Skip to content

Bakers of the giant stollen get help from engineers

To ensure that thousands of pieces of the traditional pastry can be sold at the Stollen Festival in Dresden next Saturday, 30 bakers made a giant stollen on Sunday. This year, they enlisted special help in the process.

The bakers from the Dresden Stollen Association spread the stollen slabs at the Akademie Deutsches....aussiedlerbote.de
The bakers from the Dresden Stollen Association spread the stollen slabs at the Akademie Deutsches Bäckerhandwerk Sachsen. Photo.aussiedlerbote.de

Dresden - Bakers of the giant stollen get help from engineers

In addition to bakers, engineers were also involved in the production of the Dresden giant stollen this year. "They also like to eat stollen. We asked them if they could build us a model for a giant stollen," master baker Karsten Liebscher told the German Press Agency at the Dresden trade fair on Sunday. There, 30 bakers had met early in the morning to make the XXL Striezel. Over 3000 pieces of the stollen are to be sold at the Stollen Festival in Dresden next Saturday (9.12.).

The giant stollen is made up of countless individual pieces. According to Liebscher, a model printed using a 3D printer made it easier for the bakers to start production on Sunday. "We knew exactly how many pieces we had to cut and where they had to go." Nevertheless, it takes at least six hours to make the stollen. In the final step, the pastry is sprinkled with powdered sugar.

Liebscher said that the giant version of the traditional yeast dough pastry should weigh around 1.8 tons in the end. Compared to previous years, this year's is rather light. "We've had heavier stollen before. But we don't want to keep getting bigger and heavier, we want to offer better and better quality," said the master baker.

Three weeks earlier, the bakers had already baked around 270 stollen slabs, which were then used to make the giant stollen. "The slabs are 60 by 40 centimetres in size. They are pre-cut into twelve pieces."

At the Stollen Festival, the so-called bricks will cost ten euros each. "They weigh a good pound, a good 500 grams."

Read also:

The model for the giant stollen, created using a 3D printer, was crucial for the bakers in Dresden during their production on Sunday, as it helped them understand the required number and placement of the individual pieces. Saxony, being the home of the iconic Dresden stollen, received support from the German Press Agency in spreading news about the event. Despite the lighter weight compared to previous years, master baker Karsten Liebscher aimed to continue improving the quality of the Dresden giant stollen.

Source: www.stern.de

Comments

Latest