and flip over so it’s seam-side down. Repeat with the remaining dough and filling. Cover loosely with plastic wrap and let rise in a warm spot for 30 to 45 minutes, or until slightly puffy.
- Step 10
When ready to bake, heat oven to 375 degrees. Brush pastry with more egg white, then bake until golden, about 25 minutes, rotating sheet pans from front to back and top to bottom halfway through.
- Step 11
As soon as the pastries come out of the oven (and the pastries are piping hot!), do something that seems a little crazy: Compress each pastry slightly by using the sheet pan with the other pastry on it, setting the sheet pan on top of the pastry and pressing gently to eliminate the air pocket between the pastry and filling. Transfer the sheet pans to wire racks and allow pastries to cool completely.
- Step 12
Prepare the icing: In a small bowl, whisk together confectioners’ sugar, vanilla, fine sea salt and 4 teaspoons water. Spread icing over tops of the kringles. Let icing dry before slicing and serving.
Private Notes
Comments
The American Kringle is different than a traditional Danish Kringle and does in fact originate in Wisconsin.
Egg whites for the filling - "well beaten"? Should these be just foamy, or.. beyond?
Baked this earlier today, and it was delicious. Per the earlier comment about egg whites -- no need to beat them. I used the whites as is and it worked just like you would expect. I froze half the dough and half the filling so I can bake this again next weekend when I'm visiting friends out of state.
I made this a while ago and it was delicious. Make sure you use the right kind of almond paste per other comments. Also the direction re egg whites could be more clear so you don’t add all to filling. The trader joe carried kringle (O&H) is tasty and scary addictive but very sweet and industrial by its nature (shortening/ butter mix and preservatives etc). The O&H website is a good resource for other filling ideas
Made as per the recipe and it was great. saved half of dough/filling in freezer for a few weeks. When i defrosted to made the second one i added some lemon zest and a tiny bit of vanilla and almond extract (a few drops each) to the filling and it was even better!
This was very good. Making the dough takes some time, but it turned out buttery and flaky.
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