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Linzertorte

Linzertorte

Another thing I made for Global Village (see previous post) is a rendition of Linzertorte, a crumbly dough torte with a lattice design on top, named after the Austrian city Linz.

Here’s what I used:

  • 250g flour
  • 150g ground roasted hazelnuts
  • 100g ground almonds
  • 10g baking powder
  • 150g sugar (typically powdered sugar, I used Muscovado sugar)
  • 1/2 tsp cinnamon
  • a pinch of clove powder
  • 200g milk-free margarine
  • egg replacer powder for one egg (in Norway, you can buy it at e.g. Rema1000 or Meny)
  • jam (typically redcurrant; I used rosehip)

Mix the dry ingredients; then quickly knead in the margarine. (If you knead it for too long, the dough is going to break when you try to roll it out.) Put it in the fridge for half an hour or so.

Grease a cake pan. Roll out about 3/4 of the dough, and put it in the pan. Make the dough a little higher around the edge. Spread it a little with your fingers, if necessary. Then spread the jam over the dough, maybe half a centimeter high. Roll out the rest of the dough, cut it in stripes, and put the stripes in a lattice design on top of the jam.

Bake it at 180°C for 20-30min. The Linzertorte tastes best if you let it rest over night first. Enjoy!

Pongauer Fleischkrapfen

 

Last Friday, we celebrated the multi-national culture at Opera Software with a Global Village, an event where employees served samples of traditional foods from their native countries. I’m the only Austrian at Opera, so I got to choose what to serve on my table. :-)

I grew up in the Pongau  district of Salzburg (Salzburg is both the city and one of Austria’s 9 states), in the middle of the Alps. A very typical dish for the region is ‘Pongauer Fleischkrapfen’, a sort of meat dumpling, typically made with smoked meat. So for Global Village, I created a modern rendition of the dish. It is 100% vegetarian, though I must warn you: that doesn’t make the dish much lighter. ;-)

Pongauer Fleischkrapfen

The recipe is for 6-8 people. Fleischkrapfen take quite a bit of time to prepare, so it does make sense to make a bunch. The good thing is that you can make them in stages. I did it like this:

  • Day 1: prepare the filling
  • Day 2: make the dough and make the Krapfen
  • Day 3: deep-fry the Krapfen

The measurements are not very exact, since I usually cook by approximation rather than by book.

 

The Filling

 

  • ~100g TVP (Textured vegetable protein)
  • 2 blocks of smoked tofu (the smokier the better)
  • 2 onions
  • 2 cloves of garlic
  • 1 large potato, cooked
  • vegetable stock
  • soy sauce
  • vegetable frying oil
  • herb salt, pepper
  • parsley

Cover the dry TVP with boiling water, add a dash of soy sauce, a whole bunch of vegetable stock, and herb salt. The liquid should be a lot saltier than the usual vegetable broth. Let the TVP rehydrate for a couple of minutes (the package will tell you how long exactly). Mince the smoked tofu and mash the potato. When ready, drain the TVP and press it with your hands to remove all excess liquid.

Finely cut the onions and fry them in oil until lucent. Then add some more oil, the TVP and the tofu, and roast for a little while. Then add the rest of the ingredients (potato, crushed garlic, spicery). To make it taste authentic, make sure to use a whole bunch of oil and salt. The filling shouldn’t taste dry. Let the filling cool down before you use it. Ideally, leave it over night, so the TVP can take on some of the smokiness of the tofu.

 

The Dough: “Abbrennteig”

 

  • 250g wheat flour
  • 250g rye flour
  • ~ 250ml unsweetened plant milk (e.g. soy milk or oat milk)
  • 100g milk-free margarine
  • 1 tsp ground caraway
  • salt (1 tbs?)

We call this dough “Abbrennteig” (burn-up-dough?). The idea is to ‘burn’ the flour with the hot liquid, so it thickens immediately. It can be a little tricky to get the amount of liquid right, since you shouldn’t have to add too much flour or cold liquid later on. The dough should be hard enough so it doesn’t stick and is strong enough to hold in the filling. If it is too hard, it will be tough to roll it out.

To make the dough, mix the dry ingredients. Boil up the milk and margarine, then mix the hot liquid into the dry ingredients. Knead a little and let the dough rest for a little while, so it can cool down. (I had it rest over night even, covered with plastic foil).

 

The Krapfen

 

  • Cooking oil for deep frying (I used coconut oil)

Take a bit of the dough and roll it out thinly, around 15cm in diameter. Put filling on the lower half of the circle, and fold over the other half. Make sure there’s no extra air in the pocket. Press the edges shut with your fingers, leave around 1cm of edge; you don’t want the Fleischkrapfen to open up while you deep-fry them. Cut off excess dough with a pastry wheel.

If you end up with leftover dough (or if you want a simpler/faster dish), roll out the dough and cut it into large squares. The deep-fried squares are called “Blattlkrapfen” (leaf krapfen). We’d usually wrap them with Sauerkraut and eat them with our hands.

Deep-fry the Fleischkrapfen (brown them a little on both sides), and put them on kitchen roll paper to remove extra fat. Serve them immediately, together with sauerkraut. Good luck! :-)

Austria's table at Global Village

Picture Tree

Cardboard picture tree

The process of decorating my apartment is a slow one. I want every part of it to be special. I want to have a positive connection to the items I own, and not own too much of them. So I want to put some effort into the decoration I put up, without spending much money on it.

When I saw the family tree on All Things Paper, I knew I wanted to make something similar myself. As in the original project, I used toilet paper rolls for the leaves and cardboard for the branches, but I also used cardboard instead of photo frames. I made mine purple (because purple is awesome), with some black shadows and golden highlights. Finding the right pictures is still work-in-progress :-)

Cardboard picture tree

The tree with pictures.

Cardboard picture tree (without pictures)

Before I put pictures up.

Cardboard picture tree, detail.

Detail.

Paper Tablecloth

Paper bag tablecloth

Time for another upcycling project! :-)

So I have this big-ass dining table in my apartment, extendable to fit at least 6 people. I finally tested it in its extended form last week, when I had people over for the UX book club. There was only one problem: It was empty. I had no decoration for it whatsoever. Well, I have candles, but one tiny candle on a big table doesn’t really do much. So I decided, in a cloak-and-dagger operation, to dig through my paper trash and make something out of it.

I ended up using just three paper bags – the ones bread comes in. I opened them up into one flat layer, and colored them with acrylic paint: two with purple paint and white highlights, one with golden paint. Then I cut 2cm wide stripes, and wove them together. I glued all the overlaps. Voila!

Oh, and for the white part I cut three circles out of a white plastic bag, cutting around a pot with a Stanley knife. I stuck them together in the middle using double-sided tape. Then I added a simple line of golden acrylic paint.

The reverse side of the paper part looks like this:

Paper bag tablecloth: reverse side

The bread was a little oily, that’s why there are some dark spots :-)

I didn’t document the process, so I can’t give you a step-by-step guide. But maybe you can tell by looking at the leftovers. Here you go! :-)

Paper bag tablecloth: leftover scraps

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