Kifli
Type | Bread roll |
---|---|
Course | Breakfast, coffee break |
Region or state | Europe |
Serving temperature | Warm or room temperature |
Main ingredients | Wheat flour |
Kipferl, kifli, kiflice, or kifle is a traditional yeast bread roll that is rolled and formed into a crescent before baking.
It is a common type of bread roll throughout much of central Europe and nearby countries, where it is called by different names. It is thought to be the inspiration for the French croissant, which has a very similar shape but is made with a different type of dough.
Stale kipfel[which?] are used to make a sweet bread pudding called Kipfelkoch.[1]
Names
[edit]The roll or pastry is called:
- Kipferl in Austrian German[2][3]
- kipfl in German speaking South Tyrol Italy[2]
- kifli in Hungarian
- Gipfeli in Swiss German
- kifla / кифла (pl. kifle / кифле or kiflice / кифлице) in Bosnian, Croatian, and Serbian[4]
- кифла [kifla] in Bulgarian
- кифла [kifla] in Macedonian
- kifle in Albanian
- giffel in Danish[5] and Swedish
- rogal or rogalik (little horn) in Polish
- rohlík in Czech[6]
- rožok in Slovak[7]
- рогалик [rogalik] in Russian
- рогалик [rohalyk] in Ukrainian
- rogljiček or kifelc in Slovene
- cornuleț in Romanian
- horn (horn) in Norwegian
- Hörnchen (little horn) in German[2]
In Old High German, Kipfa mean "carriage stanchion" and referred to the stanchions or "horns" of a cart.[1] In the 13th century, that usage referred to a bread shape of pagan origin.[1]
The Czech, Slovak, Polish, Slovenian, Ukrainian and Russian names derive as diminuitives from the Slavic word rogal or rohel ("horned") which in turn derives from "rog/roh" ("horn/protrusion").[8] Some other languages use a simple translation ("horn", "cornulet").
The similarity of the words "rohalyk" or "rohlík" with the English word "roll" is coincidental, the words are not related by origin. The Slavic root "rog" can be hypothetically related with the German verb "ragen" ("to protrude").[8]
Background
[edit]Kipferl are a traditional yeasted bread rolled into a crescent shape. The Austrian kipferl is a small wheat roll with pointed ends.[2] The 17th-century Austrian monk Abraham a Sancta Clara described the roll as crescent shaped, writing "the moon in the first quarter shines like a kipfl", and noted there were Kipferl in various forms: "vil lange, kurze, krumpe und gerade kipfel" ("many long, short, crooked and straight kipfel").[2]
Breads or pastries in the shape of a crescent moon are believed to have been served in ancient times as offerings to the goddess of the moon, Selene.[1] The shape is also reminiscent of horns; both are associated with ancient symbolism and considered the oldest surviving pastry shape.[9][1] A moon shaped pastry creates itself naturally by hand-rolling a ball of dough into a cylinder form.[citation needed]
A list of foods eaten in a 10th-century convent include panis lunatis, described as a small crescent-shaped roll often eaten during fasts.[10]
The Kipferl has been documented in Austria to at least 1227 when they were recorded in Babenberg-ruled Vienna as chipfen:[2][1]: 4
dô brâchten im die pecken
chipfen und weiʒe flecken,
weiʒer dann ein hermelein.
In Austria, the Kipferl is formally recognized by the government as a traditional food.[1] According to the Austrian Ministry of Agriculture, Regions and Tourism, Kipferl were probably a traditional monastery pastry baked for Easter.[1] They are described as crescent-shaped rolls made of yeast wheat dough in a variety of shapes and as being popular for coffee breaks and breakfasts, particularly in Vienna.[1]
The Kipferl likely inspired the similarly shaped French croissant, which is made from a laminated pastry dough.[1][9]
Origin myths
[edit]A common culinary myth claims that the Kipferl was invented in Vienna after or during the siege of the city by Ottoman Turks.[1]
Another story claims when Christian forces freed Buda from Ottoman occupation in 1686, the bakers of the town celebrated the victory the next day by selling freshly baked bread rolls made into a crescent shape.[citation needed] This however begs the question of why would the bakers make a crescent shape (an Ottoman symbol) instead of a Christian one.
Preparation
[edit]Traditionally, Kipferl are made by cutting sheets of soft yeast dough into triangular wedges, rolling them into crescent shapes and baking them. Unlike the French croissant (crescent), Kipferl is made from a plain, bread-like dough and is more akin to a roll than to pastry. Kipferl is also thinner and longer than the croissant. Kipferl are made in various sizes; some of them weigh as much as small bread loaf.[citation needed]
In commercial preparation, the dough is mixed, cut into small pieces, and fed into a machine that flattens and rolls it.
Varieties
[edit]Regular
[edit]When they come out of the oven, the rolls can be left plain or brushed with water to make them shiny. They can be given an egg wash and sprinkled with either poppy seeds or caraway seeds mixed with coarse salt. The latter variety is often made into a straight shape rather than a crescent. Kipferl is eaten like bread or rolls; it is usually made into a sandwich, sometimes plain or with butter like a fresh baguette. Often, especially for breakfast, the topping is jam or honey. They may also be used for dunking.
