Bredele—the diminutive Alsatian dialect term for ‘little breads’—encompasses the vast family of small biscuits and cookies baked throughout Alsace during Advent. The tradition dates to the fourteenth century when convents produced spiced biscuits for Christmas markets, and today every Alsatian household maintains its own repertoire, often numbering thirty or more varieties. The major families include Butterbredele (butter cookies cut into stars, hearts, and crescent moons), Schwowebredele (ground almond meringue cookies with cinnamon), Spritzbredele (piped butter cookies made with a cookie press), Zimtsterne (cinnamon stars glazed with royal icing over almond-meringue dough), Lebkuchen-style Leckerli (honey-spice bars), and Anisbredele (anise-flavoured drops that develop a characteristic white ‘foot’ during baking at 150°C). The doughs range from rich shortbreads with 60% butter to egg-white meringues to honey-spice mixtures aged for weeks. Key technique is resting doughs overnight at 4°C to hydrate flour and develop flavour before rolling to precise 3-4mm thickness. Baking temperatures vary dramatically—Zimtsterne at 140°C to preserve the white glaze, Butterbredele at 180°C for golden colour, Lebkuchen at 170°C for chewy interior. The Alsatian Christmas market tradition of exchanging Bredele tins represents one of France’s most enduring regional baking customs, with each family’s selection reflecting generational knowledge passed through handwritten recipe books.
Rest enriched doughs overnight at 4°C for flavour development and workability. Roll to consistent 3-4mm thickness for even baking. Match baking temperature to cookie type—low for meringue-based, moderate for butter-based. Store layered between parchment in tins for up to four weeks. Use fresh spices ground just before mixing for maximum aromatic impact.
Grind your own cinnamon from Ceylon sticks for Zimtsterne—the difference is transformative. For Schwowebredele, age the almond-meringue dough for 24 hours so the surface dries slightly, creating a crisp shell over a chewy interior. Use a light dusting of potato starch rather than flour when rolling to prevent sticking without toughening the dough.
Rolling dough too thick, producing heavy cookies instead of delicate biscuits. Overbaking Zimtsterne, which cracks the white glaze. Using stale spices that lack aromatic punch. Skipping the overnight rest, resulting in doughs that spread unevenly. Mixing different cookie types in the same tin, causing flavour and texture transfer.
Les Bredele de Noël — Gérard Fritsch