Fine
[edit]This is the same as the regular style but the dough may contain butter or other shortening and milk. It is sweeter than the regular variety and is well-suited to be eaten with jam or honey, and is commonly eaten for breakfast with coffee, hot chocolate or milk. It might also be an accompaniment for drinks like Doogh and Kumis.[citation needed]
Sweet
[edit]There are a couple of sweet rolls named "Kipferl" to describe their shape; they are eaten at the end of a meal or with an afternoon drink; these are not Kipferl, which when used on its own, always means the regular or fine varieties.[citation needed] In German, these are differentiated with a different spelling: Kipferl compared to Kipfel for the yeast bread.[1]
- Vanillekipferl is a small, very short soft cookie made from a dough of ground nuts instead of flour. It is originally made with walnuts but almonds are more often used outside of Hungary. Once baked they are rolled in vanilla-flavored confectioners' sugar then allowed to cool.[11]
- Bratislavský rožok/bratislavské rožky, diós kifli, mákos kifli, also known as Pozsonyi kifli and in German as Preßburger Kipfel, are crescent-shaped, sweet, leavened pastries filled with a sweet walnut or poppy paste. Under the name Bratislavský rožok / Pozsonyi kiflia, they are registered as Traditional Speciality Guaranteed products in the EU and the UK.[12] They are a variety of beigli, very similar in flavor but different in shape and size.[citation needed]
- Lupáčik[13][14] (Slovak pronunciation: ['lupaːtʂik]) or makovka[15] (Slovak pronunciation: ['makouka]), incorrectly presented as lúpačka,[16] (Slovak pronunciation: ['luːpatʂka]) is a sweet pastry made of fatty dough,[13] often decorated with poppy seeds.
Gallery
[edit]-
Rohlík
-
Rogal
-
Rožok
-
Bratislavsky rožok
-
Pozsonyi kifli
-
Lupáčik
-
Hörnchen
-
Loaves of dough before splitting
-
Small chunks of dough
-
Dough before insertion into rohlík machine
-
Inserting dough, machine rolls rohlík automatically
-
Rolled rohlík before baking
-
Creative variations
-
Proofing before baking
-
Watering a rohlík
-
Sprinkling with poppy
-
Salt and caraway seed variation
-
Rohlík in front of steam furnace
See also
[edit]- List of breads
- Cornetto, an Italian crescent pastry
- Rogal świętomarciński, a crescent cake baked in Poznań, Poland, for St. Martin's Day
- Rugelach, a filled crescent pastry popular in Jewish communities in Poland
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Kipfel, bmnt.gv.at". www.bmnt.gv.at. Archived from the original on 1 January 2020. Retrieved 1 January 2020.
- ^ a b c d e f g Grimm, Jacob; Grimm, Wilhelm. "Kipfel". Deutsches Wörterbuch. Archived from the original on 1 January 2020. Retrieved 1 January 2020.
- ^ "The history of the croissant". www.bakersmaison.com.au. Archived from the original on 1 January 2020. Retrieved 1 January 2020.
- ^ "Kifla in English, translation, Serbo Croatian-English Dictionary". Glosbe. Archived from the original on 24 December 2019. Retrieved 1 January 2020.
- ^ "Giffel in English, translation, Danish-English Dictionary". Glosbe. Archived from the original on 24 December 2019. Retrieved 1 January 2020.
- ^ "Czech Rohlik (Roll) Baked in Oven Recipe - Food.com". www.food.com. Archived from the original on 1 January 2020. Retrieved 1 January 2020.
- ^ "Rožok in English, translation, Slovak-English Dictionary". Glosbe. Archived from the original on 24 December 2019. Retrieved 1 January 2020.
- ^ a b Jiří Rejzek: Český etymologický slovník, LEDA, Voznice, 2001, „rohlík“, „roh“
- ^ a b Chevallier, Jim (5 October 2009). August Zang and the French Croissant: How Viennoiserie Came to France. Chez Jim. pp. 3–7. ISBN 978-1-4486-6784-0.[better source needed]
- ^ Keller, Ferdinand (1864). Benedictiones Ad Mensa Ekkehardi Monachi. London: The Archeological Journal. p. 352., cited in Chevallier (2009) p4.
- ^ "Vanillekipferl Recipe". www.austria.info. Archived from the original on 24 December 2019. Retrieved 1 January 2020.
- ^ "Publication of the amended single document following the approval of a minor amendment pursuant to the second subparagraph of Article 53(2) of Regulation (EU) No 1151/20122019/C 342/13. C/2019/7229". European Union. Retrieved 16 August 2021.
- ^ a b „lupáčik“. In: Krátky slovník slovenského jazyka. Red. J. Kačala – M. Pisárčiková – M. Považaj. 4th supplemented and edited edition. Bratislava: Veda 2003. 985 s. ISBN 80-224-0750-X (collective of autors: J. Doruľa, J. Kačala, M. Marsinová, I. Masár, Š. Michalus, Š. Peciar, M. Pisárčiková, M. Považaj, V. Slivková, E. Smiešková, E. Tibenská, M. Urbančok)
- ^ Hrano (2016-04-09). "Slovakia breakfast". Retrieved 2023-03-02.
- ^ "Recept na vláčne voňavé makovky a navyše ázijský tip pre ešte nadýchanejšie cesto". Tchibo Blog (in Slovak). Retrieved 2023-05-17.
- ^ "Je správne po slovensky pletienka, alebo... | Jazyková poradňa | SME.sk". jazykovaporadna.sme.sk (in Slovak). Retrieved 2023-03-02.